Legislative reforms that came into force this week will see Bay of Plenty Property owners, managers and body corporate committees facing increased liabilities and new responsibilities for health and safety.
"The regulations include obligations on property owners and body corporates to identify hazards, include and maintain a hierarchy of control measures, as well as the introduction of more onerous duties to provide information, supervision, training and instruction," said Kane Tarrant, Colliers International's national facilities manager for real estate management.
"Ignorance of what is happening at 'ground level' will be no defence."
The changes result from the coming into force of the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015, as well as new compulsory Health and Safety at Work regulations. Property owners and body corporates are now deemed to be a Person Conducting a Business or Undertaking who manages or controls a workplace, and had to protect the health and safety of those people associated with their workplace.
Geoff Felton, a body corporate consultant in Colliers Hamilton office, which handles property management across the Bay, noted that a body corporate had a responsibility with respect to its common property to identify hazards.