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The Building Safety Act 2022 (the Act) achieved Royal Assent on 28 April, providing a framework for radical change in the way in which all buildings are to be designed and constructed, as well as the way in which high-rise residential buildings will be managed.
The Act focusses both on improving building safety and on government plans to make the construction industry (and residential developers in particular) rather than residential leaseholders foot the bill for remedying historic fire safety defects in high rise residential buildings. Those changes relating to the industry footing the bill for historic fire safety defects include:
Much of the drafting associated with the recent changes has been produced at pace and there has been little to no time for detailed scrutiny in either the House of Lords or House of Commons. Unsurprisingly, the drafting in some areas is far from polished (and, in some instances, is rough around the edges). Whilst this has been acknowledged during debates in Parliament the overwhelming desire has been to reach Royal Assent and then try and resolve issues through secondary legislation. Those getting to grips with the Act should bear that in mind.
In this article we provide a broad overview of what the Act covers and set out next steps.
We will be publishing a series of articles over the coming weeks covering some aspects of the Act which we believe will come into force on 28 June 2022 (more on this below).
The Act is mainly aimed at England and Wales with some sections applying to Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Parts of the Act apply to all residential buildings and others to building work as a whole but the focus is on higher-risk residential buildings. The Act covers the entire life cycle of a higher-risk building, from design and construction to occupation, with a view to clarifying responsibility for building safety at each stage and introducing an element of continuity with the creation and updating of a "golden thread" of vital information about the building.
The following provisions to come into force on 28 June 2022:
Keep an eye out for our notes looking at the changes to the DPA, claims against product manufacturers and service charge changes if you would like to know more about those.
Other changes envisaged by the Act will only come into force when secondary legislation is finalised and issued.
Dates to be decided by the Secretary of State.
Given the government's indicative timeline (see below) it looks the entire regime will not be up and running for around another 18 months to two years.
No. Although it runs to circa 250 pages large parts of the Act are a framework which gives the government powers to create secondary legislation which will "flesh out" the detail.
The secondary legislation will be developed over the coming months and the government has published an indicative timeline which provides an overview of how they envisage this will happen. As can be seen from the timeline it is going to be a marathon rather than a sprint!
As mentioned above the Act is a framework which enables the development of secondary legislation which will contain much of the detail. We already have an indication of what some of the regulations might look in the form of drafts published last year. These:
These will be supplemented by regulations providing more details about, amongst other things, the proposed new homes warranties; how developers' ability to implement planning permission and obtain building control approval will be restricted in certain circumstances; how the proposed new building industry scheme will work; remediation orders (an order requiring a landlord to remedy a specified defect in a specified time) and building liability orders (an order making an associate of a developer liable for the developer's losses under the Defective Premise Act or the Building Act).
Clearly those elements of the Act coming into force on 28 June (see above) are the immediate focus. Further issues you will need to get to grips with will vary from organisation to organisation and the type of work it undertakes (see below for some suggestions).
In short, there is something for everyone involved with the planning, design and construction of the built environment as well as the management of the high rise residential buildings in the Act and, to a greater or lesser degree, we are all going to have to get to grips with it.
The time limits for prosecution for breach of building regulations will be extended and the Building Safety Regulator will have new enforcement powers for breaches by all dutyholders (whether during the construction or occupation phases).
There will be a new requirement to report structural and fire safety issues which could cause significant risk to life to the Building Safety Regulator.
Leases of premises including or consisting of a dwelling in a higher-risk building which is granted for a term of seven years or more under which the tenant is liable to pay a service charge (excluding certain social housing tenancies) will be construed as though the service charge also covers the cost of specified building safety measures taken by an accountable person. It will not be possible to exclude these provisions.
Qualifying leaseholders will receive certain financial protection (by the imposition of a costs contribution cap) from the costs associated with defects causing safety risks (fire spread/structural collapse) in buildings exceeding 11m in height. The Act also imposes liabilities on certain landlords for remediation of such defects. No service charge will be payable by qualifying leaseholders in respect of cladding remediation.
Leaseholders in buildings above 18 metres are offered protection by the Government's £5.1 billion Building Safety Fund for the removal of unsafe cladding which exists separately to the protections under the Act.
A Building Safety Pledge has also been signed by 45 developers (as of 12 May 2022) in which they have committed to fix life-critical fire safety issues on residential buildings exceeding 11 metres in height which have been developed or refurbished by them since 5 April 1992 (other than those in relation to which they acted solely as contractor). The pledge equates to a contribution from developers of a minimum @2 billion. The signatories will not draw upon the Building Safety Fund or the ACM Fund in respect of these remediation works and will refund money already received from the taxpayer to fix their buildings.
The Act represents a sea change for the construction sector and those involved with high rise residential buildings in particular. It will be interesting to see how the detail develops over the coming months and years.
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