It has been noted that “hour of Joburg” for “hour of CCHs” has been taken to mean you run the CCHs for an hour and then the Joburg Sec Check for an hour. This is very wrong.
If another auditor is giving the Joburg, it should be given in the same day. An auditor less skilled on CCHs could thus be employed for half the auditing day giving Joburgs.
But the CCHs must be run as they are supposed to be run. Run One, Two, Three, Four, One, each one to a temporary flat point (20 minutes of no Auditor-observed change of comm lag or demeanour [not pc’s statements about change or somatics]), and when one is biting, you flatten that CCH as per the 20 minute test.
If one auditor is doing CCHs and Joburg Sec Check, whenever he has pc temporarily flat on a CCH, he can give a page of Joburg. Probably one-third of the auditing time is best for a Sec Check, rather than one for one in time with CCHs if one auditor is doing both.
A pc can go three days on CCHs without a Sec Check. At a time when a CCH that was unflat but is now temporarily flat, a Sec Check consisting of a couple of pages or more can be given (in any event about five hours worth for fifteen hours of CCHs for one auditor).
If you have two auditors on a case, one giving CCHs, one Sec Checks, this means 2½ hours in the morning on CCHs, 2½ hours in the afternoon on Sec Checks or vice versa. Some pcs getting Sec Checks in the morning and some pcs getting them in the afternoon would keep all auditors busy.
I hope this helps you to handle Routine One.