I remember saying on collapse.net that there would never be any meaningful recovery in Christchurch and was shot down for it. 7 years later I am being proved largely correct.
We have a middle-class friend who 7 years later is still living in an unliveable house without hot water, still waiting for a settlement with the insurance company.
A warning to the people of Houston! Don't think that things are just goingback to where they were before
Aftershock: The debacle of shoddy Christchurch earthquake repairs
2
September, 2017
Tomorrow
marks seven years since the first earthquake hit Canterbury. Since
then, thousands of homes have been razed and tens of thousands more
repaired. Or have they? Lawyers and experts believe Christchurch is
sitting on a multi-billion dollar ticking time-bomb.
Ken
and Lucy Palepoi felt like they'd won Lotto. Owning their own home
before they'd even turned 30. Two kids, a third on the way.
As
soon as they moved in in 2015, they hung a picture. "Being able
to put a nail in the wall, in your own wall. That felt pretty good,"
Ken says.
The
1940s character home, with its stucco cladding and rounded edges, was
perfect for the young family who'd just moved to Christchurch from
Dunedin for work opportunities. And it was paying off.
The
Woolston home needed some attention, but they were happy to chip
away, when they could afford it.
"Everything
pointed to this house having really good bones," Lucy says.
They
paid above market value. Earthquake repairs were already organised -
some were already done, they were told. Exterior plasterwork
cracking, minor cosmetic stuff. To be on the safe side, the Palepois
got the Earthquake Commission (EQC) deed of assignment.
But
months went on and nobody came. Lucy, stay-at-home mum, chased up
EQC. Finally, an assessor arrived. It was deemed a $30,000 patch-up
job. EQC passed over the money and the Palepois got plasterers to
size up the job.
One
quoted $42,000 but wouldn't guarantee his work until the 70-year old
foundations were looked at. Cracks there were dismissed as minor by
EQC assessors. Pre-1970s foundations were suddenly a major issue for
Christchurch homeowners.
And
the Palepois were told EQC plaster repairs from 2011 were shoddy
The
2016 Valentine's Day quake "reopened a spider's web of cracks",
Lucy says. Windows wouldn't shut properly.
It
was clear the damage was more than cosmetic. "I hounded EQC,"
Lucy says. "I'd ring them and play nice. I'd ring them and cry.
I'd ring them and yell."
Last
December, they finally got another EQC assessment. It returned grim
findings. One corner of the house is sinking. The property needs
lifting up, so workers can dig 4m deep to find solid ground to build
new foundations.
The
repairs will soar past the EQC repair cap of $100,000. After that, it
goes to their insurance company. But the insurer's policy in such
situations is to pay the indemnity value of repairs because of the
home's wear and tear. The rest falls with the Palepois. And now,
their lawyers.
"We
were so naive," Lucy says.
"We
just thought we'd done everything right. Being vigilant by getting
the deed of assignment. Nothing pointed to repairs even remotely
going over cap.
"Anyone
buying a house in Christchurch needs to know. Even if the repairs
have been signed off, if it's a shoddy repair job, then they're left
with a massive bill or a house worth nothing."
And
this is just the tip of the iceberg.
After
the earthquakes, Bevan Craig spent hours wandering through the
cracked and twisted residential red zone.
Entire
eastern subdivisions were wrecked. More than 7200 homes would
eventually be razed, leaving a rough, barren wasteland where grasses
would slowly sprout behind wire fences.
As
a house foundation specialist, Craig had a professional interest in
what lay beneath all homes there.
Many
Christchurch houses built before the 1970s had rubble foundations -
stone in different grades of concrete, aggregate and plaster. The
rest of New Zealand stopped using the method in the 1920s.
Craig
became concerned the cracks seen in these foundations were being too
quickly repaired by EQC. Epoxy resin or waterproof filler was used to
patch them up. Often the damage was assessed as being old,
pre-quakes.
The
problem never went away. Out of a total of 26,879 domestic over-cap
claims, 384 are unresolved. Insurers have paid out $20.1 billion on
the staggeringly high 142,346 domestic claims and 26,248 commercial
claims in Canterbury as of June 30 this year.
Through
his independent house insurance assessment firm Underfoot Services,
Craig has worked with 9000 homeowners over the past six years. He
estimates as many as 60,000 pre-1970s houses may have been
incorrectly assessed and repaired. "The majority of people who
have these homes are sitting on ticking time-bombs," he says.
Documents
released in June under the Official Information Act revealed EQC
accepted there were around 11,500 claims relating to botched repairs.
Many were minor, others land and drainage claims. As of June 30, EQC
says it was down to managing 2764 call-back repairs, including 1011
underfloor repairs. EQC stresses it's important that in the wider
context, it received more than 469,000 claims for the 2010 and 2011
quakes.
"Our
policy is to ensure that all customers receive their full entitlement
for any loss or damage that was directly caused by a natural
disaster," an EQC spokesman says.
"This
has been our approach since the Canterbury earthquakes and any
homeowner who believes that their foundations may have
earthquake-related damage can discuss their situation with EQC.
"Many
homes in Canterbury were built before 1970 and had foundation damage
or structural weakness that was there before the earthquakes. It is
not uncommon for their foundations to be damaged due to causes other
than an earthquake, such as cracking caused by natural drying
shrinkage, weathering, as well as corrosion of reinforcing materials.
