
Originally Posted by
Brett
The governments approach to managing the leaky homes/buildings issue was a joke initself. The resulting changes to the Building Act and processes around it are off the mark. I don't think that the government should have nearly as much involvement as they do....they seem incapable of responding sensibly to any major drama and respond with the good ol' knee jerk reaction that according to the legislation fixes the problem, but in reality does little to actually address the root causes of the issue. Hence, in the case of leaky building...they are still being built, albeit on a much smaller scale. Buy a plaster house at your own peril! The government answer to a problem 9/10 is to regulate. regulate, regulate regulate. If we regulate against it, it wont happen. *TUI*
Actually it was more of a crime than a joke. The govt (standards Association NZ) removed the requirement for timber treatment to 90% of timber in houses. That factor alone (NZBC B2 compliance failure via decay damage) exacerbated the problem and repair cost by about 500%. Then the dirty fuckers wrote & passed the WHRS Act to allow the creatation and funding of a new litigation pathway so everyone could sue each other (instead of them) and at the same time dissolved the BIA (the govt dept that was then equivalent of todays DBH) and legislated to make it all but impossible to sue BRANZ (Govt dept that appraised all these failed cladding systems as ok) and SANZ. If that isn't the most gutless cunt act of the NZ govt ever, I don't know what is.
The money spent on lawyers and experts by all of the parties involved in the claims is estimated at totaling between 3 to 4 times the claim settlement value. So aside from being inherently unfair (hanging the wrong people) but the system is so fucked that is crippling the economy fourfold to fix it.
The leaky building debacle will cost the country more than the chch earthquakes. The resulting devaluation of our housing stock has helped considerably to drive down our country's international credit rating, so on top of everything else we have to pay extra for the money we borrow to fix it.
This is what happens when you have MMP and tinpot greeny parties that get to play kingmakers in exchange for environmentally friendly laws which allow removal of nasty timber preservatives.
Laws and regulations were unnecessarily and inappropriately changed purely because of politically driven decisions (trade offs).
We can thank the greenies for this horrific disaster. Fucking PC crap is gonna send us all bankrupt.
The Building Act, Regulations and Building Code are horrendously over complicated and are properly understood by approx less than 1% of people in the industry. You need a fucking degree just to understand how the rules are applied before you can even think about studying the rules themselves.
We need to re write our country's rules and regulations, not with new text, but by deleting 66% of it, so we have a half a chance of understanding them. Same goes with tricky dicky artistic wet dream house designs. Keep them simple and outlaw the use of 90% of the materials currently on the market. Go back to basics until we understand them. If you want unrestricted freedom of design perversion and forbidden list material use then build them without any reliance on compliance with the building code or compensation from anyone when it all turns to shit. Fair or unfair it would be a sight better than where we have gone and our flailing attempts to strive for perfection.
That would help drive both compliance and material costs down.
My 2 cents
Political correctness: a doctrine which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd from the clean end.
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