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It’s been quite the year for building safety

The past year has been a significant one for building safety. Womble Bond Dickinson’s Simon Lewis, Michelle Essen and Ryan Lavers reflect on the year’s events and look ahead to 2022.

What a year it's been for building safety. The construction sector has seen a significant amount of progress in this area over the last 12 months. To give some perspective on how things have changed, we've looked at the biggest leaps forward in 2021 and have also cast an eye towards 2022 to consider what we can expect next.

Building safety bill

The most talked about legislative development in 2021 was the steady progress of the building safety bill, which was officially laid before parliament in July. While it was based in large part on the draft that was circulated for comment in 2020 and was therefore in many respects already familiar, its provisions are being increasingly scrutinised in its passage through parliament. 

The bill's proposed changes are considerable and include: 

  • More-than-doubling the limitation period for bringing a claim for breach of s.1 Defective Premises Act 1972 (DPA). This requires residential buildings to be habitable and built in a professional or workmanlike manner with proper materials. The Bill increases that limitation period from six to 15 years – and it would apply prospectively (going forward) and also retrospectively, meaning that claims that are currently time-barred would become an option again.
  • Inserting a brand new s.2A into the DPA, which would extend the DPA to cover subsequent building works (as s.1 only covers the original construction of the building), with a limitation period of 15 years prospectively.
  • Bringing s.38 Building Act 1984 into force, to allow claims for damage caused by breach of Building Regulations, with a limitation period of 15 years prospectively.
  • Establishing a new Building Safety Regulator (BSR), and 
  • Creating a new “duty-holders” regime, where duty-holders would have greater responsibility to explain how they are managing safety risks and to show the BSR that a building is safe for occupation. Duty-holders would include existing duty-holders under the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015, such as (principal) contractors, (principal) designers and the client. 

As we have said before, we are still just at the start of our journey with the building safety bill. The effects of the changes it will bring and its impact on industry, including around risk and insurance, are hot topics of discussion which we explored with industry leaders recently. In the meantime, the bill continues to make its way through parliament, and is expected to receive royal assent in 2022.

It is worth reiterating though that the bill when it becomes law will have a more limited effect in Scotland, which has its own building and fire safety regime.

Fire Safety Act 2021

The fire safety bill was given royal assent in April, becoming the Fire Safety Act 2021. It was not smooth progress into law for the bill, as the House of Lords requested leaseholder protection on three separate occasions because it wanted building owners to be responsible for the costs of remedial works, or a system of government grants or loans in place if leaseholders were to bear the cost of repairs themselves. 

In the end, the act did not take this leaseholder protection into account, and instead it is possible for building owners to pass the costs of fire safety works onto leaseholders via increased service charges or similar. Again, the position in Scotland is different, as the Fire Safety Act only applies to England and Wales.  

Cladding remediation and government funds

The Building Safety Fund (BSF) of £1bn, which was set up in 2020, has continued to provide support in 2021 to help landlords who own residential buildings of 18m or more in height to remove unsafe non-aluminium composite material (ACM) cladding.  The aim of this fund is to protect leaseholders from the cost of these remediation works through increased rent payments or service charges.  

2021 also saw a brand-new fund created - the Waking Watch Relief Fund - to provide an additional £30m for applicants to the BSF to fund waking watch (i.e. building patrols to detect fire), since the cost of fire alarms are not covered by the BSF funding.  

This fund was announced in December 2020 and opened for applications in January 2021. £22m of the £30m available was to be spent in cities where private-sector buildings were deemed most at risk due to their prevalence of built-up areas (namely Greater London, Greater Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Sheffield, Liverpool, Newcastle and Bristol), with the remaining £8m planned for other private-sector buildings in England plus all social-sector housing over 18m. The fund closed in April, reopened in May to distribute unused funding and then closed again in June. 

It is also worth noting that in the autumn budget, the chancellor said: “We’re also confirming £5bn to remove unsafe cladding from the highest risk buildings partly funded by the Residential Property Developers Tax”. We know about that tax but details about what constitutes the rest of that funding is still awaited. 

Changes to planning permission requirements

The Hackitt Report’s recommendations included the addition of several ‘gateways’ to check that newly designed buildings are safe for residents to live in. 

In August 2021, gateway one came into force, in the form of new planning requirements. Now high-rise developers must consider fire safety in new developments at the planning permission stage, to be evidenced as a part of the planning permission process through the submission of a fire statement. Local authorities are expected to engage with the Health and Safety Executive when reviewing the fire statements provided by developers, but this role is expected to be taken over by the new BSR when it is operational.  

Gateways two and three under the building safety bill will be before the building works start and when the building works are completed respectively, and are anticipated to come into force around late 2023.

What to look out for in 2022

We anticipate a number of other significant developments in building safety in 2022.

Phase 2 Grenfell Inquiry - Despite delays due to Covid-19, the Phase 2 hearings continued in 2021. So even with the new Omicron variant, we expect that the hearings will continue in one form or another in 2022. At the moment, the hearings are expected to finish in the summer, with the Phase 2 report potentially being published at the end of 2022.

A new tax - Between April and July 2021, the government ran a consultation on a new Residential Property Developer Tax on residential property developers’ profits above £25m a year, to raise £2bn (over ten years) towards remediating unsafe cladding in residential buildings over 18m. Draft legislation was then published for industry comment between September and October 2021. In the chancellor’s budget in October 2021, he referred to the Residential Property Developers Tax saying, “I can confirm [it] will be levied on developers with profits over £25m at a rate of 4%”. This is set to apply from 1 April 2022. 

A new levy - As part of the building safety bill, a new building safety levy is being proposed on developers of certain high-rise buildings at ‘gateway two’ (the seeking of regulatory permission to construct high-rise buildings). A consultation on this levy ran from July to October 2021, seeking industry input on the design and structure of the levy, timings for implementing it, and any potential impacts on the supply of housing which may result from it. An update on the outcome of this consultation is expected in 2022.

Building safety bill - As mentioned above, royal assent is expected in 2022, with changes to the limitation periods under the DPA and the Building Act expected to follow shortly after.  

For more anticipated changes see Womble Bond Dickinson’s Building Safety Timeline and for more information about building safety, visit the firm's rebuild hub.

Simon Lewis is a partner, Michelle Essen, a managing associate and Ryan Lavers, a solicitor, all at Womble Bond Dickinson.