The Gold Coast Bulletin

Ruthless tradies cash in

Cladding audit race lures inexperien­ced, greedy

- KIRSTIN PAYNE kirstin.payne@news.com.au

GREEDY contractor­s are preying on vulnerable property owners in a combustibl­e cladding cash grab.

Industry experts and authoritie­s say tradies have been caught upping quotes 160 per cent to determine if hundreds of Gold Coast buildings have the same external materials that turned the Grenfell tower into an inferno in London in 2017, killing 72 people.

The Queensland Building and Constructi­on Commission yesterday issued a statewide alert warning homeowners of audit price gouging as part of its Safer Buildings Combustibl­e Cladding Checklist.

Engineers and building compliance auditors said they were aware of a number of “sub par” checks by “inexperien­ced” profession­als looking to make a quick buck.

The Bulletin this week reported the owners of 677 buildings on the Gold Coast – and more than 5000 throughout Queensland – had been ordered to undergo an independen­t audit into cladding.

They are being slugged between $4000 and $6000 for the inspection and must have it complete before May 29 or face fines of up to $20,000.

Builders, architects, registered engineers and level 1 building certifiers are all qualified to sign off on the audits.

Coast auditors said there had been examples of tradies pocketing the money, producing a vague report and then recommendi­ng owners fork out again for a more thorough inspection, instead of passing them phase three of the checklist, in which a fire engineer must inspect the building.

Burleigh engineer and master builder Jeffery Hills of JHA Australia, who has been in the industry for more than 35 years, said the situation was fuelled by greed.

“It happens all the time with government programs like this,” Mr Hills said.

“People with minimal qualificat­ions set themselves up as experts in the field. Supply and demand adds to people’s greed.

“We are dealing with people’s safety here.”

He said his company physically tested the materials before giving owners an answer.

“A lot of auditors are just looking at the building, rather than taking samples, which is part of our procedure.”

On Tuesday, peak body corporate group Strata Communitie­s Australia formally asked the State Government to extend the May 29 deadline because it was concerned that bodies corporate could not organise their affairs in time.

James Dunstan, the director of Profession­al Certificat­ion Group, said building profession­als unsure of where they stood should refer clients to fire engineers.

“Because of the short time frame the doors have been opened for a wide amount of people to audit these buildings,” he said.

“Some people don’t have expertise in this stuff, which leads to very bad reports.

“If the process was restricted to experts we would see a more compliant outcome.”

The QBCC said it had been contacted by multiple building owners and representa­tives concerned about paying substantia­l audit fees.

It has urged building owners and voluntary management committees to seek multiple quotes to find the best possible adviser.

THE State Government needs to rein in the vultures trying to gouge unsuspecti­ng home owners in the combustibl­e cladding mess.

Body corporates yesterday likened the inspection quote scam to the pink batts rort of a decade ago when dodgy operators used government handouts to install faulty or dangerous insulation. Only now, it is home owners and not taxpayers who are being ripped off.

No-one is questionin­g the State Government’s intentions. We all saw the horror with the Grenfell inferno in 2017 and do not want a repeat.

However, home owners asked to fork out millions statewide for inspection­s need protection. It is a testing time for some who may be asset rich but cash poor and they should not have to worry about immoral hyenas.

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