This article about the Design & Building Practitioners Act 2020 has been provided by Bannermans Lawyers.
Introduction
The NSW Government recently made the Designers and Building Practitioners Regulation 2021 (“Regulation”) under the Designers and Building Practitioners Act 2020 (“Act”), assisting greatly in establishing how the Act will be phased in and work in practical terms.
The Act operates in conjunction with the Residential Apartment Buildings (Compliance and Enforcement Powers) Act 2020 which we have considered in a separate article titled Building Commissioners New Powers.
We have prepared this article to assist in determining what action you should take in light of the new legislation. This article is aimed at strata schemes, their strata managing agents and others dealing with design and building practitioners. Design and building practitioners will require advice far beyond the scope of this article and should consider obtaining urgent legal advice, as they may be engaged in activities impacted by the new legislation.
The Act imposes new obligations on design and building practitioners, focused on improving performance. Persons dealing with design and building practitioners need to consider the following:
- Design and building practitioners performing most kinds of design and construction work in relation to specified classes of buildings (currently class 2 buildings, essentially apartment buildings), will need to be registered and to get the most benefit from the new legislation, persons engaging them should ensure that they are registered.
- An important practical consequence is that schemes will have greater scope for pursuing building defect claims, e.g. the legislation potentially extends the range of claims which may be made and the range of practitioners against whom they may be made, as well as potentially extending limitations periods. Accordingly, schemes and their managing agents experiencing building defect issues should obtain legal advice as to the implications of the new legislation. In particular:
- They may have claims which they had not previously considered.
- They should exercise care, when negotiating settlement of a claim, not to release additional rights they may have under the Act, unless that is intentional.
- Helpful as it may be, the new legislation is not going to resolve a number of ongoing issues, e.g. whether a design and/or building contract is going to achieve the expected outcome for the property owner. That will, as always, turn on the care and attention put into preparing the contract and schemes and their managing agents considering such contracts should obtain legal advice and not rely on this or any other legislation to fully protect them.
The Act commenced in stages:
- As from 11 June 2020, the Act imposed a duty of care on design and building practitioners, i.e. the potential to make a claim against them if they act negligently. This will have potential retrospective effect, i.e. potential to make a claim in relation to work which preceded commencement of the Act.
- As from 1 July 2021, most of the rest of the Act came into force
- At a future date not yet determined, the last of the Act will come into force, being registration requirements in relation to specialist practitioners.
Duty of Care
The Act provides that specified parties owe a duty of care in relation to specified forms of construction work.
Key features:
- Benefit of the duty of care extends to current and future owners.
- Benefit extends to leasehold strata schemes, who do not presently have statutory warranty rights.
- The duty of care extends to persons carrying out construction work and also designers, manufacturers & suppliers of building products and supervisors, coordinators and project managers of construction work, but does not extend to certifiers.
- The duty of care extends to work involving:
- Many classes of building and in particular, a class 2 building, essentially a multi-unit residential building.
- residential building work under the Home Building Act 1989, which extends to most forms of work, including repairs, renovations, decoration and application of protective treatments having a cost exceeding $5,000.
- The duty has potential retrospective effect, extending to loss first became apparent after 11 June 2010, but other legislation restricts the period within which claims must be made and there is currently some doubt as to whether and to what extent this legislation negates this retrospective effect.
Registration Regime
The Act restricts specified kinds of work to registered practitioners:
- Registered design practitioner for work involving preparation of regulated designs.
- Registered principal design practitioner for work involving coordination of design compliance declarations.
- Building practitioner for building work, meaning work involving:
- a class 2 building, essentially a multi-unit residential building.
- residential building work under the Home Building Act 1989, which extends to most forms of work, including repairs, renovations, decoration and application of protective treatments having a cost exceeding $5,000.
- Registered professional engineer for professional engineering work, meaning work that requires, or is based on, the application of engineering principles.
- Registered specialist practitioner for specialist work, meaning design, construction, installation or maintenance of a building element, in turn meaning fire safety systems, waterproofing, internal or external load-bearing components essential to the stability of the building, a component of a building that is part of the building enclosure, aspects of the mechanical, plumbing and electrical services for a building that are required to achieve BCA compliance and other things prescribed by the regulations.
For registration, an application to the Secretary is required, who must be satisfied as to qualifications, skills, experience and professional indemnity insurance, with the possibility of registration being varied, suspended or cancelled in certain circumstances.
There are some transitional arrangements for current practitioners.
Regulation of Regulated Designs
Key concepts:
- Regulated Design means a design that is prepared for a building element or for a performance solution for building work (including a building element) or any other design of a class prescribed by the regulations.
- Building Element means fire safety systems, waterproofing, internal or external load-bearing components essential to the stability of the building, a component of a building that is part of the building enclosure, aspects of the mechanical, plumbing and electrical services for a building that are required to achieve BCA compliance and other things prescribed by the regulations.
- Design Compliance Declaration means a declaration as to whether a regulated design complies with the requirements of the BCA and other applicable requirements prescribed by the regulations.
Key obligations:
- A builder must not carry out building work that requires a regulated design until a final design is received from a together with a design compliance declaration from that.
- A builder bears the responsibility of ensuring that:
- all regulated designs are prepared by;
- regulated designs are accompanied by a design compliance declaration from a.
- A builder must, prior to application for an occupation certificate, provide to the person for whom the work is performed, and other documents required by regulation, stating:
- whether the work complies with the requirements of the;
- whether the work complies with the requirements of any other applicable regulations;
- if non-compliant, the steps the builder will take to ensure compliance;
- whether the builder has relied upon and built in accordance with each regulated design as prepared by a registered design practitioner;
- whether the builder has obtained a design compliance declaration for each of the regulated designs;
- whether a has been appointed in relation to the to which the design compliance declaration relate; and
- whether the builder has obtained a principle compliance declaration from the principle design practitioner in relation to the design compliance declaration.
- A principal certifier must not issues an occupation certificate without these documents.
- Transitional arrangements apply for work commenced prior to 1 July 2021 and for work based on designs prepared before that date.
Investigation & Enforcement
The Act impose severe penalties for non-compliance.
The Act also provides for the appointment of authorised officers with wide-ranging powers to investigate compliance, including powers to:
- Require the production of documents and records;
- Require persons to attend at a specified time and place and answer questions;
- Enter premises and in some circumstances inspect and seize items;
- Obtain search warrants;
- Access or demolish building work if an ‘authorised officer’ has reasonable grounds for believing that it is necessary because of an offence under the Act.
The Secretary can also issue a stop work order if the Secretary is of the opinion that the work is or is likely to be carried out in contravention of the Act and such contravention could result in significant harm or loss to the public, potential occupiers or significant damage to property.
Remedial Works
Fortunately, not all remedial works are captured by the provisions and consideration of the complicated exemption provision found at clause 13 of the Design & Building Practitioners Regulation 2021 should be undertaken if you wish to avoid these implications.
Bannermans Lawyers E: enquiries@bannermans.com.au P: 02 9929 0226
This post appears in Strata News #606.
The information contained in this article is general information only and not legal advice. The currency, accuracy and completeness of this article (and its contents) should be checked by obtaining independent legal advice before you take any action or otherwise rely upon its contents in any way.
This article has been republished with permission from the author and first appeared on the Bannermans Lawyers website.
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