Standards Australia addresses the lack of access to Australian standards

Standards Australia has met with Parliament House in Canberra to address access to Australian standards. They identified accessibility to standards being a critical issue impacting safety, productivity, workforce capability and the delivery of housing and infrastructure that underpins the National Construction Code (NCC).

 

GALLERY  

Standards Australia acknowledges the role of Australian standards in delivering safer, high-quality and consistent construction outcomes. Additionally, it adds that barriers caused by fragmented, outdated and inconsistent access to standards has led to negative impacts on workforce productivity and compliance.

There’s also a shared ambition between the building and construction industry and government to lift housing supply, improve construction quality and safety, guide the transition to net zero and drive national productivity gains

In response, Standards Australia has agreed to:

  • Work collectively to advocate for a national standard access model for the construction sector to eliminate the costs and barriers to accessing standards mandated by laws to create enhanced compliance tools.
  • Create a model to empower innovation and education, improve compliance, empower practitioners, reduce work and rework and support today’s workforce and the next generation of workers.
  • Present a unified proposal to the government to remove unnecessary barriers to Australian Standards, therefore strengthening the construction sector and unlock productivity gains.

By removing the paywall, the change can play an integral role in processing the government’s deregulation and boosting industry productivity.

“The opportunity to work collaboratively with the government and industry to reduce the upfront cost would provide a substantial red tape reduction boost for the industry and in turn improve the usability and penetration of the National Construction Code (NCC) and associated Australian Standards,” Standards Australia chief executive Rod Balding says.

“With more innovation and new AI tools coming online, the potential to move to free online standards would also act as an important step towards smarter integrated standards and help support a more fit for purpose regulatory system in 2025 and beyond.”

Image courtesy of, Morgan Von Gunten, Unsplash.






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