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News: Safety Bill is an ‘ opportunity
Building Safety Bill is ‘once in a generation’ opportunity
PARLIAMENT EXPECTED TO BEGIN DEBATING THE BILL THIS AUTUMN, WITH CIOB BACKING ALL ITS RECOMMENDATIONS
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The construction industry must seize
the “once in a generation opportunity for change” presented by the government’s Building Safety Bill.
That is the message from the CIOB with the bill expected to begin its passage through parliament this autumn.
“There is likely to be substantive change across the system, with design, specification, procurement, construction, building control, management of buildings during occupation, and the competencies of those working on buildings all in scope,” said Eddie Tuttle, director of policy, research and public affairs.
He expects the passage of the bill to take about a year but warned that it will require substantial secondary legislation which will likely take “many years” to introduce. “Getting that detail right will be crucial,” Tuttle added.
“Some classes of building that we might have expected to be covered by the draft bill are absent, such as care homes, hospitals, hotels,” he noted. “But the bill gives the Building Safety Regulator powers to advise the Secretary of State to amend definitions of the buildings in the legislation.”
The CIOB remains concerned about the implementation of the proposals in the bill and whether the industry has the skills or the culture to deliver the wide-ranging changes required.
Paul Nash, the CIOB past president who sits on the Industry Safety
The bill is expected to take a year to go through parliament Steering Group (ISSG), said: “The underlying message we’re getting back from the industry is that people will not change unless there is legislation forcing them to do so. While we’ve seen some early adopters, and some companies have begun implementing the recommendations of Dame Judith Hackitt’s Building a Safer Future report, many are still lagging behind.”
Further detail on skills and competency standards for those working on higher risk buildings will emerge from the imminent final report from the Competence Steering Group (CSG), Nash said. Meanwhile, the British Standards Institute is leading development of standards for the duty holder roles under the new building safety regime and the CIOB is leading the working group responsible for developing standards for the principal contractor role.
“We are also considering the processes that will be needed to assess and assure the competence of our members performing these roles in the future,” added Nash. ●
Paul Nash on the ISSG report, p10.
Building Safety Bill: likely timeline
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Autumn 2020: Begins passage through parliament June or October 2021: Becomes law as Building Safety Act 2021-2024: Implementation across built environment sector From 2021 onwards: Secondary legislation
Concerns rise over ‘green skills’ competence
Questions are mounting over construction’s ability to deliver ‘low to no carbon’ work, following a new study.
The government recently announced the £2bn Green Homes Grant scheme, among a spate of initiatives to stimulate eco-friendly building work, but there are concerns about workforce competence.
Seven out of 10 businesses who responded to the Electrical Contractors Association (ECA) and Building Engineering Services Association survey said they do not have enough competent employees to undertake ‘green’ building work.
Nearly half (48%) said that there was not ‘sufficient industry training’ for those involved in low carbon work. Technologies including solar PV, heat pumps and energy storage systems were cited as being most problematic.
Concerns have also been expressed over quality and workmanship, with the government urging tradespeople delivering Green Homes Grant work to sign up with TrustMark accreditation, a move welcomed by the CIOB.
Which low carbon tech will prove most popular? See p28-31.