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Major changes to building laws proposed

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The New Zealand Government proposes to change its building laws, stated to be the biggest since the enactment of the Buildings Act in 2004.

Building and Construction Minister Jenny Salesa said that the new Statute aims to address long-standing challenges in the building sector and that public submissions are welcome.

“These proposed reforms will deliver safer and more durable buildings, a high performing building sector, and better efficiency in our regulatory system. This also delivers on the Government’s commitments under the Construction Sector Accord, announced on April 14, to improve building regulatory systems,” she said.

Ms Salesa said that the government is consulting on proposals to: improve the regulation of building products and modern methods of construction including (a) offsite manufacturing (b)  strengthening occupational regulation (c) (c) (c) (c) (c) (c) look at how risk and liability are managed; possibly reduce the building levy; and strengthen penalties for those who don’t comply with the law.

Improving quality, skills

“I expect this reform to create a building sector where people understand their responsibilities and increase the number of skilled workers; where better quality means building it right the first time and people are better protected if that doesn’t happen; and where people are accountable when things go wrong.

“A thriving, productive and sustainable building sector is vitally important for New Zealand’s economic and social success. A healthy building sector will increase the wellbeing of all New Zealanders and deliver on the Government’s plan to ensure everyone has a warm, dry home.

“Clear and robust building laws are critical to enabling the building sector to reach its full potential.

“We need input and feedback from the public as well as people across the building and construction sector to help make sure the law works effectively for everyone. I encourage everyone to have their say,” Ms Salesa said.

You can find more information on the proposals and how to make a submission here

The Consultation will close on 16 June 2019.

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Photo Caption:

Jenny Salesa (INL Picture)

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