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Bids invited for Government’s £525m smaller housing fund

Bids invited for Government’s £525m smaller housing fund

The Government will be inviting bids in May for a slice of its half a billion fund for smaller housing schemes.

The new Builders Finance Fund is hoped to help deliver 15,000 homes, supporting 15,000 jobs in construction. The fund is designed to help smaller builders who have struggled to raise finance for stalled but viable sites.

Money will be available as a loan to re-start and speed-up housing developments of between 15 to 250 homes, which have plans in place and the support of local people. Cash will be released over two years from 2015 to 2017, and will be operated as an open competition.

Bidding for the fund will start on 14 May, and expressions of interest are to be submitted by midday on 25 June 2014 to the Homes and Communities Agency.

Download the Builders Finance Fund funding prospectus.

Housing Minister Kris Hopkins said,

“This government has got Britain building again, and created thousands of jobs in the construction sector. But it has been harder for smaller schemes to come back from the crash of 2008 and, as part of our long-term economic plan, we want them to have a bigger role in building homes for the housing market. From today developers can start preparing their bids for a share of £525 million to accelerate development on shovel-ready schemes of 15 to 250 homes.”

Support through the Builders Finance Fund will be on top of £1 billion that has been made available to unlock 250,000 homes on large-scale developments with over 1,500 units.

A £50m Local Growth Fund is also being targeted at kick-starting stalled housing projects of between 250 and 1,499 homes.

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£150m Cardiff Highways Work: Meet the Buyer

£150m Cardiff Highways Work: Meet the Buyer

Subcontractors and suppliers are being invited to meet contractors on the South East Wales Highways and Civil Engineering Framework in Cardiff on Friday 9 May.

Contractors will be looking to source subcontractors and suppliers in Wales as much as possible, for major works packages worth a total of £150m.

The framework includes several significant infrastructure projects, consisting of highways, civils project work, major new build work, resurfacing, and a series of smaller regional packages.

South East Wales Highways Framework: Meet the Buyer
Date: Friday 9 May 2014
Time: 09:00hrs – 13:00hrs
Location: Cardiff City Stadium, Leckwith Rd, Cardiff, South Glamorgan CF11 8AZ
Book your place

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The Meet the Buyer event will be attended by Business Wales, Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council and seven of the 20 appointed contractors, namely Dyer & Butler, Calibre Contracting, Horan Construction, LGA, Lafarge Tarmac, Alun Griffiths (Contractors) and Dawnus Construction.

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OJEU Tender Notices released this week

OJEU Tender Notices released this week

Here’s our round-up of the latest construction OJEU Tender Notices, released this week:

Stanford-le-Hope: Dredging and pumping works
Sector: Ports
Deadline: 16 May 2014

Bristol: Building surveying services
Sector: Education
Deadline: 5 June 2014

Gateshead: Urban development construction work
Sector: Housing and community amenities
Value: £50m – £2.25bn
Deadline: 11 June 2014

Aberdeen: Installation of services of line telephony equipment
Sector: General public services
Prior Information Notice

Do you want to pre-qualify for any of these projects? The Propeller Bid Response team can help you. Contact us on 01462 004477 or via our online contact form.

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OJEU Tender Notices released this week

OJEU Tender Notices released this week

Here’s our round-up of the latest construction OJEU Tender Notices, released this week:

Luton: Gas-fitting installation work
Sector: Housing and community amenities
Deadline: 21 May 2014

Oldham: Construction work
Sector: Housing and community amenities
Deadline: 22 May 2014

London: Electrical installations
Sector: Rail
Value: £40m – £60m
Deadline: 27 May 2014

Swansea: Mechanical engineering installation framework
Sector: Education
Deadline: 27 May 2014

London: Burglar alarm systems
Sector: Defence
Value: £600k – £2.5m
Deadline: 2 June 2014

Nottinghamshire: Glazing work
Sector: Housing
Value: £25k -£10m
Deadline: 4 June 2014

Cambridge: Industrial or laboratory furnaces, incinerators and ovens
Sector: Education
Deadline: 16 June 2014

Guildford: Urban development construction work
Sector: Housing and community amenities
Deadline: 8 August 2014

Sittingbourne: Commissioning of heating installations
Sector: Housing
Prior Information Notice

Leeds: Construction work
Sector: General public services
Prior Information Notice

Do you want to pre-qualify for any of these projects? The Propeller Bid Response team can help you. Contact us on 01462 004477 or via our online contact form.

