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BUILDING AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2004 (NO 1) (NO 46 OF 2004)
2004
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
BUILDING
AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2004 (No
1)
Subordinate Law
SL2004-46
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated by authority of
Mr Simon Corbell
MLA
Minister for Planning
BUILDING AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2004 (No
1)
These are new regulations under the Building Regulations
2004.
The Building Act 2004 and the Building Regulations 2004
both commenced on 1 September 2004.
Those laws generally
provide for the procedures and technical standards to be followed in relation to
doing building work and occupying buildings. Prior to
1 September 2004, those matters were regulated under the Building
Act 1972, which was repealed on commencement of the Building Act
2004.
An intention in enacting the Building Act 2004 was to
provide a seamless transition from the previous regulatory regimes of the
Building Act 1972 (repealed) to the Building Act 2004, with the
exception of builder licensing provisions, which were essentially relocated into
the Construction Occupations (Licensing) Act 2004. To do so the
Building Act 2004 contains various transitional provisions in relation to
matters previously regulated by the former Act.
The Building Act
2004, s 179 (Regulations modifying pt 11), provides to the effect that the
Building Regulations 2004 may modify the operation of the Building Act
2004, part 11 (Transitional), to make provision in relation to any matter
that is not, or is not in the Executive’s opinion adequately, dealt with
in that part 11.
The new regulations are necessary to make minor
modifications to the Building Act 2004 to provide for certain matters not
dealt with in part 11 of that Act.
Clause 1 provides that the name of the new regulations is the
Building Amendment Regulations 2004 (No 1).
Clause 2
prescribes that the new regulations commence on the day after the day that the
regulations are notified.
Clause 3 provides that the new
regulations amend the Building Regulations 2004.
Clause 4
inserts new regulation 5 (1) (c) (v), which limits the span of relevant exempt
structures to 4 metres. That is necessary to align the exemption with the
corresponding former exemption in the Building Act 1972
(repealed).
Clause 5 inserts a new regulation 32 (Modifications of
Act, pt 11—Act, s 179), which has the effect of modifying the Building
Act 2004 by inserting into that Act 3 new sections—
s 164A
(Certificate of regularisation); and
s 164B (Application of s 88 (2)
(b)); and
s 164C (Prudential Standards).
The above-mentioned new s
164 (Certificate of regularisation), has the intention of making a transitional
provision to effectively provide that certificates of regularisation, issued
under the Building Act 1972 as in force at any time, may be taken as
being issued under the Building Act 2004, s 75.
Such certificates
are issued in relation to certain buildings constructed by the Commonwealth of
Australia outside of the provisions of ACT building laws. The intent of those
certificates is to provide comfort to prospective purchasers of such buildings
by permitting occupancy of the building despite an absence of a certificate
otherwise permitting that occupancy under the Building Act 2004.
It is necessary to make the transitional provision to provide certainty
about the ongoing validity and force of such certificates despite the repeal of
the Act some were issued under—the Building Act 1972.
The
above-mentioned new s 164B (Application of s 88 (2) (b)), in effect adjusts an
inappropriate reference to ‘plans approved for the work by the
construction occupations registrar’ as that register has no entitlement to
approve such plans. The adjusted reference is instead to ‘approved
plans’. That term approved plans is defined in the
Dictionary to the Building Act 1972.
The above-mentioned new s
164C (Prudential standards), is intended to remove doubt that the prudential
standards made under the Building Act 1972 are taken to be prudential standards
under the Building Act 2004.
Fidelity fund schemes approved under the
Building Act 2004 are required by that Act to conduct the schemes in
accordance with prudential standards approved under that Act. Fidelity fund
schemes provide coverage against risk of loss due to a breach of statutory
warranty, which is a warranty given by the builder providing that building work
will meet certain specified requirements. Fidelity fund scheme coverage is not
taken as providing insurance for the purposes of certain insurance law, and so
the prudential standards provide for matters such as scheme governance etc, in a
similar way that insurance law regulates insurance providers.
Nil