Quiz-summary
0 of 8 questions completed
Questions:
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
Information
Premium Practice Questions
You have already completed the quiz before. Hence you can not start it again.
Quiz is loading...
You must sign in or sign up to start the quiz.
You have to finish following quiz, to start this quiz:
Results
0 of 8 questions answered correctly
Your time:
Time has elapsed
Categories
- Not categorized 0%
Unlock Your Full Report
You missed {missed_count} questions. Enter your email to see exactly which ones you got wrong and read the detailed explanations.
Submit to instantly unlock detailed explanations for every question.
Success! Your results are now unlocked. You can see the correct answers and detailed explanations below.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- Answered
- Review
-
Question 1 of 8
1. Question
A client relationship manager at a mid-sized retail bank seeks guidance on Relevant ANSI/ASME Standards as part of conflicts of interest. They explain that during the construction of a new regional branch, an internal audit revealed that the plumbing contractor installed air gap fittings that lack documented compliance with industry benchmarks. The project manager, who is a close associate of the contractor, claims the fittings are sufficient for the facility’s drainage system. To provide an objective assessment and mitigate the risk of cross-contamination in the potable water system, which ANSI/ASME standard should the building inspector or auditor reference to verify the design and performance requirements of these air gap fittings?
Correct
Correct: ASME A112.1.2 is the specific standard for Air Gaps in Plumbing Systems (For Plumbing Fixtures and Water-Connected Receptors). It establishes the necessary dimensions and performance criteria to ensure that an air gap provides a physical break between the potable water supply and a potential source of contamination, which is the primary method of backflow prevention in this scenario.
Incorrect
Correct: ASME A112.1.2 is the specific standard for Air Gaps in Plumbing Systems (For Plumbing Fixtures and Water-Connected Receptors). It establishes the necessary dimensions and performance criteria to ensure that an air gap provides a physical break between the potable water supply and a potential source of contamination, which is the primary method of backflow prevention in this scenario.
-
Question 2 of 8
2. Question
Following an on-site examination at an insurer, regulators raised concerns about Testing and Commissioning of Systems in the context of change management. Their preliminary finding is that the internal audit department failed to adequately validate the commissioning of the newly installed potable water distribution and sewage ejector systems during a major facility renovation. To remediate this finding, which evidence should the internal auditor prioritize to confirm that the plumbing systems were properly tested for leaks and structural integrity?
Correct
Correct: Hydrostatic pressure testing is the industry-standard method for commissioning potable water systems. It requires the system to be pressurized to a specific threshold (typically 100 psi or the working pressure) for a set duration to ensure there are no leaks or failures in the joints or materials before the system is concealed or put into service. This provides direct evidence of the system’s physical integrity.
Incorrect: A certificate of occupancy is a general document and does not provide the specific technical evidence of plumbing pressure tests required for commissioning. Maintenance logs for backflow preventers are operational records for future compliance, not evidence of the initial system integrity test. Manufacturer warranties verify the quality of the materials themselves but do not prove that the installation was performed correctly or that the system is leak-free.
Takeaway: Proper commissioning of plumbing systems requires documented hydrostatic pressure testing to verify the integrity of joints and materials before the system is put into service.
Incorrect
Correct: Hydrostatic pressure testing is the industry-standard method for commissioning potable water systems. It requires the system to be pressurized to a specific threshold (typically 100 psi or the working pressure) for a set duration to ensure there are no leaks or failures in the joints or materials before the system is concealed or put into service. This provides direct evidence of the system’s physical integrity.
Incorrect: A certificate of occupancy is a general document and does not provide the specific technical evidence of plumbing pressure tests required for commissioning. Maintenance logs for backflow preventers are operational records for future compliance, not evidence of the initial system integrity test. Manufacturer warranties verify the quality of the materials themselves but do not prove that the installation was performed correctly or that the system is leak-free.
Takeaway: Proper commissioning of plumbing systems requires documented hydrostatic pressure testing to verify the integrity of joints and materials before the system is put into service.
-
Question 3 of 8
3. Question
You have recently joined a private bank as internal auditor. Your first major assignment involves Re-Inspection Procedures during third-party risk, and a customer complaint indicates that a property recently sold by the bank’s real estate division had a catastrophic failure of the sewage ejector system despite a ‘clear’ re-inspection report from a third-party plumbing contractor. The bank’s policy requires that any plumbing defects identified in an initial inspection must undergo a formal re-inspection within 10 business days of the reported repair. You are reviewing the workpapers for a sample of properties that required re-inspections of their Drainage, Waste, and Vent (DWV) systems. Which of the following audit procedures would provide the most reliable evidence regarding the operational effectiveness of the bank’s re-inspection control process?
