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    You are at:Home Government Overhaul Its Approach to Building Safety Crisis
    Builds & Development

    Government Overhaul Its Approach to Building Safety Crisis

    Cristina DiaconuBy Cristina Diaconu14/01/2022No Comments3 Mins Read1 Views
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    Government Overhaul Its Approach to Building Safety Crisis
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    The Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, Rt. Hon. Michael Gove gave a statement to the House of Commons, confirming an ‘overhaul’ of the Government’s approach to the building safety crisis.

    The statement marks a ‘resetting’ of government policy, with the relatively new Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) team demonstrating a new commitment to fixing unsafe and dangerous buildings as soon as possible, while keeping costs to a minimum for leaseholders living in those buildings.

    The details of the new approach come ahead of the Building Safety Bill returning to the House for Report Stage, and include:

    • Restoring risk proportionality to the remediation of unsafe buildings, including withdrawing the controversial Consolidated Advice Note and replacing it with the PAS 9980 (expected to launch 19th January 2022), and plans for future engagement with the Royal Institution of Charted Surveyors (RICS) and key lenders to form a new reset approach to the building safety crisis in terms of risk assessment and suitability for lending
    • Scrapping the previously proposed loan scheme for affected 11m – 18m buildings, replacing it with a limited grant scheme for leaseholders, up to a maximum of £4bn
    • Developers are expected to contribute to this £4bn package, and if they fail then they can be threatened with approved “use of high-level ‘threat’ of tax or legal solutions”
    • In addition to the £4bn grant funding, there is also going to be £27m more available for fire alarms in buildings, in addition to the existing ‘waking watch relief fund’ of £30m
    • The Government will launch ‘Operation Apex’ to navigate the intricate webs of SPVs set up by developers which can obscure liability – a move that will be particularly welcomed by leaseholders. Papers seen by The Times note that it will also identify “egregious behaviour where freeholders have sought to aggressively pass on costs to innocent leaseholders”.
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    11M-18M FUNDING SPECIFICATIONS:

    • Lenders and insurers must not be brought in to the ‘polluter pays’ piece – no contributions are to be sought from them.
    • This grant funding covers cladding/external wall systems ONLY, no other fire or safety defects or problems. Mr Gove expects developers or other responsible parties to make good these defects. He reiterated the principle that leaseholders should not pay.
    • The Building Safety Fund delivery for 18m+ buildings must be “accelerated”.

    DEVELOPER’S CONTRIBUTIONS:

    • Mr Gove has warned developers that if they don’t agree to fund his new £4bn building safety plan by early March 2022, he may force them to act by using different restrictions such as public contract bans, planning restrictions or pursuing them through the courts.
    • Gove now expects developers to fund and undertake all necessary remediation on buildings developed over 11 metres and provide comprehensive information on all buildings over 11 metres which have historic fire safety defects spanning the past 30 years.
    • The Government has said that it will only decide on which companies are in scope of the tax following the discussions with industry but expects it to cover all firms with annual profits exceeding £10million.
    • Over the coming weeks, the Government will host a series of roundtables with ministers, developers and leaseholders that will look to agree a settlement. This will open with the 20 biggest house builders in the sector being invited into Government to start discussions.
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