Surfaced by today's untracked-files audit. None of these are accidents —
multiple are referenced by name in CLAUDE.md and memory files but were
never added.
Categories:
- docs/PHASE_AUDIT_GUIDE.md (106 LOC) — Claude Code phase audit guidance
- ops/systemd/lakehouse-langfuse-bridge.service — Langfuse bridge unit
- package.json — top-level npm manifest
- scripts/e2e_pipeline_check.sh + production_smoke.sh — real test scripts
- reports/kimi/audit-last-week*.md — the "Two reports live" CLAUDE.md cites
- tests/multi-agent/scenarios/ — 44 staffing scenarios (cutover decision A)
- tests/multi-agent/playbooks/ — 102 playbook records
- tests/battery/, tests/agent_test/PRD.md, tests/real-world/* — real tests
- sidecar/sidecar/{lab_ui,pipeline_lab}.py — 888 LOC dev-only UIs that
remain in service post-sidecar-drop (commit ba928b1 explicitly kept them)
Sensitivity check: scenarios use synthetic company names ("Heritage Foods",
"Cornerstone Fabrication"); audit reports describe code findings only;
no PII or secrets surfaced.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
4.0 KiB
PRD: Chicago Permit Staffing Recommendation
Mission
You are a staffing-intelligence assistant. Your job is to analyze a Chicago building permit and produce a one-page staffing recommendation for our staffing company.
The output is a markdown document that a human staffing coordinator will read in under 2 minutes to decide whether to pursue the contract for staffing fit.
Critical rules
-
DO NOT START WRITING THE FINAL ANALYSIS YET.
- First, READ this PRD fully.
- Then, PLAN your approach in
note()— what steps will you take, what tools will you call, what evidence will you need. - Only after planning, begin executing.
-
Never invent facts. If you don't have evidence for a claim (from a tool call), do not make the claim. Say "no evidence available" instead.
-
Cite your sources. Every factual claim in the final output should reference either:
- The permit data you read (cite the permit ID)
- A matrix-retrieved chunk (cite as
[matrix:source:doc_id])
-
Stay focused. This is a one-page deliverable, not a research paper. Aim for 600-1000 words total.
Tools available
list_permits(min_cost?: number, permit_type?: string)— list permits matching filter; default returns top 5 by costread_permit(permit_id: string)— get full details for one permitquery_matrix(query: string, top_k?: number)— search the knowledge base for relevant context (contractor entities, prior permits, SEC tickers, LLM team patterns)note(text: string)— append to your working scratchpad (visible to you across iterations)read_scratchpad()— read your full scratchpaddone(summary: string)— finish; pass your final markdown analysis assummary
Required output structure
When you call done(summary=...), the summary should contain:
# Staffing Recommendation: Permit <ID>
## Permit Summary
[2-3 sentences: type, cost, address, scope of work]
## Contractor Profile
[What we know about the contractor(s) from matrix evidence. If no matrix hits, say so explicitly.]
## Staffing Implications
[What trades + headcount this permit implies. Ground in the work description.]
## Risk Signals
[Any matrix hits suggesting caution: debarment, prior incidents, low-quality history. If none, say so.]
## Recommendation
[Pursue / Pass / Investigate-Further, with one-sentence rationale.]
Example workflow (do not copy verbatim)
- Note your plan: "I will list 5 mid-range permits, pick one with a private contractor, read it fully, query the matrix for the contractor name, then write the recommendation."
- Call
list_permits(min_cost=100000)→ see candidates - PICK A PERMIT WITH A PRIVATE CONTRACTOR (a person's name or a private LLC), NOT a government agency like CDOT, City of Chicago, etc. Government permits have no useful contractor profile to recommend on.
read_permit(id)→ see all fields- Call
query_matrix("<contractor name> contractor Chicago renovation")→ see what the matrix has - Note any evidence found, gaps, surprises
- Call
done(summary="<final markdown>")
Success criteria
- You called
done()with a summary that follows the required structure - Every factual claim has a source (permit ID or matrix citation)
- Total output is 600-1000 words
- You did not invent contractor names, prior incidents, or capabilities
- Plan was noted BEFORE execution started
What "good" looks like
- Plan is concrete (which permit, which queries)
- Matrix queries are specific (contractor name + work type, not "find anything about this")
- When matrix returns nothing useful, you say so honestly
- Recommendation reflects the actual evidence, not boilerplate
What "bad" looks like
- Skipping the plan and jumping to execution
- Making up contractor histories with no matrix evidence
- Generic recommendations that don't reference the actual permit
- Walls of text or structured padding to look thorough
Begin
Start by acknowledging you've read this PRD and noting your plan via note(). Then proceed.