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BUILDING (RESIDENTIAL BUILDING WARRANTY) AMENDMENT BILL 2003
2003
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN
CAPITAL TERRITORY
BUILDING (RESIDENTIAL BUILDING WARRANTY)
AMENDMENT BILL 2003
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Circulated by authority
of
Simon Corbell
MLA
Minister for Planning
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
BUILDING (RESIDENTIAL
BUILDING WARRANTY) AMENDMENT BILL
2003
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Overview
This is an amending bill. It amends the Building Act
1972 (“the principal act”) and the Building Regulations
1972.
Part 6 of the principal act and
regulations 18 to 20 of the Building Regulations describe the warranty
protection that builders must obtain to protect building owners before
undertaking residential building work. The amendments alter the minimum terms
of warranty protection in line with recent changes in NSW and Victoria. These
changes are considered necessary to ensure that insurance will continue to be
available to protect home owners. The following are the principal
changes:
Warranty protection applies only if
the builder has died, disappeared or is insolvent. The principal act is
formulated in a way that implies a slightly wider application though not the
scope of jurisdictions where the insurer provided first resort cover against
defects and recovered the costs from the
builder.
Warranty protection is limited to
buildings with a maximum of three residential storeys or three storeys and a
garage level. The principal act is formulated in a way intended to impose this
limitation and is now reworded for clarity.
The
lower limit of residential building work that requires warranty protection is
increased from $5,000 to $12,000. Building work in this range of values is
minor extensions and alterations to
dwellings.
The period for which warranty
protection applies to completed residential building work ceases to be five
years for all residential building work and becomes six years for structural
defects and two years for non-structural defects. This is more closely aligned
with the periods in which faults in these categories can be expected to become
apparent. Structural defects may remain latent for a lengthy period because the
design of a building did not take adequate account of long-term soil movement.
Other defects should be obvious in a shorter
period.
Developers no longer need to be
protected by warranty protection but people who buy a residential building from
a developer continue to be protected. This was not one of the points that
concerned the insurers but was part of legislation in NSW and Victoria before
the recent changes. Developers can be expected to be more informed consumers
than buyers of single dwellings and not to require this kind of statutory
protection. The bill does not prevent developers from obtaining other insurance
products to protect their
investment.
Details
Name of Act
Clause 1 is a formal clause that gives the
name that the bill will have if passed.
Commencement
Clause 2 is a formal clause that links the
commencement of the bill to its notification on the legislation
register.
Act amended
Clause 3 is a formal clause that identifies the
principal act.
Definitions for Part 6 –
Completion day
Clause 4 adds a definition of “completion
day” to Part 6 of the Principal Act. This change is a consequence of that
made by clause 7.
Definitions for Part 6 –
Ground storey
Clause 5 omits the definition of “ground
storey” from Part 6 of the Principal Act. This change is a consequence of
that made by clause 6.
Definitions for Part 6 –
Residential building
Clause 6 alters the definition of residential
building to limit the maximum height of a building that requires warranty
protection to three residential storeys and a garage or garages underneath.
Meaning of “completion
day” for part 6
Clause 7 inserts in the principal act new section
59A, which defines a “completion day” for residential building work.
This is part of the change described in connection with clause
8.
Statutory
warranties
Part 6 of the principal act creates statutory warranties
for residential building work that are deemed to be part of the agreement
between the builder and the landowner concerned. The principal act currently
states that the warranties remain in force for a period that begins with the
issue of a certificate of occupancy for the work. Clause 8 revises this
provision so that even if no certificate of occupancy is issued, the statutory
warranties will still expire at a time linked to the completion of the
residential building work concerned.
Residential building work
insurance
Clause 9 revises the requirements of the
principal act for the minimum period of warranty protection in the same way that
is described under clause 8 for the statutory warranties.
New sections 64 (1A) and
(1B)
Clause 10
inserts in the principal act new provisions
that exclude developers from compulsory warranty protection and specify
that minimum warranty protection is limited to occasions when the builder
concerned has died, disappeared or become insolvent.
New section 64
(9)
Clause 11 replaces section 64 (9) of the
principal act. The effect is to insert a provision that gives the meaning of
the reference to “developer” in new section 64 (1A) and prevent the
application of the existing definition of “deposit” from being
affected by changes in the number of subsections in section
64.
Section 64
Clause 12 provides for the renumbering of the
subsections of section 64 of the principal act as amended by this
bill.
Regulations
amended
Clause 13 indicates that Part 3 (the remaining
provisions) of the bill amend the Building Regulations and not the Building
Act.
Cost of work
Regulation 18 states the maximum
value of residential building work that does not require warranty protection.
Clause 14 increases this figure to
$12,000.
End of warranty
Regulation 19 deals with the period for which warranty
protection must be provided. Clause 15 changes this from five years for
all building work to six years for structural elements (as defined in the
revised regulation) and two years for non-structural
elements.
Financial
Implications
Nil.
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