• insights-banner

    In the Press

Construction News quotes Michael O'Connor on issues relating to the building control registration deadline

Some commentators are suggesting that construction work on some high-rise residential schemes could grind to a halt because the recent extension to the building-control registration deadline does not apply to private company certification. According to reporting from Construction News, fears and concerns continue to build in the industry as the registration deadline looms.

As part of Construction News's investigation, Michael O'Connor, Partner in our construction, engineering and projects team, was invited to provide analysis:

On 14 March 2024 and in the wake of the wake of significant concerns raised by local authorities and other parts of the construction industry, the HSE notified a change to the transitional arrangements for the registration of building control inspectors (‘RBIs’) in England. 

"The HSE did not acquiesce to the industry’s cry for more time.  BCIs still have to register by 6 April 2024 but they have been given a further 13 weeks’ extension to successfully complete their competence assessments.  Interestingly, the Welsh Government have taken a similar approach but have given RBIs a 6 months’ extension.

"This problem is not being viewed as limited solely to RBIs.  For a registered building control approver (‘RBCAs’), competency assessments are not needed, but certain information is required at the time of the application and the applicant may be invited to attend an interview.  It is therefore unsurprising that the HSE has chosen not to make any adjustment to the registration deadlines for RBCAs - steadfastly sticking to the 6 April 2024 registration deadline.

"It remains to be seen how much of an impact on the construction projects pipeline we will see.  For higher-risk building projects, employers will be focussed on satisfying the requirement to have sufficiently progressed the works by 6 April 2024. But (among other matters), their appointed approved inspector must also have registered as an RBCA by 6 April 2024.  If not, they will encounter potentially substantial programme  and budget impacts applying to the HSE in its capacity as the building safety regulator for building control approval and depending upon which of the alternative transitional provisions apply in the given scenario.

"The Construction Leadership Council reported an estimated decrease in the construction output of 0.9% in the three months to January 2024, attributed to a decrease in new work, both for infrastructure and private housing.  It remains to be seen whether the industry’s greatest fears on delay and cost as a result of registration issues will materialise.

Read the full piece in Construction News here (subscription required).

 

Our thinking

  • Building Safety and the challenges for UK construction - where are we now?

    David Savage

    Events

  • Women in Leadership: Resilience in Entrepreneurship

    Events

  • Dominic Lawrance and Catrin Harrison write for Tax Journal on the implications of the Court of Appeal judgment in the case of ‘A Taxpayer v HMRC’

    Dominic Lawrance

    In the Press

  • BBC Radio 5 Live and The Telegraph interview Sarah Jane Boon on Labour’s plans for cohabitation reform

    Sarah Jane Boon

    In the Press

  • Something Changed – Landlord recovers possession of iconic music venue

    Samuel Lear

    Quick Reads

  • Implications of Johnson v FirstRand – will secret commissions pave the way for claims from Auto ABS noteholders?

    Caroline Greenwell

    Insights

  • Property Week quotes Georgina Muskett on the future implications of a high-profile court judgment relating to a £32.5m moth-infested mansion

    Georgina Muskett

    In the Press

  • City AM quotes Claire Fallows on the government's new Planning and Infrastructure Bill

    Claire Fallows

    In the Press

  • When is 20% not 20%? The real impact of the proposed changes to business property relief on trading companies

    Sarah Wray

    Quick Reads

  • Joseph Evans, Cassidy Fan and Jessica Boxford write for New Law Journal on the future of insolvency: a digital asset revolution

    Joseph Evans

    In the Press

  • Cohabitation law reform

    Hannah Owen

    Quick Reads

  • Property Patter - Lifetime achievements: Katie Kopec of JLL

    Emma Humphreys

    Podcasts

  • PBC Today quotes Mark White on Manchester United's plans to build a new football stadium worth £2 billion

    Mark White

    In the Press

  • Charles Russell Speechlys finds that Gen Z prioritises financial planning and saving amidst growing economic challenges

    Sally Ashford

    News

  • Law 360 quotes Stewart Hey on the potential integration of the PSR into the FCA and the impact on APP fraud reimbursement

    Stewart Hey

    In the Press

  • Kevin Gibbs and Sadie Pitman write for CoStar on the need for investment in power infrastructure to support new data centres

    Kevin Gibbs

    In the Press

  • New code of practice for the cyber security of AI development

    Rebecca Steer

    Quick Reads

  • Drapers quotes Kerry Stares on the potential for a review of the Modern Slavery Act 2015

    Kerry Stares

    In the Press

  • EU Design Legislation Updates

    Matthew Clark

    Insights

  • The EU Omnibus: resetting the rules on sustainability due diligence

    Kerry Stares

    Insights

Back to top