INDEPENDENT NEWS

Building systems WOFs: Council checks fall far short

Published: Wed 9 May 2018 04:29 PM
Phil Pennington, Reporter
Only 10 buildings in Porirua have been checked by the council for building safety systems compliance in three years, far short of the roughly 330 checks recommended.
Porirua city, which lies between Wellington and Kāpiti Coast in the region's west. Photo: Porirua
The city north of Wellington has 437 buildings that have warrants of fitness covering 16 types of systems including emergency warning systems, fire sprinklers, lifts, emergency lights and smoke control.
The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment recommends checking about a quarter of the stock each year, so Porirua should check about 110 annually.
However, a report released to RNZ under the Official Information Act showed the council estimated just 10 on-site of buildings in the three-and-a-half years between March 2012 and August 2015.
RNZ sought reports on four councils after the ministry's overarching review found two-thirds had big gaps in how they policed the building safety systems.
Read the full reports here
For some time, the ministry's repeated response to requests had been only that there was "room for improvement".
Porirua was also not the council with the worst record, with one of the 38 councils reviewed since 2014 having audited just three of its 423 buildings since March 2012. RNZ has sought answers on which council that was.
Like many other councils Porirua had some woeful paperwork, with up-to-date compliance schedules on just 25 of its buildings. Those with outdated ones included churches, a kōhanga reo and the council's own buildings.
All the schedules were meant to have been updated by 2013.
The council had also issued just one infringement notice to building owners in eight years. The ministry said a notice to fix should be seen as a "common everyday building control tool".
The council told RNZ it had employed someone to look after building warrants of fitness and fixed its building forms since the 2015 review.
"We have addressed all the matters raised by MBIE," council manager of building compliance Kelvin Newman told RNZ in a statement.
"We have a programme in place to complete the recommended 110 onsite BWOF checks by the end of the year," Mr Newman said.
"So far we have carried out 22 [on-site inspections] ... and 70 desktop surveys."
Desktop surveys would not reveal if independent building inspectors were making mistakes or cutting corners, however.
The council also would not say how many on-site audits were done in 2016 and 2017, saying it had not fixed its IT system and could not track warrant of fitness data.
It also would not say how many buildings had corrected their compliance schedules.
Mr Newman pointed out responsibility for keeping a building safe falls on building owners, not councils.
"Building owners who fail to meet these requirements may be risking the health and/or life safety of the building occupants," the ministry said.
Despite the council's failings, the OIA response revealed the ministry took a lighthanded approach. It made some suggestions, but did not go so far as to make recommendations.
"We trust you have found the review to be of some value and have seen it as an opportunity to improve some of your building control activities," the report said.
The reviewers did schedule an earlier-than-usual return visit.
Along with the report on Porirua, three others were released to RNZ.
Wellington City Council and Whangarei District Council had robust building WOF systems, with many checks.
RNZ is seeking more information about the fourth report, of New Plymouth District Council, which the ministry praised despite it having done few on-site audits and issuing zero infringement notices in a decade.
RNZ
New Zealand's public broadcaster, providing comprehensive NZ news and current affairs, specialist audio features and documentaries.
Radio New Zealand is a Crown entity established under the Radio New Zealand Act 1995. Radio New Zealand News are vital elements in our programming, providing impartial news and information to New Zealanders every day. Radio New Zealand (RNZ) provides listeners with exciting and independent radio programmes in accordance with the Radio New Zealand Charter.

Next in Comment

The Australian Defence Formula: Spend! Spend! Spend!
By: Binoy Kampmark
New Hospital Building Trumps ‘Yes Minister’ Hospital Without Patients
By: Ian Powell
Prices Are Still Rising - It's A Cost Of Living Crisis
By: Mike Treen
On When Racism Comes Disguised As Anti-racism
By: Gordon Campbell
Dunne's Weekly: Newshub And TVNZ Tip Of Media Iceberg
By: Peter Dunne
Austerity – For And Against
By: Harry Finch
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media