Inaction on site safety results in fine for house builder

A string of health and safety failings on construction sites across north west England have landed building firm Mullberry Homes with a £116,666 fine. Investigations found issues with the company’s planning, management and monitoring of worker safety.

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Rail scheme boss calls for reassurance over spending

Government has been urged by the chief executive of Britain’s largest transport infrastructure project High Speed 2 to provide more certainty over its future support for the rail scheme. Mark Thurston told a committee of MPs this week that “uncertainty can be unsettling for the supply chain” who have a “huge amount of investment” in the project.

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Ruling on natural justice breach explored in latest CL

Critical importance of ‘natural justice’ to the fairness of the legal decision making process – as demonstrated by a recent Scottish court case – is emphasised by our Guest Editors in the latest printed edition of Construction Law which arrived with subscribers this week.

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MPs slam inaction on infrastructure climate resilience

Construction lawyers have backed a call for Government to ‘get a proper grip’ on the need to adapt critical national infrastructure for the effects of climate change, which is expected to bring increasingly extreme weather.

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Challenge remains likely as Thames crossing application resubmitted

National Highways has this week submitted its second application for a development consent order to build the Lower Thames Crossing between Essex and Kent. The company’s chief executive Nick Harris is confident the application addresses “myriad environmental and traffic concerns” but acknowledges that a future judicial review challenge is likely.

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Ruling made in PFI hospital dispute

A PFI project company has secured a significant High Court judgment against a building contractor in a dispute arising from defects in the design and construction of an oncology centre at Europe’s largest teaching hospital.

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Fresh legal challenge threatens major road scheme

National Highways’ plan to upgrade a portion of the A428 between Oxford and Cambridge has become the latest nationally significant infrastructure project to face a potential judicial review, after a legal challenge was launched by environmental campaigners.

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Galliford Try cleared over sheltered housing defects

The High Court has ruled in favour of Galliford Try in a dispute concerning who bears responsibility for repairing roof defects on sheltered housing that was refurbished by the contractor as part of a PFI project in North Tyneside.

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News in Brief: November 2022

Government has promised to pursue legal action against the owner of a 15 storey residential building in Stevenage unless it moves forward with work to replace unsafe cladding.

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Call to delay changes to European product regulations

Government has been urged by two leading construction groups to suspend the introduction of new product regulations until at least 2025. Hasty changes could lead to reduced materials choice and higher prices, one legal commentator suggests.

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