MBIE’s review of the current building consent system
MBIE’s review of the current building consent system
The Ministry of Business Innovation & Employment (MBIE) has released a number of documents outlining the issues it has identified and is consulting with the public as a first step in the review of the building consent system. Submissions close at 5 pm on 4 September 2022.
What are the key issues identified in the current building consent system
MBIE has identified five issues that it says collectively constrain the ability of the building consent system to produce well-made, healthy, durable and safe buildings:
- Roles, responsibilities and accountability: roles and responsibilities across the consenting system are not always well understood, accepted, applied or consistently enforced. There is sometimes over-reliance on building consent authorities to provide assurance of compliance with the Building Code.
- Capacity and capability: building consent authorities face capacity and capability constraints in dealing with an increased volume and complexity of building work. Sector workforce capacity and capability constraints can also undermine the performance of the system.
- System agility: all consents go through the same basic process, which is not always responsive to the level of risk, complexity of the building work, or type of project. The current system does not always deal well with new or innovative practices or products or the design-and-build approach. It is also not sufficiently responsive to the building needs and aspirations of Maori.
- Performance monitoring and system oversight: the performance of the system is insufficiently monitored, and information flows are poor. MBIE is not yet the strong central regulator that was contemplated in the original system design.
- Fragmented implementation:the processing of building consent applications is devolved to territorial authorities who are building consent authorities, which has led to variability and unpredictability in the consent process and its outcomes. This fragmentation adds to the overall costs of the system due to duplication and variable processes, tools and functions being implemented across building consent authorities, and difficulties maintaining a professional workforce.
Risk, liability and insurance
As part of its consultation, MBIE has released a policy position paper outlining the Government’s position on risk, liability and insurance settings building sector and whether there is scope to introduce a building warranty insurance market.
MBIE’s position is that existing rules of joint and several liability should be maintained because the parties (including the building consent authorities) who have actually caused the harm should bear the risk compensating for damage, and owners should not be left out of pocket if one or more liable parties cannot pay its share. MBIE also considers that there is currently a weak case for establishing a public building warranty insurance scheme, however, that may change depending on the findings of its evaluation of the consumer protection measures in the Building Act 2004.
MBIE acknowledges that its position on these issues does not address any existing issues in civil disputes involving co-liable parties. However, its review of the building consent system is intended to lead to a reformed system which has a clear allocation of responsibilities and risk and constructs better buildings overall, leading to fewer defective buildings and civil liability disputes.
What does MBIE want to achieve?
MBIE’s discussion document identifies four critical outcomes a properly functioning building consent regime should aim to achieve:
- Efficiency: a risk-based system that has proportionate compliance costs, allows for innovation, and provides efficient assurance to the building owners and users.
- Roles and responsibilities: a system that sets out clear roles and responsibilities of all building sector participants and the extent they can rely on others for assurance based on their respective ability to identify and manage risks.
- Continuous improvement: a responsive, flexible and agile system that seeks to continually improve through performance and system monitoring, good information flows and feedback loops.
- Regulatory requirements and decisions: a system that ensures all building sector participants clearly understand the regulatory requirements, and the robust, predictable and transparent decisions made by the building consent authorities.