6 Audit Wales - 'Cracks in the Foundations' - Building Safety in Wales PDF 273 KB
Additional documents:
Decision:
That the report be noted.
Minutes:
Members
received an overview of the circulated report from Audit Wales.
Officers mentioned the report was a local
government national study, not specific to Neath Port Talbot, but the
recommendations apply to all local authorities in Wales.
Officers
highlighted that all 22 councils were looked at a high level and the
conclusions that were reached. Responsible bodies were yet to develop
comprehensive plans that set out how the new and revised responsibilities
introduced by the Building Safety Act will be addressed.
Resourcing issues make it unlikely that
local authorities can successfully implement the new building safety regime or
that services were fit for purpose. There was little evaluation of building
control services across Wales and no national comprehensive system of building
safety assurance.
Officers
mentioned there were eight recommendations issued in the report, of those
recommendations, four were for Welsh Government and four were for local
authorities.
Officers
mentioned that the first recommendation related to the developing of an action
plan, and whilst there wasn’t a bespoke action plan in place, there was a lot
of work that was going on in parallel in addition to systems in place which
could essentially be pulled into an action plan.
Officers had
reviewed the structure that Building Control has in place and were content that
the structure was fit for purpose, albeit it was noted there were significant
challenges with recruitment.
Officers
highlighted the second recommendation that links to local authorities needing
to review their financial management to ensure that the building control
function is compliant with the regulations. Officers mentioned they regularly
review the fee structures looking at hourly rates of Officers and the Council
already publishes on an annual basis its financial statements.
The third
recommendation related to local authorities needing to explore the need to
potentially collaborate and to regionalise to strengthen that resilience in
terms of the challenges that the profession has overall.
Officers
mentioned Carmarthenshire Council has a team in place, which under service
level agreements with authorities, who provide the planning service for
minerals and waste which is a specialist function within the planning sphere.
Moving forward it may be that local authorities will need to look at a similar
potential regionalisation model as options to consider going forward.
Officers also
explained that we are working with LABC in developing a model for cross
boundary and collaborative working.
The fourth
recommendation relates to the need for local authorities to continue to review
their risk management processes and looking at particularly mitigation. Officers mentioned that risks were already captured within the directorate risk register. If it
needed to escalate further, then the Council has a wider strategic risk register,
which could be added to going forward.
The Chair asked
in relation to the hourly rates situation with regards to financial management.
Officers stated that it had not been possible to uplift the hourly rate due to
efficiency savings within the section and on costs.
Members asked in relation to keeping up with the costs for people ... view the full minutes text for item 6