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  • Sympathy For The Devils

    Sydney Morning Herald
    April 22, 2004 Thursday

    Sympathy For The Devils

    by Keith Austin


    Builders often get a bad rap. Here's their side of the story.

    It's time to confess. That was YOU who gave your builder carte
    blanche to finish off the bathroom while you went on holiday ("just
    keep it white and simple") and then sued him when you didn't like the
    white and simple result, wasn't it?

    And it was YOU who fell out so badly with a builder that you banned
    him from the house, wasn't it? "I had to stand in the alleyway at the
    back and shout instructions over the fence to the blokes. It was
    ridiculous."

    As a builder once observed on the Channel Seven program Hot Property:
    "Our biggest enemy in this work, apart from the weather, is the
    client."

    Stories abound of the so-called shonky builder - not surprising,
    given there are 160,000 licensed builders and contractors in NSW -
    but does anyone take the time to get the other side of the story; the
    one in which YOU are the villain?

    Harry Hogan (not his real name) is a 44-year-old, fair-skinned (trust
    me, it matters) plumber who has been in the job for 28 years. His
    horror story happened when he was called to the home of couple who
    were doing their own renovations.

    "They were typical owner-builders in that they had no idea what was
    involved in a job like that.

    "When I went there at the end of the job to finish off the bathroom I
    noticed there was a crack on a tile near the tap. I drew the wife's
    attention to it before I started putting the new taps on, but then I
    heard her say to her husband, in Armenian, that the bloody plumber
    had cracked a tile and she was going to deduct $200 from the bill.

    "The thing is," he laughs now, "I'm Armenian. But because I'm fair
    and most Armenians are dark they didn't know I could understand every
    word. I thought 'f-- this, I'm off', and started to pack my tools up.
    Anyway, she freaked out when I called her an 'effing bitch' in
    Armenian. It didn't go down too well with the husband either. I just
    walked away from it and didn't hear from them again ... They were
    customers from hell."

    Then he quickly adds, "I've got to go now because I'm being paid by
    the hour and if I'm not careful this customer will turn out like
    those."

    The incident mentioned in the first paragraph of this story happened
    in the eastern suburbs and cost the builder involved thousands of
    dollars. "They took me to court and I lost. I had to rip it all out
    and replace it; it cost me $10,000. Now I'm very careful about what I
    do. I make sure everything is covered in the contract."

    Another story, from Crows Nest, involves a woman who went to a
    bathroom showroom, chose a suite and got a local builder to install
    it. "She was horrified when she saw it," explains the builder's
    secretary, "because she could see the pipes! She wanted it to look
    exactly as it had in the showroom where, obviously, there weren't
    pipes showing because they don't need them."

    If the clients from hell aren't enough, there is always the nightmare
    neighbour to consider. Several builders recounted stories of
    neighbours who don't like the noise or the dirt emanating from next
    door. "Yeah, I've had neighbours turn the hose on me a few times,"
    said one. "A lot of them call the police, too."

    Another told how one set of neighbours, already angry at losing a
    council battle to stop an extension going up next door, refused to
    let the workers step onto their land: "We had to get a cantilevered
    scaffold in and every time we set one foot on their land they called
    the police."

    By far the most common complaint, though, is of clients who refuse to
    pay the final bill. Elizabeth Crouch, NSW executive director of the
    Housing Industry Association (HIA), says they deal with cases like
    this every day.

    "There's also the issue of people who go for betterment on their
    property, which means they go into a dispute with a builder in order
    to effect more value out of the contract," she says.

    "I can think of one case where a couple of lawyers engaged in this
    and effectively got their home finished by three successive builders
    as a result of going in to dispute with each of them, and each time
    they got a little bit more and each time they didn't pay.

    "That was possible under the old insurance regime because you could
    go automatically to an insurer and get a claim made against someone
    without that builder or contractor having the opportunity to come
    back and fix it.

    "That's changed now but there's still not a lot of protection for a
    builder in tribunals. The best you ever get out of a tribunal is a
    50-50 sort of thing. You very rarely hear of a builder winning.

