Sunday News

Call for probe into substandar­d steel used to build Kiwi homes

- AMANDA SAXTON

MORE than 100 home-owners have joined a class action against steel building mesh suppliers, as a Sunday News investigat­ion reveals widespread concern about builders’ cost-cutting.

Adina Thorn, the lawyer heading the court case, is this weekend calling for a government inquiry into dodgy mesh. ‘‘Experts suggest a new testing regime be introduced for steel – perhaps changes to the standards, perhaps government audits on steel manufactur­ers and suppliers.’’

The 10-week investigat­ion has identified three key problems: ● Unqualifie­d tradesmen who can’t count: they under-quote to get the job, measure badly, cut corners. ● Cheap, substandar­d steel mesh for reinforcin­g concrete slabs mostly imported from China. ● Materials bought on overseas websites like Ali Baba for a fraction of their price at New Zealand hardware wholesaler­s and retailers – and without any of the quality certificat­ion.

One lower North Island teacher and mother-of-two who has joined Thorn’s class action – and who didn’t want to give her name – is infuriated her $700,000 dream home no longer feels like hers because she has ‘‘no idea’’ what it’s really made of’’.

‘‘Our whole life savings are tied up in this house.’’

Thorn says ductile steel reinforcin­g mesh, sometimes referred to as welded wire fabric, is typically used as reinforcem­ent in concrete floor slabs. Two months ago, the Government announced it would toughen up the Building Code on 500E mesh testing requiremen­ts in response to quality issues.

Thorn has received no response yet from Steel & Tube and other mesh suppliers.

But in a leaked letter, Steel & Tube chief executive Dave Taylor expresses confidence to shareholde­rs that the company can stare down the court action. ‘‘We believe Steel & Tube’s seismic mesh is compliant, and therefore there can be no claim.’’

He says the company has talked to the Insurance Council: any home-owners with substandar­d mesh from the past four years shouldn’t be unduly concerned about their insurance coverage.

Building Minister Nick Smith says he’s not convinced of a significan­t problem in the building sector, ‘‘but we must be vigilant and I keep an ear to the ground.’’

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