Building Safety Regulator charges regulations and charging scheme published

Building Safety Regulator charges regulations and charging scheme published

The Building Safety (Regulator’s Charges) Regulations 2023 were laid before Parliament on 6 September 2023, to come into force on 1 October 2023. The Regulations can be found here.

The Building Safety Regulator (BSR) Charging Scheme from 1 October 2023 has also been published. The publication details BSR’s charging scheme for chargeable functions, as defined in the Building Safety (Regulator’s Charges) Regulations 2023.

The Scheme explains:

  • the chargeable functions
  • the trigger for each chargeable activity
  • who is required to pay for the chargeable activity
  • what the amount payable will be made up of
  • the relevant legislation for that activity

This information is supplemented by annexes that explain how charges are calculated, how payments and repayments are processed, and the queries and disputes process.

The charging scheme was published on 21 September and can be found here.

CITB launches fire safety in buildings training

CITB launches fire safety in buildings training

CITB has announced the launch of its new Level 1 (awareness) course, which has been developed in partnership with Build UK and fire industry experts. The course is designed to improve an individual’s knowledge of fire safety measures in buildings and is suitable for anyone working in the design, construction, or maintenance of buildings, with a specific focus on installers.

The course is free and is split into five modules:

  • Grenfell
  • Materials
  • Fire protection
  • Competence
  • Installation

Certification lasts five years.

For more information and to register visit https://www.citb.co.uk/courses-and-qualifications/find-a-training-course/ecourses/#firesafetybuildings

Are you ready for the Building Safety Act (2022)?

Are you ready for the Building Safety Act (2022)?

Assent are holding CPD sessions with Colin Blatchford-Brown about the legislative changes for all buildings as part of the Building Safety Act, and what the introduction of the Building Safety Regulator will mean from October 2023.

As an Approved Inspector (soon to be Registered Building Control Approver) Assent are at the forefront of the new regime. The Building Safety Act will change how building projects are managed and the role we all play in the delivery of safe buildings. This includes new dutyholder roles, clients, principal designers and principal contractors.

We’ll also discuss the golden thread and the information needed for higher-risk buildings, as well as the recently released secondary legislation and transitional provisions.

If you would like to attend, please reserve your place via the link below.

11th October – London

Creating a productive environment for UK Construction

Creating a productive environment for UK Construction

Building better: CLC announces plan to boost industry productivity by 25%.

The Construction Leadership Council has today published a new report exploring the potential for the UK industry to transform its productivity, identifying three areas where billions of pounds of savings could be made, or additional value generated for the UK economy.

The analysis explores why average productivity per worker in construction lags 13.5% behind the wider economy and suggests that the introduction of a number of measures – many of them already in the process of delivery – could boost productivity by up to 25%.

For the first time, the report includes a detailed breakdown, issue by issue, of the potential benefits of boosting construction productivity; demonstrating the urgency of the issue and the scale of opportunity on offer if the challenges can be addressed.

The three key focus areas identified by the report are:

  • Better preparation: creating a productive environment to develop and deliver projects; through reforming the planning process for housing and major infrastructure projects; showing consistent leadership in project scope, creating more effective delivery teams, improving supply chain relationships and more collaborative working during the design process; delivering a potential 17% productivity boost and £30bn in annual value added.
  • Better building: delivering construction more productively; through maximising the use of MMC, supporting workers in the industry to re-skill and extending their careers; and reducing re-work through the elimination of errors; delivering a potential 7% productivity boost and £12.7bn in annual value added.
  • Better business: supporting our industry to do business more productively; through supporting digital investment for SMEs, better utilisation of capital and improved data on productivity at a sector level; delivering a potential 2% productivity boost and £2.8bn in annual value added.

Richard Robinson, Deputy Chair of the Construction Leadership Council and Chief Executive Officer, UK & Europe at AtkinsRéalis, said:
“Improving the construction industry’s productivity offers the UK one of our largest economic opportunities. If we can build faster, at a reduced cost, we can spur growth and job creation across the UK – delivering the places and infrastructure our communities want and our economy needs without delay.
“At a time when construction costs and the complexities of planning policy are rightly under scrutiny within the UK, this latest report from the CLC lays out the scale of the opportunity and sets out a roadmap to partner with Government to help us realise it. This isn’t just something that benefits our industry – it’s something that could be transformative for the entire country.”

The report includes a series of recommendations and measures for industry and government to follow, many of which are built on already existing programmes of work; highlights of these include:

  • Reform Planning, Allow industry to pay increased planning fees in returned for guaranteed standards of performance, learning from the best of the current planning authorities who already deliver efficiently and digitally
  • Showing consistent leadership in infrastructure planning, Adopt the proposed National Infrastructure Commission recommendations around accelerating the planning process for Nationally Significant Infrastructure Projects.
  • Supply chain development, work with the industry to bring about widespread fair and balanced commercial terms and payment practices.
  • Explore licensing domestic builder, gather evidence to understand the link between licensing domestic builders to enhance quality and productivity and if sufficient, introduce licensing.
  • Set out a clear policy and regulatory roadmap to accelerate domestic retrofit across UK housing stock.

The measures in the report will be built into the existing Construction Leadership Council delivery programmes.

Building Better – complying with the Building Safety Act

Building Better – complying with the Building Safety Act

The Building Safety Act has introduced a range of changes to the way buildings in the UK are designed, constructed and maintained, with the aim of improving safety and reducing the risk of fire and other hazards. Compliance with these changes will require a range of behavioural and cultural changes across the construction industry.

FIS Technical Director Joe Cilia is taking part in Selo’s Building. Better. seminar which will focus on the behavioural and cultural changes needed in order to comply, and embrace the Building Safety Act within your businesses.

This half day event, starting at 08:15, is taking place on 13 October in Westminster. You can register your interest to attend here.

Joe will be joined by industry-leading speakers who will share information on the Gateway Process, design and procurement requirements and recommendations for manufacturers.

For more information visit https://selo.global/the-building-safety-act-seminar/

Inadequate and incomplete fire stopping leads to safety risks

Inadequate and incomplete fire stopping leads to safety risks

CROSS Collaborative Reporting for Safer Structures UK (CROSS-UK) are the body used by Government to report safety issues to ensure information about safety issues in construction are shared with the sector. They recently published the following report.

Following numerous compartmentation surveys in residential flats, inadequate and incomplete fire stopping of cables and services have been regularly observed as they pass through compartment walls. These appear to be either as part of the initial build or following subsequent installations after premises occupation.

Inadequate fire stopping around cables and other penetrations

FIS together with ASFP and GPDA have developed a labelling initiative to ensure that follow on trades and engineers installing cables don’t simply pass their services through the compartment wall before investing how to carry out the work compliantly.

This link will take you to a short article, written by FIS Technical Director Joe Cilia, How do we ensure that fire walls forming compartmentation don’t fail because additional cables and pipes are installed through the wall post occupancy

More information on the Fire Labelling Scheme is available here: Fire Labelling

The artwork for the labels can be downloaded from https://www.thefis.org/fis-fire-tape-2022-no-crops/