Correct
Correct: Vouching re-inspection reports to independent documentation, such as municipal permits or specific contractor certifications, provides the highest level of assurance. It confirms not only that a re-inspection occurred, but that the underlying plumbing work was performed according to code and verified by a party other than the inspector who signed off on the bank’s internal report. This addresses the risk of ‘rubber-stamping’ or superficial re-inspections.
Incorrect: Focusing on the 10-day turnaround time measures the efficiency of the process but does not validate the quality or accuracy of the re-inspection itself. Interviewing inspectors provides only testimonial evidence, which is less reliable than documentary evidence and does not prove that the procedures were actually followed in practice. Reconciling invoices to reports ensures that the bank paid for the services rendered, but it does not verify that the plumbing repairs were technically sound or that the re-inspection accurately assessed the state of the DWV system.
Takeaway: The most effective way to audit re-inspection procedures is to verify the substantive resolution of the original defect through independent, third-party documentation rather than relying solely on internal status reports or process timelines.
Incorrect
Correct: Vouching re-inspection reports to independent documentation, such as municipal permits or specific contractor certifications, provides the highest level of assurance. It confirms not only that a re-inspection occurred, but that the underlying plumbing work was performed according to code and verified by a party other than the inspector who signed off on the bank’s internal report. This addresses the risk of ‘rubber-stamping’ or superficial re-inspections.
Incorrect: Focusing on the 10-day turnaround time measures the efficiency of the process but does not validate the quality or accuracy of the re-inspection itself. Interviewing inspectors provides only testimonial evidence, which is less reliable than documentary evidence and does not prove that the procedures were actually followed in practice. Reconciling invoices to reports ensures that the bank paid for the services rendered, but it does not verify that the plumbing repairs were technically sound or that the re-inspection accurately assessed the state of the DWV system.
Takeaway: The most effective way to audit re-inspection procedures is to verify the substantive resolution of the original defect through independent, third-party documentation rather than relying solely on internal status reports or process timelines.
-
Question 4 of 8
4. Question
When addressing a deficiency in Electrical Safety Around Plumbing Systems, what should be done first? During a comprehensive safety audit of a commercial building’s mechanical systems, an inspector discovers that the metallic water distribution system has been repaired in multiple locations using PEX tubing. The inspector notes that these repairs have interrupted the electrical continuity of the metallic piping, which is required to be bonded to the electrical service grounding system to prevent the pipes from becoming accidentally energized.
Correct
Correct: In plumbing systems where metallic pipe is used for grounding or is required to be bonded, any break in continuity caused by non-metallic materials like PEX must be bridged with a bonding jumper. According to electrical and plumbing codes, this ensures that the entire metallic system remains at the same electrical potential as the ground, providing a low-impedance path for fault current and protecting occupants from electric shock.
Incorrect: Installing secondary grounding electrodes at every repair point is not a standard or code-compliant method for maintaining the continuity of a building’s internal bonding system. Conductive foil tape is not an approved or durable method for establishing electrical continuity in plumbing systems and does not meet safety standards. Dielectric unions are designed to prevent galvanic corrosion between dissimilar metals and do not address the safety hazard created by the loss of electrical continuity in the grounding path.
Takeaway: Electrical continuity in metallic plumbing systems must be maintained through the use of bonding jumpers whenever non-metallic components interrupt the grounding path.
Incorrect
Correct: In plumbing systems where metallic pipe is used for grounding or is required to be bonded, any break in continuity caused by non-metallic materials like PEX must be bridged with a bonding jumper. According to electrical and plumbing codes, this ensures that the entire metallic system remains at the same electrical potential as the ground, providing a low-impedance path for fault current and protecting occupants from electric shock.
Incorrect: Installing secondary grounding electrodes at every repair point is not a standard or code-compliant method for maintaining the continuity of a building’s internal bonding system. Conductive foil tape is not an approved or durable method for establishing electrical continuity in plumbing systems and does not meet safety standards. Dielectric unions are designed to prevent galvanic corrosion between dissimilar metals and do not address the safety hazard created by the loss of electrical continuity in the grounding path.
Takeaway: Electrical continuity in metallic plumbing systems must be maintained through the use of bonding jumpers whenever non-metallic components interrupt the grounding path.