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New supply chain payment charter launched

New supply chain payment charter launched

The Construction Leadership Council has launched its supply chain payment charter, with nine signatories from the council.

The charter is aimed at reducing standard payment terms in the construction industry to 30 days by 2018. Clients Barratt Developments, Berkley Group and British Land, and contractors Kier, Laing O’Rourke, Skanska, Imtech UK, Stanford Industrial Concrete Flooring and Stepnell have signed up to the charter.

There are a number of companies represented on the council which haven’t signed-up yet, including Network Rail and Sainsbury’s.

Author of the charter and Chief Executive of the Institute of Credit Management, Philip King, said,

“Each have their own particular reasons for not [signing], but the leadership council’s position is clear it was a charter it was willing to put its name to. Each have their own particular reasons for not [signing], but the leadership council’s position is clear it was a charter it was willing to put its name to.”

The charter sets 11 fair payment commitments:

  • We will make correct full payment as and when due for all work properly carried out, or products supplied, in accordance with the contract. We will ensure any withholding of payment due to defects or non-delivery is proportionate, and clearly, specifically and demonstrably justified in line with the arrangements set out in the contract.
  • We will not deliberately delay or unreasonably withhold payment.
  • For all new contracts we will ensure that payments are made to our supply chain not more than 60 calendar days from the end of the Calendar month in which the work is carried out or products are supplied. From June 2015 we will ensure that payments are made to our supply chain not more than 45 calendar days from the end of the calendar month. From January 2018 that will decrease to not more than 30 days.
  • Public authorities are already required to pay within 30 calendar days. On central Government contracts, payment will be made to Tier 1 within 14 days, to Tier 2 within 19 days and to Tier 3 within 23 days of the due date, which will be 7 days after the common assessment or valuation date established by the client in the Tier 1 contract.
  • We will either not withhold cash retention or ensure that any arrangements for retention with our supply chain are no more onerous than those implemented by the client in the Tier 1 contract. Our ambition is to move to zero retentions by 2025.
  • We will issue any ‘pay less’ notices at the earliest opportunity and no later than 7 days prior to the final date for payment.
  • We will have processes in place to enable the effects of contract variations to be agreed promptly and fairly and payments for such variations to be included in the payment immediately following the completion of the varied works.
  • We will make payments electronically unless agreed otherwise.
  • We will use Project Bank Accounts on central Government contracts unless there are compelling reasons not to do so and on other contracts where appropriate.
  • Where Supply Chain Finance schemes allowing members of the supply chain to secure earlier payment are offered, we will not impose fees or costs for receiving payment within the terms set out in the contract.
  • We will adopt a transparent, honest, and collaborative approach when resolving differences and disputes.

Sources have said that the impact of the charter will be to reduce the cashflow of main contractors, forcing them to increase their prices and charge clients more in order to continue to meet their business obligations.

Government Chief Construction Adviser Peter Hansford said it was, “certainly not the intention to drive up costs”, with Construction 2025 setting out ambitions to reduce costs by a third.
Mr King added that it was too early to say what the consequences of reducing payment terms to 30 days throughout the industry would be.

He admitted that,

“some will have to look at their business models and that is right and proper, and I would expect them to manage it in the best way that they can”, and that the changes could “make clients more aware of what they are paying for.”

The charter requires signatories using supply chain finance schemes to agree to not impose fees or costs for receiving payment within the terms set out in the contract.

It has been made it clear that contractors whose standard payment terms exceeded terms laid out in the charter, but offered early payment schemes, would not be compliant.

When 30-day payment terms take effect for signatories to the charter in 2018,there will still be a place for supply chain finance, but only if schemes allow for accelerated payment ahead of the payment terms.

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