General

Housing Consumer Protection

In terms of Government Gazette dated 30 August 2019, the Minister for Human Settlements, Water and Sanitation published the Housing Consumer Protection Draft Bill, 2019 which, if promulgated, will repeal the existing Housing Consumer Protection Measures Act No 95 of 1998. The application of the draft Bill will extend to any addition to, alteration, renovation or repair of a home insofar as any of these necessitates the submission of building plans to the Local Authority. The existing Act only applies to a person who carries on the business of a homebuilder.

Some new definitions are proposed in the draft Bill including the words “build, “home”, “homebuilder” and “Home Warranty Fund” which means a home warranty fund contemplated in the draft Bill, the purpose of which is to pay for claims by housing consumers.

In terms of clause 25 of the draft Bill a homebuilder or developer who undertakes or commissions the building of a home must apply for registration with the National Homebuilders’ Regulatory Council (“NHRC”). There are no exemptions from registration such as allowed by the current Act. This means that every homebuilder, including a person who builds a house or a home for himself, is now required to be registered. The draft Bill, in addition to the establishment of a warranty fund, provides that the Board may also establish an additional fund for the purposes of underwriting the existing fund.

This draft Bill also suggests that the NHRC may establish a non-profit company the purpose of which is to create mechanisms for risk-based insurance offerings relative to the structural integrity of a home.

Repairs to roof leaks attributable to workmanship can now be done within two years after the finalisation of the construction of a home as opposed to 12 months of the date of occupation. The time for repairs to major structural defects remains five years which is calculated from finalisation of construction.

Inasmuch as the existing Act imposes an obligation on Conveyancers attending to bond registrations to ensure that a homebuilder is registered in terms of the Act, there is no prescribed penalty for failure to do so. Clause 84 of the new Bill requires the Conveyancers to ensure that a new home is duly enrolled. If a home is not enrolled, Conveyancers will have an obligation to inform the National Homebuilders Regulatory Council and the Registrar of Deeds accordingly. The Council may report a Conveyancer who does not comply with the provisions of this clause and this will apply in regard to both bonds and transfers.

In terms of the current Act, any person who contravenes the Act or permits such contravention shall be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding R25,000.00 or imprisonment for one year. In terms of the draft Bill, the person responsible will be liable to a fine not exceeding R1,500,000.00.

Simphiwe Maphumulo
Garlicke & Bousfield Inc

Download The Housing Consumer Protection Draft Bill

Reader Comments:

IAN HANSEN 07/11/2019:

Regarding the notion of having to extend to alterations is just not feasible and furthermore I see it as being difficult to enforce and question the legality as the alterations can have some influence on the present house. Just stick to new houses. Benchmark this in countries where new houses have to be enrolled. For the record I represented the then Wits MBA back in 1993 on the steering committee back then. The NHBRC was modelled on that of the U.K.

Leave a comment:

Security Picture (click to change)
Word shown in picture:
advert
menu close

Search Articles