-
Question 5 of 8
5. Question
During a routine supervisory engagement with a credit union, the authority asks about Under-Wall and Under-Slab Inspections in the context of data protection. They observe that the plumbing infrastructure for the new secure data vault is being installed beneath the structural slab. To ensure the physical security and environmental safety of the facility, the auditor reviews the inspection logs to confirm that the piping was properly prepared before being concealed. Which of the following is the most critical requirement for a plumbing inspector to verify during the under-slab phase?
Correct
Correct: During an under-slab inspection, the primary focus is ensuring the system is leak-free and structurally supported before it is buried under concrete. Plumbing codes require that the piping be laid on a firm, continuous bed (to prevent settlement and joint stress) and undergo a water test—typically involving a 10-foot head of water for 15 minutes—to verify that no leaks exist which could later saturate the soil or damage the building’s foundation and interior environment.
Incorrect: Secondary mechanical clamps and polyethylene wrapping are not standard regulatory requirements for all under-slab DWV (Drainage, Waste, and Vent) systems. While slope is necessary, a 1/2-inch per foot slope is not the universal minimum requirement for all pipe sizes (1/4-inch is standard for many common diameters), and slope alone does not ensure the integrity of the slab. Cleanout locations are regulated for accessibility, but a specific height of exactly 12 inches is not a standard under-slab inspection requirement.
Takeaway: Under-slab inspections must prioritize the verification of proper bedding and successful pressure testing to prevent future structural and environmental failures once the piping is concealed.
Incorrect
Correct: During an under-slab inspection, the primary focus is ensuring the system is leak-free and structurally supported before it is buried under concrete. Plumbing codes require that the piping be laid on a firm, continuous bed (to prevent settlement and joint stress) and undergo a water test—typically involving a 10-foot head of water for 15 minutes—to verify that no leaks exist which could later saturate the soil or damage the building’s foundation and interior environment.
Incorrect: Secondary mechanical clamps and polyethylene wrapping are not standard regulatory requirements for all under-slab DWV (Drainage, Waste, and Vent) systems. While slope is necessary, a 1/2-inch per foot slope is not the universal minimum requirement for all pipe sizes (1/4-inch is standard for many common diameters), and slope alone does not ensure the integrity of the slab. Cleanout locations are regulated for accessibility, but a specific height of exactly 12 inches is not a standard under-slab inspection requirement.
Takeaway: Under-slab inspections must prioritize the verification of proper bedding and successful pressure testing to prevent future structural and environmental failures once the piping is concealed.
-
Question 6 of 8
6. Question
Excerpt from a whistleblower report: In work related to Rough-In Inspections (DWV, Water Supply, Gas) as part of change management at a wealth manager, it was noted that the plumbing contractor frequently bypassed the required 10-foot head of water test for the drainage, waste, and vent (DWV) system to accelerate the project timeline. The report indicates that the project manager authorized wall closure within 24 hours of pipe installation without verification from the local building official. From a risk assessment perspective, which of the following represents the most critical concern regarding this deviation from standard inspection protocols?
Correct
Correct: In a rough-in inspection, the DWV system must be tested (typically with a 10-foot head of water or air pressure) to ensure all joints are solvent-welded or sealed correctly. Bypassing this test and closing the walls creates a high risk that minor leaks will go unnoticed until they cause significant moisture damage, rot, or mold growth within the building envelope, which is extremely costly to remediate once the building is operational.
Incorrect: The concern regarding cross-contamination and backflow prevention is related to the potable water supply system, not the DWV rough-in testing protocol. The gas piping pressure requirements are a separate safety and performance concern that does not address the integrity of the waste drainage system. While storm drainage capacity is important, it relates to hydraulic sizing and roof area calculations rather than the integrity of the sanitary DWV rough-in joints.
Takeaway: Pressure testing DWV systems during the rough-in phase is a critical control to prevent long-term structural damage and health hazards from concealed leaks.
Incorrect
Correct: In a rough-in inspection, the DWV system must be tested (typically with a 10-foot head of water or air pressure) to ensure all joints are solvent-welded or sealed correctly. Bypassing this test and closing the walls creates a high risk that minor leaks will go unnoticed until they cause significant moisture damage, rot, or mold growth within the building envelope, which is extremely costly to remediate once the building is operational.
Incorrect: The concern regarding cross-contamination and backflow prevention is related to the potable water supply system, not the DWV rough-in testing protocol. The gas piping pressure requirements are a separate safety and performance concern that does not address the integrity of the waste drainage system. While storm drainage capacity is important, it relates to hydraulic sizing and roof area calculations rather than the integrity of the sanitary DWV rough-in joints.
