Developers risk not being able to get occupation certificates from 1 September 2020
New legislation has just been passed which gives NSW building regulators the unprecedented power to prevent the issuing of occupation certificates (OCs) or the registration of a strata plan for residential apartment buildings where certain requirements are not met.
The Residential Apartment Buildings (Compliance and Enforcement Powers) Act 2020 (RAB Act) commences on 1 September 2020.
The RAB Act applies to Class 2 buildings within the Building Code of Australia (BCA) and includes any building that contains a Class 2 component under the BCA.
A Class 2 building is an apartment building, but could also include mixed-use residential and commercial buildings.
The NSW Government is heralding the RAB Act as one of its six reform pillars designed to build a better regulatory framework to protect consumers who have been wronged in the past by poor building and construction practices. These changes are about making sure that “Developers can no longer turn a blind eye to the work done by practitioners contracted for a project” and that “occupants of buildings deserve to feel safe and secure within their walls”[1].
It is difficult to disagree with the sentiments but questions still remain about how effective these changes will be.
An overview of the key components of the scheme
The scheme operates as follows:
These components are discussed in more detail below.
The problem of volume
At the outset, we note that the RAB Act proposes to regulate a significant number of projects. In Sydney alone, we note that:
This means that the Secretary will need to be processing expected completion notices for hundreds of developments, and each of those developments may have staged OCs which would result in the trebling of that figure. For the system to be successful, the Secretary (and the Building Commissioner) will also need to carry out detailed inspections of a reasonable sample of these projects in an attempt to identify any defects.
The sheer scale of this task was recently described by the Minister for Better Regulation Kevin Anderson as “a mammoth undertaking”[5]. It is difficult to disagree with that statement.
As part of the six reform pillars, the Government has also said that it will establish a shared industry wide electronic platform. Potentially the first test of such a platform would be to manage the potentially overwhelming volume of expected completion notices what will start arriving from 1 September 2020. Any failure to promptly respond to all the effective completion notices will damage confidence in the RAB Act and leave many projects stranded.
Who is a “developer” for the purpose of the RAB Act?
The RAB Act seeks to regulate “developers”. The definition of “developer” has been drafted very broadly as part of any attempt to capture (and therefore regulate) the various players that contribute to the construction of a residential apartment building.
This is why the term “developer” is defined under the RAB Act as including:
This means that for many projects, there will be multiple “developers” for the purpose of the RAB Act.
It is also worth noting that the RAB Act definition of a developer is even broader than the definition under the Home Building Act 1989 (HBA), which captures an individual, partnership or corporation on whose behalf residential building work is done (or the owner of the subject land), for some projects.
Notice of applications for an OC
One of the key features of the RAB Act is the introduction of a notification regime surrounding the date for the intended completion of building work.
Specifically, the Act requires that developers notify the Secretary at least six months, but not more than 12 months, before an application for an OC is made. This is known as the “expected completion notice”.
The completion date identified in the expected completion notice needs to be accurate to within 60 days because if the date changes beyond that 60 days (because work is expected to complete sooner or later than anticipated) a further notice, referred to as the “expected completion amendment notice”, needs to be issued to the Secretary.
The intention is that by providing the Secretary with a reasonable notice period that building work is nearing completion for part of a building, the Secretary will have sufficient lead time to examine the construction of the building and to detect and act on any identified serious building defects before an OC is issued[6].
Failure to comply with these notification provisions will render a developer liable for a maximum penalty of $55,000 in the case of a body corporate or $11,000 in any other case.
What is an OC for the purpose of the RAB Act?
The term “occupation certificate” is defined in s 3 of the RAB Act as an OC issued under the EP&A Act.
Relevantly, Part 6 of the EP&A Act which deals with building and subdivision certification was amended on 1 December 2019 to, amongst other things, remove interim OCs from the planning framework. Instead, OCs can now only be issued for completed buildings, or completed parts of buildings.
This is important because, as a matter of practice, developers will often stage a project, with each stage being subject to a separate OC (or previously an interim OC).
In the context of the RAB Act, it is clear that the obligations imposed on developers will need to be complied with in respect of each OC – even where a project might have multiple OCs.
This means that the administrative burden on developers, the Secretary, and the Building Commissioner alike will be multiplied tenfold.
Further, we also note that it is unclear how the RAB Act is to apply in respect of those developments caught by the savings and transitional arrangements under the EP&A Act which are not currently subject by the new Part 6 (and therefore, may be eligible to obtain interim OCs). For example, are the obligations under the RAB Act intended to apply to those applications for interim OCs?
Power to prohibit the issue of an OC
The RAB Act also gives the Secretary the power to prohibit the issue of an OC, known as a “prohibition order”.
A prohibition order may be given where:
A “serious defect” will exist where a building work rectification order is in effect, or a development control order has been issued under the EP&A Act which relates to a defect in building work.
