Class two and three inspectors were told they would revert to a class one registered building inspector and be allowed to work supervised.
There are four classes of building inspector: trainees, registered building inspectors, specialist building inspectors and technical managers.
The standards for the sector are set out in the building inspector competence framework, which went through a public consultation between October and December 2022 and was published in April 2023.
Registration data shows that, as of 30 July 2024, there were 4,049 building professionals registered as building inspectors in England and Wales.
The class with the most registrations so far is the trainee group, with 1,971 people, followed by registered building inspector, with 1,614.
The two most senior classes had far fewer registrations, with 464 specialist building inspectors and 516 technical managers.
“Building control bodies must take regulatory advice from registered building inspectors of class two or class three” in order to function effectively, Mr Cooper said.
“Enhanced professional standards will lead to stronger compliance with building regulations. Improved practices will set high standards as the norm, not the exception.
“Looking at the landscape ahead, the quality, effectiveness and efficiency of building control activities are set to significantly improve,” he said.
Inside Housing revealed in July how delays at the BSR could lead to an uptick in financing costs, with borrowers paying higher interest rates for longer as they wait for projects to be signed off, according to warnings from sector experts.
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Next phase of East Leeds extension gets green light
Reading Time: < 1 minuteCouncillors on the Leeds City Council North and East Plans Panel have unanimously voted in