NZCB InHouse Magazine August/September 2022

Page 28

IN THE KNOW —

Can councils transfer some or all of their liability to the builder? Building Consent Authorities and Territorial Authorities (for simplicity I’ll call them Councils) are coming under increasing pressure these days. The volume of residential building activity is unprecedented. People are hell-bent on doing their renovation or their new build, seemingly oblivious to the fact that there’s a lack of available building expertise, a lack of building materials, and prices going through the roof. Add to that the fact that Councils struggle to attract and retain the right expertise too. Many of their overseas-sourced staff have had to return home because of tightened New Zealand immigration rules. The rest of their workforce has been decimated by COVID-19 and that must have created a massive backlog for the Councils to work through. And they are now having to operate in an era where flexible working hours and working from home has become the norm.

In recent years, Council liability increased substantially due to the leaky building crisis. It’s not as if the burden on Councils has been eased to compensate for these added pressures. Their basic responsibilities under the Building Act remain unchanged. They are the gatekeepers that ensure buildings in New Zealand do not harm anyone or damage property. They are responsible for checking that an application for a building consent complies with the building code and that building work has been carried out in accordance with the building consent for that work. They are subject to statutory time limits for the issue of building consents and code compliance certificates. Section 391 of the Building Act makes it clear that the Council can be sued for negligence it if gets it wrong. And under section 393 they are potentially liable for 10 years. In recent years, Council liability increased substantially due to the leaky building crisis. Although Councils were typically held to be 20% responsible on average, they frequently had to pick up the tab for everyone else who had gone AWOL or gone bust. And they are still picking up that tab to this day. After their insurance cover ran out early this century, they had to pass the cost on to their disgruntled ratepayers, so they became very risk-averse and very cautious. In 2012, the then-Government responded to their concerns by introducing a concept known as risk-based consenting – which basically proposed to transfer more risk off the Councils and onto the builders – but those laws ended up in the too-hard basket. More recently there have been some new building consent exemptions introduced into Schedule 1 of the Building Act (eg. single-storey detached buildings of between 10-30 m²) which effectively pass responsibility onto Licensed

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Building Practitioners (LBP) and Chartered Professional Engineers, but that hasn’t eased the load much. So, what can Councils do? They can’t exactly escape their responsibilities, because under section 49 of the Building Act they must grant a building consent if they are satisfied on reasonable grounds that the provisions of the building code would be met if the building work were properly completed in accordance with the plans and specifications that accompanied the application. And under section 94, a Council must issue a Code Compliance Certificate if it is satisfied, on reasonable grounds that the building work complies with the building consent. To absolutely guarantee that consented building work complies with the building code, and therefore avoid all liability, they would have to have a building inspector on every site 24/7. But the cost of that would be astronomical, so it’s not going to happen. Instead, Councils manage the risk in two ways. They conduct inspections at critical stages of the build so that they focus on the high-risk areas and minimise what can be hidden from them. And they insist on certificates from third parties known as Producer Statements so that they can pass on their liability to those third parties if they supply goods or services that are not code-compliant. Recently, members of New Zealand Certified Builders have noticed an increase in the number and frequency of producer statements being requested by Auckland Council, and it is likely to be a phenomenon happening throughout the country. If the Councils are doing that – perhaps because their building inspectors can’t cope with the current workload – then that is an unfair burden on builders, because it is allowing Councils to avoid their statutory responsibilities and instead foist them on builders. Although to be fair to Councils, they don’t have many other options right now, given the unprecedented volume of inspection work and the toll that COVID-19 has taken on their workforce. A producer statement is fundamentally different to the record of work (ROW) that you have to submit to the Council if you are an LBP. ROWs do not create any liability, whereas producer statements do. ROWs simply identify who did the relevant restricted building work, they don’t make that person any more liable for that work than they already were. By contrast, producer statements do create liability – and it is liability to a party (the Council) that the builder wasn’t already liable to.


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Articles inside

IN THE MEDIA

29min
pages 70-73

NZCB Strategic Partners and Affinity Partners

1min
page 74

NEWS BITES

11min
pages 62-65

Air seals around windows – getting it right matters

2min
pages 66-67

Introducing the new GIB® System Selector

1min
pages 68-69

RoVE update #3

3min
page 60

NZCB and Industry Events Calendar

3min
pages 58-59

Apprentice Challenge bench seat finds special home

2min
page 57

A close finish in the Waikato/Coromandel

2min
page 56

Meet our 2022 NZCB Presidents

2min
pages 54-55

Keeping your worksite safe this flu season

3min
pages 52-53

Your business’ health starts with its people

6min
pages 50-51

The Tortoise beats the Hare

4min
pages 48-49

Impressive effort leads to awesome achievement

2min
page 46

Managing finances through tough times

6min
pages 44-45

Gemma the scooter raises a record $9,300 for Cancer Society

7min
pages 38-41

Immigration NZ’s employer accreditation

3min
pages 42-43

Leadership and management

3min
pages 36-37

Can councils transfer some or all of their liability to the builder?

7min
pages 28-29

Busy? Now’s the time to market your business

4min
pages 26-27

NZCB and Noel Leeming Commercial

4min
pages 22-23

A real look into the 2022 employment market

3min
pages 24-25

Understanding provisional tax

4min
pages 34-35

You must pass the ball to win the game

2min
pages 30-31

Make tech a powerful, everyday tool in your business

6min
pages 32-33

Walking the talk at Auckland’s Asian Construction Expo

1min
pages 20-21

NZCB Building Contracts

3min
pages 12-13

Want to improve your business performance?

2min
page 11

Don’t get caught short with your insurance cover

3min
pages 16-17

Message from our Chief Executive

3min
page 8

Message from the NZCB Board

4min
pages 4-5

South Island gets a new office

1min
page 18

Message from our Education and Technical Manager

3min
page 10

Putting our partners in the spotlight

2min
page 19
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