EDITORIAL:
Five Cabinet ministers, no less, gave up some time on Sunday to meet leaders of the construction industry on a South Auckland building site and announced an "accord" on the industry's problems. But it is not at all clear what the accord will do.
The Prime Minister said, "The wellbeing of New Zealanders is intrinsically linked to safe, durable and affordable homes, buildings and infrastructure. To meet the future needs of New Zealand, both Government and industry recognise that we need to work differently."
Fletcher Construction chief executive Peter Reidy, formerly head of KiwiRail, said, "The accord recognises that the way the construction industry, its clients and the Government have behaved in the past has created systemic problems ... It commits those working in, and with, the industry to start treating each other differently, so we can replace the current adversarial culture with one based on respect, trust and shared responsibility."
These sentiments are a response to several recent construction company collapses and heavy losses made by the likes of Fletcher Building on major projects such as Auckland's international convention centre. The reason for these difficulties is not hard to understand. The firms are competing hard for contracts and putting in bids with little margin for escalating costs. And costs have risen, especially in Auckland, because the city is having a construction boom and, as every householder knows, a tradesman or woman is hard to get.