Rick Willmott has today described the Building Safety Act as 鈥渁 poorly conceived travesty of justice that shines a spotlight on popularist law making鈥.
His strong words came as his company posted its annual results for 2021 with a 拢10.7m cladding repair provision impacting on profitability for the year. 聽The cladding scandal has now cost Willmott Dixon 拢61m so far.
Profit before tax and amortisation was 拢13.3m, after writing down 拢10.7m under exceptional items, on turnover down from 拢1.2bn in 2020 to 拢1.1bn in 2021.
Willmott Dixon remained debt free at the start of 2022 with 拢113m cash in the bank.
Rick Willmott said: 鈥淥ur underlying trading and profit was strong across all of Willmott Dixon鈥檚 operating companies, despite macro-challenges that the UK economy and the construction industry continue to face. However, our progress has been distorted by the need to increase our cladding related provisions to 拢61m in aggregate in line with accounting standards, while we pursue recovery from those organisations ultimately responsible for designs, fire safety advice and insurance protection.鈥
He continued: 鈥淲e are all beginning to decipher the retrospective impact of the new Building Safety Act at a time when many in our industry will be wondering how the widespread failure of the government鈥檚 own regulatory and testing system has left building owners and their contractors facing uninsured and unquantifiable financial risks for residential properties certified as fully compliant with Building Regulations over the last 30 years.鈥
鈥淚t is a poorly conceived travesty of justice that shines a spotlight on popularist law making.聽 While the Act has quite rightly found a solution to the problems of innocent occupiers of some dangerous buildings, it has done so by making a scapegoat of the whole industry and by throwing developers, contractors and their supply chains under the proverbial bus rather than accepting the fundamental role that successive governments, their own regulators and agents have played in creating this mess."
The government's line is that it was the developers and contractors who put up lethal cladding systems on tall buildings all round the country, and so industry should pay to fix it. The Building Safety Act is designed to put an end after five years to what was famously described at the Grenfell Inquiry as "a merry-go-round of buck-passing".
Rick Willmott concluded: 鈥淒espite these evident headwinds, our teams have done a tremendous job securing over 95% of budgeted work already this year, and our 拢1.4bn order book provides a solid platform for the future.聽 Last year, over 60% of our work was on a repeat business basis, which is something that continues to grow as customers use a multitude of framework options to secure our teams to deliver their capital projects.鈥
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