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Government sets out timetable for Building Safety Bill

The Palace of Westminster (Image: Dreamstime/Tomas1111)

The passage of the Building Safety Bill through Parliament is expected to take at least nine months, the government has said.

Following the Bill’s publication today (5 July), the government said it expected a number of changes would come into force in the next 12 months. Those changes include:

  • Establishing the Residents’ Panel within the Building Safety Regulator.
  • Additional powers for the regulation of construction products, including paving the way for a national regulator for construction products, which is being established within the Office of Product Safety and Standards (OPSS).
  • Changes to the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005.
  • Strengthening the powers of the Architects Registration Board to monitor the competence of architects.
  • Extending the limitation period of the Defective Premises Act 1972 retrospectively - and applying this Act to refurbishments prospectively.

It predicted that the “bulk” of new provisions brought forward under the Bill would come into force 12-18 months after the Bill receives Royal Assent in Parliament.

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