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Alan Ivory's avatar

In September 2024 the Court of Appeal decided Cridge v Studcorp a leaky homes case involving 149 homes. The Court found that not one of the 149 had been built in accordance with the plans and with the Harditex Instructions. And we are going to allow builders to certify? A joke surely. Here’s the link to Cridge:

http://www.nzlii.org/cgi-bin/download.cgi/cgi-bin/download.cgi/download/nz/cases/NZCA/2024/483.pdf#page80

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Ron Segal's avatar

Apart from obvious quality worries, my biggest concern frankly is that the change could turn into monopolisation by larger building companies, forcing out the smaller guys who don't have the resources to pass the requirements for self-certification and for whom access to a now diminished pool of certifiers is even slower and possibly more costly than it is now. To avoid this there has to be a reasonable basis for all firms and individuals to qualify to self-certify, not just large "trusted" companies. Quality might be assured for example by unannounced random checks on the validity of self-certifications with significant penalties involved for breaches including self-certification being suspended or removed. More generally there is no free lunch to achieving quality in any sphere.

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