Takeaway: Pressure testing DWV systems during the rough-in phase is a critical control to prevent long-term structural damage and health hazards from concealed leaks.
-
Question 7 of 8
7. Question
A regulatory inspection at a broker-dealer focuses on Hazardous Materials Handling (e.g., Solvents, Soldering Flux) in the context of outsourcing. The examiner notes that the third-party plumbing contractor responsible for the facility’s potable water distribution network maintenance has been storing solvent cements and primers in an unventilated utility closet. During a review of the maintenance logs from the past six months, the auditor finds no evidence of Safety Data Sheet (SDS) updates following a change in the chemical supplier. Which action should the internal auditor recommend to best mitigate the risk of non-compliance and safety hazards?
Correct
Correct: The internal auditor must ensure that the organization maintains proper documentation and safety protocols. A centralized SDS repository ensures that safety information is accessible as required by occupational safety standards, while training ensures that staff can identify and mitigate risks associated with volatile organic compounds found in plumbing solvents.
Incorrect: Transferring oversight entirely to a contractor is a failure of internal control, as the host organization remains responsible for safety on its premises. Replacing all fittings with mechanical ones is an impractical and potentially unnecessary capital expense that does not address the underlying documentation failure. Increasing inspection frequency for inventory levels does not solve the primary issues of improper ventilation and missing safety documentation.
Takeaway: Effective management of hazardous materials in an outsourced environment requires robust documentation accessibility and active safety training for all personnel involved.
Incorrect
Correct: The internal auditor must ensure that the organization maintains proper documentation and safety protocols. A centralized SDS repository ensures that safety information is accessible as required by occupational safety standards, while training ensures that staff can identify and mitigate risks associated with volatile organic compounds found in plumbing solvents.
Incorrect: Transferring oversight entirely to a contractor is a failure of internal control, as the host organization remains responsible for safety on its premises. Replacing all fittings with mechanical ones is an impractical and potentially unnecessary capital expense that does not address the underlying documentation failure. Increasing inspection frequency for inventory levels does not solve the primary issues of improper ventilation and missing safety documentation.
Takeaway: Effective management of hazardous materials in an outsourced environment requires robust documentation accessibility and active safety training for all personnel involved.
-
Question 8 of 8
8. Question
The compliance framework at a mid-sized retail bank is being updated to address Firestopping of Penetrations as part of transaction monitoring. A challenge arises because the bank’s internal audit team is reviewing the installation of new sanitary drainage lines through fire-rated walls in the primary data center. During a site walkthrough, the auditor observes that several 3-inch PVC pipes pass through a two-hour fire-resistance-rated concrete wall. To ensure the integrity of the fire-rated assembly and the protection of the transaction processing equipment, which of the following criteria must the firestop system meet?
Correct
Correct: Firestop systems are not generic products but are tested assemblies. For combustible penetrants like PVC, the system must be specifically listed (e.g., UL or ASTM E814) for the pipe material, size, and the specific rating of the wall or floor. Because PVC melts during a fire, an intumescent material is required to expand and seal the void left by the melting pipe to prevent the spread of fire and smoke.
Incorrect: Filling the space with grout or mortar is incorrect because it does not account for the melting of the PVC pipe, which would leave a hole for fire to pass through. Standard fire-rated silicone sealants are not universally applicable and must be part of a listed system for the specific material. Firestopping is required for both horizontal and vertical fire-rated assemblies, not just floors.
Takeaway: Firestop systems must be specifically listed and tested for the combination of the penetrating material, the assembly type, and the required fire-resistance rating.
Incorrect
Correct: Firestop systems are not generic products but are tested assemblies. For combustible penetrants like PVC, the system must be specifically listed (e.g., UL or ASTM E814) for the pipe material, size, and the specific rating of the wall or floor. Because PVC melts during a fire, an intumescent material is required to expand and seal the void left by the melting pipe to prevent the spread of fire and smoke.
Incorrect: Filling the space with grout or mortar is incorrect because it does not account for the melting of the PVC pipe, which would leave a hole for fire to pass through. Standard fire-rated silicone sealants are not universally applicable and must be part of a listed system for the specific material. Firestopping is required for both horizontal and vertical fire-rated assemblies, not just floors.
Takeaway: Firestop systems must be specifically listed and tested for the combination of the penetrating material, the assembly type, and the required fire-resistance rating.