Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Newcastle Herald
Newcastle Herald
Sage Swinton

'Tearing their hair out': why private certifiers confound councils

Questions have been raised over the private certification process after a Merewether development was issued an occupation certificate when Newcastle council insists it doesn't comply with its approval.

What is private certification?

Developments that receive approval in NSW must have a principal certifying authority appointed. This can be a registered private building surveyor, the local council or a registered body corporate.

Certifiers inspect the construction to ensure building standards are met and once the build is complete, issue an occupation certificate as long as requirements are satisfied.

The history

Private certification was introduced in NSW by the Carr government in 1998. It allowed developers to hire their own certifier to inspect work and provide certificates, rather than the relevant council.

Newcastle Labor councillor Carol Duncan said while introducing private certification may have seemed like a good idea to help councils dealing with development backlogs, it had the potential to go wrong.

"This is not the only private certifier issue that I am dealing with for a Ward 2 resident at the moment," she said at a council meeting.

The wall of the development in Merewether which council believes should not have been issued an occupation certificate.

How they are regulated

NSW Fair Trading regulates private certifiers. The department's certifier disciplinary register shows various private certifiers who have been penalised on multiple occasions - including one who appears on the list 15 times.

City of Newcastle CEO Jeremy Bath said councils had "been tearing their hair out for years pleading for reform to the state government's hands off approach to private certifiers".

"Not only does the government's Environmental Planning and Assessment law prevent councils from appealing an occupation certificate issued by a private certifier in the Land and Environment Court, but they are also denied basic powers to act against dodgy developers," he said.

"Councils for example can't issue penalty notices when a developer fails to pay their development contribution or refuses to provide the information needed for a council to issue a construction certificate."

However the Association of Australian Certifiers website points out council and private certifiers "work under the same planning codes, perform the same inspections, and issue the same occupation certificates after considering the same factors in NSW".

"Council Certifiers and Private Registered Certifiers are there to serve the public, and act in the public interest. They are both bound by the same code of ethical practice."

WHAT DO YOU THINK? Join the discussion in the comment section below.

Find out how to register or become a subscriber here.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.