    "There's definitely been [an increase] in the level of litigation and
    so on. I think that's just a symptom of us being a far more litigious
    society. And I think consumers are a bit more savvy about how they
    might get around these things."

    One of the examples the HIA gave as typical involves a builder who
    had almost finished a job when the clients, who had been changing
    their minds constantly, presented him with a list of more than 60
    items that they said had to be attended to. Then, before he could
    complete them, they threw him off the site and went to the Office of
    Fair Trading. In the meantime, the builder is owed $20,000.

    An HIA spokesperson said: "Even if they do go back, fix the defects,
    [the client will] come up with another list. We have had several
    examples of this, keep coming back and coming back, getting another
    list, not getting paid."

    Many years ago, one builder even had an offer from late standover man
    Tim Bristow to "sort out" a couple of lawyers who were refusing to
    pay the final $15,000 instalment on their renovation work. "I got to
    the point where I was tempted," he laughs now.

    Michael Pyers, an executive director with HIA who wrote some of its
    dispute resolution courses, says he's lost count of the number of
    times builders have come to him and said, "I've built this lovely
    house, there's nothing wrong with it, but the people won't pay me."

    Very often the problem is that people have borrowed $300,000 to build
    a house, a few things happen along the way, and they run out of
    money.

    "The building of a home is an emotional process for both builder and
    client. For the client, it's the single biggest investment they'll
    ever make. Good builders pride themselves on their work and if you
    accuse them of not doing good quality work, they do take it
    personally. That's why there's a lot of emotion. Proper mediation can
    get behind that and get to the real issues."

    In the 2002-2003 financial year there were 61,697 applications lodged
    with the Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal (CTTT), of which 5685
    related to home building work.

    In an effort to increase mediation in building disputes, the NSW
    Government introduced the Home Building Service in July last year.
    Operated under the umbrella of the Office of Fair Trading it was
    created to license, regulate and investigate builders.

    "In the first six months, 840 dispute resolutions have been carried
    out by inspectors and the results have been outstanding, with 80 per
    cent of the cases resolved by agreement," says Reba Meagher, the NSW
    Minister for Fair Trading.

    It's not all doom and gloom, though. Alfred Kittel, 50, a builder
    based in Forest Lodge, once had a client who changed his mind on a
    kitchen at the last moment. This is a common area of conflict: when
    customers are unable to visualise what the plans will look like in
    reality.

    "The thing is, everything can be done, it just comes down to money,"
    Kittel says. "It cost a few thousand dollars but [the client] was
    prepared to pay for it. If he'd decided he didn't want to pay for it,
    we'd have had a sh--fight on our hands."

    See? It can be done. It's down to you.

    How to take the cuss out of customer

    * Take time before the job to develop a good working relationship
    with the client.

    * Keep up to date with paperwork.

    * Take notes and always record meetings by sending a letter
    afterwards saying, "These were the issues discussed and the outcomes
    agreed".

    * Don't take it personally.

    * Try to find out whether they have had building work done before and
    what their experience was.

    As of March 1 this year, builders and subcontractors in NSW have had
    to take part in a "continuing professional development program" under
    the auspices of the Office of Fair Trading. To renew their licence in
    the future, they will have to certify that they've completed various
    training courses and seminars each year. For more information check
    the HIA website (www.buildingonline.com.au).

    Keith Austin's tips on being nice to your builders

    1. Make tea For some reason, all workmen thrive on tea, even before
    they've done a skerrick of work. I suspect it's psychological; they
    might be working for you, but who's making the tea, hmmm?

    2. Move stuff before they get there There will be dirt, there will be
    dust, so it's best to relocate the silk Persian rug to save problems
    later.

    3. Put your spirit level away and do not hover - it makes them
    nervous A watched kettle never boils, does it? At this stage in the
    process, it's time to trust them to do the job.

    4. Which bring us to: time is money The longer you hang around asking
    idiot questions, the longer the job takes.

    5. Which brings us to: time is limited Every big building job is a
    logistical puzzle, with each specialist an integral part of the
    jigsaw. Slow the electrician down and you slow the plasterer who, in
    turn, slows the tiler, who in turn ...

    6. Make more tea
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