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John MacDonald: A Cantabrian's perspective on govt building changes

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Tue, 29 Apr 2025, 1:02pm
Photo / File
Photo / File

John MacDonald: A Cantabrian's perspective on govt building changes

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Tue, 29 Apr 2025, 1:02pm

I reckon a lot of us in Canterbury won鈥檛 be as excited as people elsewhere in the country about the Government鈥檚 plan to let builders, plumbers and drainlayers sign-off their own work.

I say that because of the bare faced lies a lot of us were told by builders after the quakes.

So this is going to apply to the construction of simple, standardised houses to try and reduce the need for so many council inspections and to speed-up building times.

The Government reckons there鈥檚 about 3,000 homes that will pop-up sooner through these changes. But the only way I鈥檇 be happy to even consider going along with this, would be if the Government listens to what the NZ Certified Builders organisation is saying.

Malcolm Fleming heads it and while he thinks, overall, the Government is doing the right thing, he reckons the Government should go further and introduce a quality mark for builders. To give homeowners confidence that their builder is qualified to sign-off their own work.

I think it's a brilliant idea.

Before the earthquakes we did quite a major renovation and I reckon, back then, I would have been quite happy for the builder to sign things off himself. He was an ex-detective. A great guy. And we didn鈥檛 have any problems with him at all.

But that was back in the day when I was a bit more trusting. Not now, though.

Because from what we saw here in Canterbury, when there鈥檚 the lure of money and cashflow and a need to keep your people busy, it can be pretty tempting for tradespeople to cut corners.

And that鈥檚 what I see this new scheme being. A licence to cut corners.

There are very good and reliable and trustworthy builders, plumbers and drainlayers who probably think I need to get over it.

And maybe I do. But, when you get to the point of dreading seeing anyone in a high vis top coming down your driveway because you鈥檝e been stung one too many times, then I can鈥檛 help feeling the way I do about this move by the Government.

I won't be the only person in Canterbury feeling this way. I won't be the only person in the whole country feeling this way.

Building and Construction Minister Chris Penk, though, thinks he鈥檚 onto a winner.

He鈥檚 saying: 鈥淢aking it easier and more affordable to build would open the door to home ownership for more Kiwis and support growth and job creation in the construction sector.鈥

He says: 鈥淲e can鈥檛 achieve this vision while the building consent system remains slow and overloaded. Even simple, single-storey homes must go through around 12 inspections before they鈥檙e finished, with costly delays when demand is high.

鈥淎t a time when many Kiwis are locked out of the housing market, that鈥檚 simply not good enough.鈥

But what I would say to that is that failing to learn from past mistakes isn鈥檛 good enough, either.

And, surely, if we have learned anything from Canterbury's earthquake recovery experience it鈥檚 this. That, when it comes to building, more safeguards are needed - not less.

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