Housing secretary has pledged to stop firms doing business unless they sign up to scheme to fix historic defects

Housebuilders Rydon and Galliard came in for stinging criticism yesterday in Parliament as Michael Gove told MPs of his plans to ban up to 11 housebuilders from trading for failing to sign legal documents pledging to fix historic fire safety defects.

The housing secretary said the 鈥渋nvestors and shareholders鈥 of those firms 鈥 including AIM-listed builder Inland Homes and Australian Olympic Village developer Lendlease 鈥 would 鈥減ay the price鈥 if they didn鈥檛 sign up soon.

While most of those on the list which have thus far responded have signalled they intend to sign and are in the process of doing so, Rydon Homes, a sister company of Grenfell contractor Rydon Maintenance, has indicated it will fight the government on the issue.

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Housing secretary Michael Gove singled out Rydon and Galliard for particular criticism in the House of Commons yesterday

The government has brought in legislation, which Gove said yesterday he will set out more details of next week, which will stop firms from carrying out planning permissions or from receiving building control unless they are deemed to be 鈥渞esponsible actors鈥.

The signing of the 鈥渟elf-remediation鈥 contracts is designed to underpin the developer pledges made last year, in which 49 housebuilders promised to undertake more than 拢2bn of life-critical fire safety repairs to homes going back 30 years.

The government announced yesterday that 39 have signed the contract, with 11 still required to sign but so far having failed to do so. The 11 firms have a combined annual turnover of at least 拢2bn and produce more than 5,000 homes per year.

Labour shadow housing secretary Lisa Nandy pressed Gove in Parliament yesterday on when the firms named would be banned from operating in the market, adding that the inclusion of Rydon on the list of non-signees was 鈥渟hameful, given its role in Grenfell鈥.

However, a spokesperson for Rydon Homes, which reported turnover of 拢19.2m in its most recent accounts, said: 鈥淩ydon Homes develops an average of 16 family homes per year which confirms our belief that Rydon Homes falls into the category of a small SME house-builder. We have made this point to the DLUHC [Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities] but have had no response.

鈥淲hen the DLUHC wishes to extend the contractual scheme to all SME developers, Rydon Homes Ltd will engage with that process, with a view to agreeing to enter into a fair and reasonable agreement with the Government.鈥

Developers who were asked to sign contract but have yet to do so

  • Abbey Developments
  • Avant
  • Ballymore*
  • Dandara
  • Emerson Group (Jones Homes)
  • Galliard Homes
  • Inland Homes
  • Lendlease
  • London Square
  • Rydon Homes
  • Telford Homes

Rydon Homes is part of a wider construction group which reported turnover of 拢122m in its most recent accounts, however the government has not otherwise asked housing contractors to sign the self-remediation contract.

But it was London-focused housebuilder Galliard, which reported turnover of 拢204m in the year to March 2022, came in for the most trenchant criticism from the housing secretary.

In response to a question about a Galliard development in Eltham, Gove said it was 鈥渙ne of the companies that has been the most recalcitrant throughout鈥.

He said: 鈥淕alliard has held out, it has briefed against the Department and all the rest of it.

鈥淯nless Galliard signs, it will face consequences, and its business model will be fundamentally challenged by the legislation that we in this House have passed. Ultimately, with a company such as Galliard whose owners, directors and investors are determined not to play ball, the consequences will come for it.鈥

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Galliard has asked for extra time to sign the so-called self-remediation contract

Gove鈥檚 comments came after a spokesperson from Galliard said the firm was committed to helping its leaseholders and had asked the department for extra time in order that it could resolve details and sign the self-remediation contract.

The spokesperson said: 鈥淲e uphold the principle that leaseholders should not have to pay for remediation of life critical building fire safety defects.

鈥淲e are already remediating our buildings. Our review of the remediation contract is ongoing, and we aim to complete the extensive consultation with our stakeholders as soon as possible. To thoroughly assess the financial and administrative liabilities of the contract, we are in constant dialogue with DLUHC and have requested further time to complete our review process.鈥

Galliard has been asked for a response to Gove鈥檚 further comments.

Galliard鈥檚 request for extra time to sign the contract was mirrored by London-based developer London Square, which said it had no objections to signing but needed to secure the department鈥檚 acceptance that it didn鈥檛 have any schemes that needed repairing.

A spokesperson said: 鈥淲e remain committed to the pledge. We are disappointed to have been included in the list when we had not received a draft contract that was relevant to London Square to reflect the fact that we have no historic fire safety issues. Our lawyers are working to reach an agreement with the government lawyers and we understand they are close to achieving this. We are happy to sign when agreed.鈥

Australian-owned developer-contractor Lendlease, which claims a development pipeline of 30,000 homes, also said it will need more time to sign the contract. A spokesperson said: 鈥淲e鈥檙e continuing to work through the detail of the contract in the context of our global business and governance processes, and expect to confirm our position by early April. The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities is aware of our timeframe.鈥

A spokesperson for 拢282m turnover Telford Homes said: 鈥淲e are completing the process of evaluating the terms and conditions of the proposed agreement.鈥 好色先生TV also understands that both Ballymore and Avant Homes both intend to sign the contract, but are still working through the detail.

There is some anger in the industry over the rushed way in which firms were expected to sign contracts, with final versions complete with bespoke details reflecting the individual schemes committed to by each firm not sent out by the department until late last week.

One housebuilder executive told 好色先生TV鈥檚 sister title Housing Today: 鈥淲e were all waiting for the bespoke contracts to come through. Speaking for ourselves, we turned their questions round within their deadlines 鈥 often way in advance 鈥 and yet we have weeks of silence and then Gove put that tweet out suggesting we were dragging our heels. It鈥檚 very frustrating.鈥

But Gove said yesterday that housebuilders had no-one to blame but themselves. He added: 鈥淎 final version was sent to developers with minor alterations on 21 February. The execution version of the contract depended on the developers themselves providing the Department with a list of affected buildings, so it was the work of developers, not of the Department, that led to the late signing of contracts鈥.

Nonetheless, he said: 鈥淚 want to allow some of the 11 who have not yet signed a little leeway to ensure that they live up to their responsibilities.

But he warned: 鈥淚 will be writing to major investors in those firms [that haven鈥檛 signed contracts] to explain the commercial implications of their directors鈥 current decisions. I will write to local authorities and building inspectors to explain that those developers鈥 projects may not be started or signed off. I will notify public bodies to be prepared to reopen tender award processes or rerun competitions.鈥

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