New and proposed legislation: State of play table 257

This table, prepared by Dentons UK and Middle East LLP, provides a regularly amended guide to new and proposed legislation that will affect the construction industry. In addition to EU Directives and UK legislation, the table includes notes highlighting discussion papers issued by both government and non-government organisations, and commentary on the latest developments.

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Major public procurement reform in the UK kick-started

The Cabinet Office’s Green Paper Transforming Public Procurement, published on 15 December 2020, sets out the government’s goals to reform procurement laws, now the UK is no longer bound by the EU Directives on which UK procurement laws are based.

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Legal Terms Explained: Defective Premises Act 1972

1. How is the Defective Premises Act 1972 (the “Act”) relevant to construction projects? The Act provides a remedy to property owners (the original purchaser as well as subsequent owners, whatever their interest) for defects which render a dwelling unfit for habitation, against those who take on work for or in connection with the provision of that dwelling.

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Confusion over liability for pandemic impacts

Confusion remains over who takes responsibility for Covid related delays and additional costs on projects, with a third of respondents to an industry survey reporting that their contracts were not fit to address the effects of notifiable pandemic events.

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Sector less adversarial than feared during pandemic

Industry has remained less adversarial than many feared at the start of the pandemic according to analysis from consultant Gleeds, which highlights a trend towards greater collaborative working.

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Legal expert to lead construction frameworks review

Construction law specialist Professor David Mosey of King’s College London will lead an independent review of public sector construction frameworks in a bid to support more effective contracting, the Cabinet Office has announced.

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News in Brief: March 2021

Establishment of a new Building Safety Regulator to oversee the safe design, construction and occupation of high risk residential buildings in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire has taken a key step forward with the appointment of a Chief Inspector of Buildings.

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Insurance problems threaten the UK’s future

Insurance has never felt cheap to companies in the construction sector, although many or most of them never took the sort of risk management measures highlighted in our regular insurance articles, so to a large extent often had only themselves to blame if they were paying higher premiums than they need have.

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Roofing firm fined £165,000 following fatal fall

A roofing company has been fined for 'completely inadequate' safety precautions after an employee fell to his death while working on a warehouse roof at the Port of Tilbury.

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