Once issued, the Secretary is required to give notice of the prohibition order to the local council or the relevant certifier for the building work.
The justification proffered for this prohibition power is that it “is the ultimate signal to the developer that they must resolve any noncompliance or face never having the building sold or occupied”[7].
Investigation powers
Part 3 of the RAB Act establishes an investigation framework that will be delegated to the Building Commissioner and his compliance staff. For example, the Act:
These powers are coupled with a provision which makes it an offence for a person to obstruct, hinder or interfere with an authorised officer in the exercise of their functions.
Other enforcement powers
Aside from prohibition orders, the Secretary also has the power to issue a “stop work order” where there is an opinion that the building work:
Additionally, the Secretary may make a “building work rectification order” where it has a reasonable belief that building work is being carried out in a manner that could result in a serious defect. This order effectively requires the developer to carry out certain works, or refrain from carrying out certain works, in order to “eliminate, minimise or remediate” a serious defect or potential serious defect.
How to lift an order?
Once given, an order remains in effect until the order is complied with, expires (if a date is specified), or is otherwise revoked by the Secretary or the Court.
While the RAB Act does allow for undertakings to be provided, it appears as though the undertaking can only be given as an alternative to an order and is not a regime to allow developers to give undertakings in satisfaction of an order that has already been given.
This means that where a prohibition order has been made because, for example, a building work rectification order is in place, a developer will need to physically carry out the works in order for the prohibition order to be revoked and the OC to be issued.
This will place further financial constraints on developers as the inability to sell units (arising from the prevention of the issuing of OCs) will directly impact on cash flow, potentially making it difficult to finance the works required to satisfy an order.
Appeals
The RAB Act provides some limited rights of appeal. For example, a developer may appeal against the making of a prohibition order to the Land and Environment Court within 30 days of notice of the order. The same appeal rights apply in respect of stop work orders and building work rectification orders.
Given the serious consequences that flow from the issuing of any of these orders, 30 days is not a long period of time. Developers, landowners, and financiers alike will need to be cognisant of this and seek urgent legal advice once an order is made.
The other likely consequence of having such a short appeal window is that it provides insufficient time for developers to undertake their own investigations to determine whether an alleged defect exists and/or consider what would be required to remedy that defect. This means that in many cases, people will need to commence proceedings in order to preserve their appeal right, before they even know their position regarding the soundness or otherwise of the order. Not only is this inefficient, but it does not promote the just, quick and cheap resolution of disputes and will likely contribute significantly to an already overburdened court system.
Savings and transitional arrangements
The RAB Act incorporates a “transitional period” which ends six months from the commencement of the Act, being on 1 March 2021.
If the developer proposes to make an application for an OC during the transitional period, they are required to notify the Secretary of that OC application within 14 days of the commencement of the RAB Act, being by 14 September 2020.
This gives developers almost no time to adjust to the new regime and also means that the RAB Act will capture almost all existing projects – even those where construction is nearing completion.
The potential impact on developers
Settlements of off the plan sales typically do not occur until after an OC is issued or a strata scheme is registered. In those circumstances, the RAB Act has the potential to hit the traditional developer hard as it stops cash flow from sales by restricting the issue of OCs.
It will be interesting to see how the potential threat to settlement might change the contracting and financing behaviour of developers and whether it may encourage, for example:
What can we take away from this?
The Government’s sole focus is on protecting people buying apartments off the plan. There is no doubt that the RAB Act creates a strict and somewhat radical regime that places the Secretary (and the Building Commissioner) at the helm.
As a result, there is sure to be a significant administrative and compliance burden imposed both on developers who will need to create robust internal project management processes to ensure compliance with the Act, but also the Secretary and the Building Commissioner who bear the brunt of the compliance and enforcement burden.
This means that for the RAB Act to achieve its desired outcome of revolutionising the NSW building and construction industry, the Secretary and the Building Commissioner will need to be sufficiently resourced to carry out their functions efficiently and effectively.
After all, by preventing the issue of OCs, they have placed themselves in the uncomfortable position of being between a developer and its financiers and purchasers, which will likely be a hostile environment if a dispute arises over the quality of construction of a residential apartment building.
Hopefully all of the stakeholders will understand that this catastrophic delay is in their long-term best interests.
Authors: Peter Holt, Christine Jones & Georgia Appleby
[1] Second Reading Speech by Mr Kevin Anderson (Tamworth-Minister for Better Regulation and Innovation) dated 2 June 2020, Legislative Assembly Hansard, 2 June 2020, page 4.
[2] Based on ABS data, analysis provided by City Plan.
[3] Based on data from the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment, analysis provided by City Plan.
[4] Based on the RLB crane index (a count of cranes visible across the City’s skyline), analysis provided by City Plan.
[5] NSW Government, ‘Building reforms boosted with new transformation team’, 6 February 2020.
