Government dedicate £8m to boost cladding repair enforcement teams

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The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has announced that £8m of funding will to support cladding repair enforcement teams in England

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has announced that £8m of funding will be split between 59 councils in England to support cladding repair enforcement teams

The government has announced that local teams handling building control issues, such as cladding repair enforcement, are to benefit from an increased £8m funding allocation.

More building owners will be held to account for repairs of high-rise properties thanks to a multi-million-pound expansion in council enforcement teams.

There are still multiple buildings with incomplete cladding removal works across England

Councils have already begun a crackdown through their own teams, but with extra support will now be able to provide more innocent leaseholders with a safe and secure home.

The funding from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities will be split among 59 councils in England and prioritised for those with the highest number of unsafe buildings, particularly in London, Manchester and Birmingham.

Local enforcement units will benefit from greater resources to pursue freeholders who are dragging their heels and refusing to begin repairs.

The Building Safety Programme Monthly Data Release from the DLUHC recently revealed that there are still over 300 high-rise buildings with incomplete unsafe cladding removal works.

The Building Safety Act is designed to protect leaseholders from repair responsibilities

The Building Safety Act makes clear building owners must fix their own buildings. The additional funding will help ensure freeholders cannot escape their responsibilities.

More than 45 of the UK’s biggest house builders have pledged to do the right thing and agreed to fund work to fix life-critical, fire-safety defects on buildings 11 metres and over that they had a role in developing or refurbishing over the last 30 years – including those which have applied for or received government funding.

Where a developer cannot be identified or has not yet agreed to pay for its own buildings, the £4.5bn Building Safety Fund is available to pay for work to address life-critical fire safety issues with buildings 18 metres plus in height with cladding.

Cladding enforcement repair teams will put greater pressure on freeholders

Minister for building safety Lee Rowley said:

“Building owners must get essential cladding repairs done as quickly as possible and we will be relentless in pursuing those who do not.

“We are bolstering council enforcement operations, making them better equipped to make the most of the powers they have to hold freeholders to account and prevent them from dragging their heels.

“I look forward to working with councils to ensure we keep up the pressure on freeholders so they step up to the plate.”

Cllr Dora Dixon-Fyle, cabinet member for community safety at Southwark Council, said:

“We’ve been taking enforcement action against private residential building owners who haven’t completed necessary cladding work for some years now. This is part of our thorough fire safety measures that protect people.

“However, we have far more high-rise buildings than many other London boroughs, meaning that this funding will support a much needed expansion of our work.”

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