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Building
Control Inspectors Welcome Government Consultation
The Association of Consultant Approved Inspectors (ACAI),
which represents private sector building control consultancies and inspectors
in England and Wales, has welcomed the announcement of the Government's
formal consultation into the future of building control.
Paul Timmins, chairman of the ACAI, said:
The building control system we have at the moment needs improvement.
But there's nothing so fundamentally wrong that means it needs to be abolished,
and there's no problem we haven't already got solutions for. Our system
provides both compliance and consumer confidence, and is the envy of the
rest of the world.
We are delighted that this consultation process is addressing our
wish list for the future. Working with the Building Control Alliance,
the ACAI will continue to lobby for changes to ensure builders get better
customer support, more warning and input into new regulations and a more
professional service overall.
Commenting on some of the specific changes that the ACAI wants to see
imposed on all building control bodies, including its members and local
authorities, Paul Timmins said:
Approved inspectors have always adopted a risk-based approach to
site inspections, which means an intelligently targeted service and tailor-made
inspection regime to reflect the risk in a building's design. The builder
gets an independent pair of eyes on site at the most critical times for
that specific project. That sort of approach should now be adapted for
use by the public sector too and statutory notifications ditched.
He also makes a strong case for better evaluation and accountability to
the client:
We want to see proper performance indicators based on quality rather
than quantity, and much more transparent monitoring. There should be a
single, national auditing system that checks up on all building control
services, public and private sector. That way we can really demonstrate
the value of building control to the whole development community.
The ACAI is also supporting calls for changes to the way Building Regulations
could be amended and communicated in the future.
The changes to Part L in 2006 and the disastrous way these were
foisted onto the construction industry have taught everyone a harsh lesson,
says Paul Timmins.
Here were highly complex regulations, brought in two years earlier
than expected. They were published just three weeks before they were supposed
to be implemented, without adequate or even accurate supporting guidance,
to an industry which was entirely unprepared and has struggled to comply
ever since.
That's why we're calling for a clear route map for how Regulations
will change from now on. We should have a fixed four or five year cycle
for the review of Regulations, which should then be published at least
nine months before they must be implemented. We also want to see the Approved
Documents and other guidance written in plain English and split into documents
for residential and commercial projects. It's the only way to make this
guidance comprehensible.
Government should involve us, the regulators, in writing future
guidance because we know how the regulations are applied, what works and
what doesn't. We need more effective regulations, not necessarily fewer
or more. Better regulation and its pragmatic application is everything
that approved inspectors stand for.
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