[6] Second Reading Speech by Mr Kevin Anderson (Tamworth-Minister for Better Regulation and Innovation) dated 2 June 2020, Legislative Assembly Hansard, 2 June 2020, page 4.
[7] Second Reading Speech by Mr Kevin Anderson (Tamworth-Minister for Better Regulation and Innovation) dated 2 June 2020, Legislative Assembly Hansard, 2 June 2020, page 5.
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CONSUMER LAW – representative proceedings pursuant to Pt IVA of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) – where applicant alleges products were not fit for purpose or not of merchantable or acceptable quality – where applicant claims loss or damage suffered arising out of defective building work – claims for statutory compensation and damages under the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) and the Australian Consumer Law
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – representative proceedings under Part IVA of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) (FCA Act) – where order sought requires group members to register and provide certain information – whether Court has power to make such an order under s 33ZF of the FCA Act – whether order is appropriate to ensure that justice is done in the proceeding
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – representative proceedings under Part IVA of the FCA Act – where order sought was that only group members who registered and provided certain information would be eligible to receive any distribution from a settlement or judgment in the proceeding – whether Court has power to make such an order under s 33ZF of the FCA Act – whether order is appropriate to ensure that justice is done in the proceeding – the significance of prejudice concerning limitation periods on third party contribution claims
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – claim for contribution – where State and Territory statutes provided a right of action between tortfeasors or wrongdoers – whether group members suffered damage as a result of a tort and whether the respondents are tortfeasors under the relevant legislation
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – limitation provisions – whether claims for contribution affected by limitation periods in various State and Territory legislation – whether claim for contribution is an action for loss or damage – whether “long stop” limitation provisions relating to defective building work applied to potential claims for contribution
Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) ss 173, 177, 179(b), 183;
Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) Sch 2 Australian Consumer Law ss 18, 29, 33, 54, 271, 236, 271, 327
Building Act 1993 (NT) ss 159, 160(1); Building Act 1993 (Vic) ss 129, 134; Building Act 2004 (ACT) ss 140, 142
Building Act 2016 (Tas) s 327’ Home Building Act 1989 (NSW)
Jamie Beyer t/as Leisure Pools &
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BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION – Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) – Major defect – a small crack in a swimming pool shell not extending below the water-line did not amount to “destruction” of the swimming pool – evidence that the pool shell was not adequately supported and that cracking of the shell had occurred was sufficient to establish that the pool was likely to become unusable
Kode v Tassone [2020] NSWCATAP 108
APPEAL - Civil and Administrative Tribunal – interlocutory decision – practice and procedure – late filing of evidence – explanation for delay – prejudice to respondent – leave refused
Amoiunt payable for building related works on residential development
Hosking v Extend N Build Pty Ltd (No 2) [2020] NSWCA 107
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Taouk v Commissioner for Fair Trading [2020] NSWCATAD 149
MERITS REVIEW - Building and construction – Home Building Act 1989 (NSW) - contractor licence – fit and proper.
DB Homes Pty Ltd v D'Souza
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HOME BUILDING – Contract completion date - Delay damages for late completion- new evidence
Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013; Home Building Act 1989
Burbank Montague Pty Ltd v The Owners – Strata Plan No 8531 [2020] NSWCATAP 100
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Betta Build Group Pty Ltd v El Baba (No. 3) [2020] NSWDC 272
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NSW
Regulations and other miscellaneous instruments
Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment (Activation Precincts) Regulation 2020 (2020-265) — p
Civil and Administrative Tribunal (Amendment No 7) Rule 2020 (2020-250) — published LW 5 June 2020
Work Health and Safety Amendment (Silica) Regulation 2020 (2020-244) — published LW 5 June 2020
Environmental Planning Instruments
State Environmental Planning Policy (Activation Precincts) 2020 (2020-266) — published LW 12 June 2020
Bills introduced Government – 05 June 2020
Residential Apartment Buildings (Compliance and Enforcement Powers) Bill 2020
Non-Government – 05 June 2020
Building Amendment (Mechanical Services and Medical Gas Work) Bill 2020
Bills revised following amendment in Committee – 05 June 2020
Design and Building Practitioners Bill 2020
Residential Apartment Buildings (Compliance and Enforcement Powers) Bill 2020
Bills passed by both Houses of Parliament
Design and Building Practitioners Bill 2020
Residential Apartment Buildings (Compliance and Enforcement Powers) Bill 2020
Bills assented to
Design and Building Practitioners Act 2020 No 7 — Assented to 10 June 2020
Residential Apartment Buildings (Compliance and Enforcement Powers) Act 2020 No 9 — Assented to 10 June 2020
Disclaimer
The information in this publication is of a general nature and is not intended to address the circumstances of any particular individual or entity. Although we endeavour to provide accurate and timely information, we do not guarantee that the information in this newsletter is accurate at the date it is received or that it will continue to be accurate in the future.
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