Industry chiefs demand answers as ministerial advice appears to contradict PM鈥檚 lockdown ruling
Michael Gove confirmed that construction sites can remain open this morning as confusion continues over last night鈥檚 apparently contradictory advice.
The housebuilding industry was plunged into confusion when Robert Jenrick responded to the prime minister鈥檚 decision to put the country into 鈥渓ockdown鈥 by saying that it was fine for construction sites to remain open.
Boris Johnson ordered people to stay at home and has asked the police to enforce the new measures which include a ban on gatherings of more than two people.
In an address to the nation on Monday evening, he warned people will only be allowed outside to buy food or medication, exercise alone once a day, or to travel to work if absolutely necessary.
But less than 90 minutes later, Jenrick, the communities and housing secretary, tweeted that the advice for the construction industry was: 鈥淚f you are working on site, you can continue to do so.鈥
And this morning Gove said: 鈥淚t is the case, as Robert Jenrick pointed out, that construction on sites should continue. People should obviously exercise sensitivity and common sense and follow social distancing measures. But construction in the open air on those types of sites can continue.鈥
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He added: 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important that, when we have construction work that is going in a way that can be done safely, in the open air and on new sites, that does continue.
鈥滻t鈥檚 important that we make sure that construction and manufacturing can continue and that seems to me to be the safest way of ensuring that we can maintain appropriate social distancing rules in a way which ensures that people who cannot work from home continue to do so.鈥
In a series of tweets late last night Graham Watts, the chief executive of the Construction Industry Council, said Construction Leadership Council (CLC) chair Andy Mitchell had been in touch with government following Johnson鈥檚 announcement about 鈥渟ecur[ing] much needed clarity about the position of construction sites, which may take until [this] morning鈥.
He added: 鈥淭he CLC chair has advised the Cabinet Office that the construction industry will come to work tomorrow [Tuesday], to prepare to shut down works safely, whilst awaiting further information. We hope that by tomorrow morning there will be a much clearer picture of exactly what can and cannot continue.鈥
The chair of the CLC, Andy Mitchell, has been in dialogue with the Cabinet Office since the PM鈥檚 announcement at 8-30pm this evening. Officials are working to secure much needed clarity about the position of construction sites, which may take until the morning.../contd 2
鈥 Graham Watts (@CICCEO)
...It is clear that this does not mean that everything must stop - it certainly doesn鈥檛 apply to those working in the health services and utilities operations and maintenance for example. In the meantime, the CLC chair has advised the Cabinet Office that the construction..contd/3
鈥 Graham Watts (@CICCEO)
...industry will come to work tomorrow, to prepare to shut down works safely, whilst awaiting further information. His interpretation is that this means as a minimum, to do whatever is necessary to leave works in a state that can be safely left for some while...contd/4
鈥 Graham Watts (@CICCEO)
...and to secure plant, equipment and materials. He has also made clear that this should include the maintaining of site security, the stability of partially constructed structures that could become unstable and potentially dangerous, and the maintenance of systems...contd/5
鈥 Graham Watts (@CICCEO)
...The main message is that the Prime Minister鈥檚 announcement does not mean 鈥渄o not go to work regardless of the consequences鈥 as this would be irrational and wrong, and unintended. END
鈥 Graham Watts (@CICCEO)
One major contractor admitted: 鈥淸The confusion] is making a very difficult decision for construction chief executives even harder.鈥
And another added: 鈥淭he government is bottling it by defining one of the restrictions of only travelling to work if it鈥檚 鈥榓bsolutely necessary鈥 and you can鈥檛 work from home.
鈥淎 lot of this is that private developers don鈥檛 want to shut the sites because they then take responsibility for the decision and then have to give compensation, added time if not also added money, to the main contractor.
鈥淭he developer wants the main contractor to admit defeat first, through the inability to resource the job and or critical programme slippage. Then it is the main contractor鈥檚 default that comes into play and a claim against them is pursued by the developer.
鈥淎pply the same logic to the main and specialist subbies鈥 contractual relationship, then you鈥檝e got two levels of 鈥榳ho blinks first鈥.鈥
Another added: 鈥淭he position is a farcical one. Any contractor or subcontractor who survives coronavirus may find themselves being taken down by litigation next year.鈥
黑洞社区 understands that some firms are drawing up plans to pull workers off jobs, adding the issue of whether sites stay open is now a matter of conscience.
A director at one senior firm with a string of schemes in the UK said: 鈥淲e have to do what is right by our staff. This is a moral issue. We all have to be able to look at ourselves in the mirror when this is over and be satisfied with our actions.鈥
Government guidelines on social distancing say people should be at least 2m apart but the director added: 鈥淚t is becoming increasingly hard to be able to maintain the government guidance on projects with 200-300 people on site.鈥
A note produced by the CLC on site operating procedures admitted: 鈥淭here will be situations where it is not possible or safe for workers to distance themselves from each other by 2m.鈥
The 2m rule has been branded unenforceable for construction even before workers get to site 鈥 given so many use public transport, especially in London, to get to jobs. One executive said: 鈥淭he workers still need to get to work on tubes and the 2m rule is impossible on public transport. Likewise, I鈥檓 not sure how you maintain the 2m rule on a site.鈥
Simon Tolson, a senior partner at law firm Fenwick Elliott, said Johnson鈥檚 message was that 鈥渆ssential work does not cover working on a construction site of non-critical purpose鈥.
The number of coronavirus cases in the UK yesterday jumped by 17% to 6,650 with the number of deaths up 19% to 335.
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