Construction directors sentenced over asbestos disturbance

Two ex-directors of a construction company have received suspended sentences and fines after a refurbishment project at a former department store in Sunderland was found to have disturbed large quantities of asbestos.

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Engineers report limited safety progress since Grenfell

Just 36% of civil engineers believe that the sector has become safer in the five years since the fatal fire at Grenfell Tower, an industry survey has found, with 92% saying the profession still has lessons to learn from the disaster.

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Construction Act reform considered in June issue of CL

Whether there is need for reform to the Construction Act is considered by Guest Editor James Davison of 3PB Barristers in the latest printed edition of Construction Law, which arrived with subscribers this week.

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News in Brief: 10 June 2022

Tunnelling tactics used by protestors to disrupt infrastructure projects such as High Speed 2 will be banned under an amendment to the Public Order Bill, the Home Secretary announced this week.

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Construction bosses jailed after roofer death

Two construction bosses have been jailed and their companies ordered to pay a combined total of £360,000 for health and safety failings that resulted in a worker falling to his death at a building site in Hove, near Brighton.

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PwC fined £5m over Kier and Galliford Try audit breaches

Big four auditor PwC and one of its former partners have been fined after admitting breaches in relation to its statutory audits of construction firms Kier Group and Galliford Try.

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Grenfell cladding materials banned from all new buildings

Cladding materials of the kind installed at Grenfell Tower will be banned for use on buildings of any height, the government has announced as part of a package of new regulations to improve fire safety.

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Audit reforms set out to prevent Carillion repeat

Plans to revamp the UK’s audit regime through a new regulator with stronger enforcement powers, additional transparency requirements for businesses and measures to tackle the dominance of the Big Four audit firms have been confirmed by the government.

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Two receive jail sentences after fatal roof fall

Two men who were responsible for safety on a cladding job in North Shields have received suspended prison sentences after a worker fell through a fragile roof, suffering injuries that subsequently proved fatal.

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Mandatory embodied carbon assessments urged for buildings

Regulations to mandate whole life carbon assessments for buildings should be introduced by the government, a new report from the Environmental Audit Committee has urged to help address the issue of embodied carbon in the built environment.

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