"Minister says it is proving hard to get firms who made combustible materials to pay
Michael Gove has told MPs the taxpayer may have to pay more to make thousands of buildings safe after saying it is proving hard to get companies who made combustible materials to pay to fix the building safety crisis.
In comments that struck a less bullish tone about his previously stated ambition to make the construction industry and developers pay, he conceded that the “government has to share some of that responsibility as well” and that the “taxpayer is the backstop”.
Gove had said he wanted freeholders, developers and product manufacturers to pay £4bn to help fix combustible cladding on all tower blocks above 11m, after the government already committed £5.1bn.
But the secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities told a Commons select committee: “The chancellor will probably shiver to hear me say it, but we have a responsibility here. But what we want to do is to make sure that with the taxpayer having already committed a significant amount, those who do have a direct stake in ownership do so.”"
https://www.theguardian.com/society/...gove-tells-mps
This is really amazing - residential propery is so valueable, yet firms can build deadly tulipe and get away with it, how the feck is it legal to build stuff and not have Lloyds of London level insurance to cover any such claims for period of 30-50 years? Say place that I bought (a luxury betsit over a kebab shop) was built by an offshore company that is long gone.
Michael Gove has told MPs the taxpayer may have to pay more to make thousands of buildings safe after saying it is proving hard to get companies who made combustible materials to pay to fix the building safety crisis.
In comments that struck a less bullish tone about his previously stated ambition to make the construction industry and developers pay, he conceded that the “government has to share some of that responsibility as well” and that the “taxpayer is the backstop”.
Gove had said he wanted freeholders, developers and product manufacturers to pay £4bn to help fix combustible cladding on all tower blocks above 11m, after the government already committed £5.1bn.
But the secretary of state for levelling up, housing and communities told a Commons select committee: “The chancellor will probably shiver to hear me say it, but we have a responsibility here. But what we want to do is to make sure that with the taxpayer having already committed a significant amount, those who do have a direct stake in ownership do so.”"
https://www.theguardian.com/society/...gove-tells-mps
This is really amazing - residential propery is so valueable, yet firms can build deadly tulipe and get away with it, how the feck is it legal to build stuff and not have Lloyds of London level insurance to cover any such claims for period of 30-50 years? Say place that I bought (a luxury betsit over a kebab shop) was built by an offshore company that is long gone.
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