"There
are repair solutions available for repairing houses and foundations
and each is assessed individually. Once a decision is made to
undertake a repair, then the work must meet the requirements of all
of the relevant legislation, including the EQC Act."
But
Andrew Hooker of Shine Lawyers believes there are "hundreds, if
not thousands, of seriously botched repairs".
"When
I say seriously botched, I mean repairs that were EQC patched-up
cracks in foundations and a proper assessment reveals the entire
foundation is stuffed, so you're talking $300,000-$500,000 repair
jobs. The scale is massive. There are potentially billions of dollars
at stake."
Hooker
has more than 50 clients in situations similar to the Palepois. But
with time - or indeed more shaking like last year's magnitude 5.7
Valentine's Day jolt - homeowners notice that "things aren't
quite as they should be".
"So
EQC admits, 'Yep we stuffed your repairs up, here's $100,000, which
is our limited liability under the EQC Act (Earthquake Commission Act
1993).' And I say, 'No, you stuffed up these people's houses, you
need to pay the lot'," Hooker says.
And
that will fall back on the taxpayer.
Dozens
of claims from people in situations similar to the Palepois have been
filed in the High Court in recent days. More will come in the
following weeks.
The
Insurance Council of New Zealand (ICNZ) has previously told
Cantabrians the main residential private insurers would not rely on
the Limitations Act before September 4, 2017 - the seven-year
anniversary of the magnitude 7.1 tremor that sparked the devastating
2010-2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence.
There
are different interpretations of how the Act applies, and individual
insurers and EQC, have taken a range of positions.
ICNZ
chief executive Tim Grafton says there is no need for homeowners to
rush to court and incur costs to protect their legal position. "You
can simply make a call to your insurer to understand its position on
its Limitation Act rights in relation to your claim."
Lawyers,
insurance advocates, and homeowners spoken to by the Herald on Sunday
are worried, however, they'll be left to foot the bill of
quake-damaged homes if they don't act now.
"We're
filing proceedings in court saying that the insurer and/or EQC have
not repaired the house to policy standards, and/or that the repairs
are defective ... and to get a ruling on whether EQC has to pay the
lot," says Hooker, whose firm filed "about 50"
proceedings in the past few days. In the next few months, he expects
"possibly two to three times that amount".
Hooker
was still receiving "desperate requests for help" on
Thursday night.
"Time
is ticking on and EQC and insurers will be able to rely on things
like the Limitation Period if people aren't careful. By then it's too
late and they can't sue anyone.
"It
has been seven years, so imagine how many homes that have had botched
repairs have since been sold and people moved on and changed their
lives.
"People
in the rest of New Zealand have no idea how big the problem is."
Law
firm Anthony Harper has filed two proceedings where insurance
companies have refused to defer reliance on a Limitation Act defence
after today. Both the claims are with the insurer, not EQC.
"However,
we are drafting many more proceedings, for clients who only have
extensions from their insurer to October 2, 2017. A number of these
claims are still with EQC and have not yet been passed to the
insurer," says Lisa Taylor, senior associate at Anthony Harper.
Labour
pledged last weekend to commit to a Royal Commission of Inquiry into
EQC to "get to the bottom of many issues Cantabrians have faced
in recent years" - a call supported by Hooker and Bourke.
Labour
also promised to establish an arbitration tribunal with an
inquisitorial focus as an alternative pathway for claimants, EQC and
insurers to resolve disputes.
ICNZ
rubbished the arbitration service proposal as a "misconceived,
poorly thought through seat-of-the-pants policy that runs roughshod
over natural justice", claiming the existing system, including
the legal system, does enough to resolve insurance claims.
Labour's
Christchurch Central candidate Duncan Webb questioned why ICNZ would
be "so defensive and negative" towards something that looks
to be a way to resolve "nightmarish situations for so many
people".
Former
Canterbury Earthquake Recovery Minister Gerry Brownlee has repeatedly
backed the work of EQC. During an election debate in Christchurch
this week, he provoked a chorus of boos when he labelled it a
"roaring success".
Mel
Bourke, of earthquake claimant advocacy group EQC Fix, bought a
repaired St Albans rental property in February last year only to find
the repairs were sub-standard.
Grasping
for solutions and trying to understand her rights, she was stunned
there was no group to represent the homeowners and help with key
decisions.
"It
doesn't matter if you're a surgeon or a solo mum, when you ride
through a [magnitude] 7 or 6 earthquake and your home is destroyed,
you know nothing about insurance and you know nothing about insurance
law.
"You're
emotionally devastated and you're vulnerable. There is so much you
need to know to make sure your claim is not mishandled.
"Your
home is your one place where you want to feel safe from the world,
and the insurance companies and the Government are taking the fight
into your living room and you have no escape."
In
April last year, a group of 98 homeowners won a landmark High Court
settlement that confirmed EQC is obliged to repair homes to a "when
new" standard.
But
more people are coming forward all the time.
"There
are so many people here, as homes change hands, as people delve into
things a bit more, who are finding failed EQC repairs and they just
don't know where to start. We're contacted with people like that
every month and it's heartbreaking," Bourke says.
"For
every home that EQC has cash settled, every home they've touched,
every home they've forced under the cap, then the New Zealand
Government should be accountable or liable to put right.
"If
a volcano hits Auckland, they're just as vulnerable as us. People
don't understand that it's one thing to have an insurance policy,
it's completely different for an insurer to pay a claim."
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