Hong Kong proposes mandatory renovation briefings to combat bid-rigging

Hong Kong authorities have proposed mandatory briefings for building renovation projects to increase homeowner participation and curb bid-rigging, in response to a fatal fire in Tai Po. The amendment to the Building Management Ordinance seeks to close legal gaps. Officials highlighted information asymmetry as a key cause of recent disputes.

Hong Kong's Secretary for Home and Youth Affairs, Alice Mak Mei-kuen, stated on a radio programme that authorities plan to amend the Building Management Ordinance to require management companies to hold briefing sessions before major repair or improvement works, allowing owners to gain detailed information.

"From our experience of handling disputes in recent years, we found that many conflicts arose from an information asymmetry," Mak said, as reported by the South China Morning Post. "It would be helpful if homeowners did not rely solely on the general meeting to ask questions and make decisions, which would be too rushed … the briefing could provide more information for owners to make an informed decision and allow the management company or the management committee to address their questions before the general meeting."

"If they fail to do so, owners would be more motivated to attend the meeting on their own to vote," she added. The measure targets issues like proxy forgery and bid-rigging, drawing from cases involving companies such as Hop On Management Company.

The proposal follows a deadly fire at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po on November 26, which killed 168 people and displaced nearly 5,000 residents. A public consultation is underway to enhance fire safety facilities and other protections.

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Residents of Hong Kong's Wang Fuk Court have returned to the fire-ravaged ruins in recent days, climbing stairs to retrieve jewellery, cash, photo albums and keepsakes before bidding farewell to their homes. The fire services chief acknowledged at a hearing that departments need better communication while insisting on clear divisions of responsibility. The blaze killed 168 people.

Hong Kong has launched a public consultation on proposed amendments to the Fire Services Ordinance, six months after a deadly fire at Wang Fuk Court in Tai Po.

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In the latest session of Hong Kong's inquiry into the deadly Wang Fuk Court fire—which killed 168 and displaced nearly 5,000—Urban Renewal Authority officials admitted their tendering system cannot prevent market manipulation or bid-rigging in estate renovations, citing limited resources and a policy of non-interference in homeowners' choices.

Hong Kong's Basic Housing Units Ordinance takes effect on Sunday, requiring landlords to renovate properties to meet new standards. The law has already prompted evictions, with more than 200 households in Sham Shui Po's Yee Wa Building given notice to leave. Tenants like 72-year-old Chan Sai-chiu struggle to find affordable alternatives.

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An inquiry heard that a fire services company conducted no on-site checks and merely rubber-stamped 85 shutdown notices for a housing estate's hose reel system before Hong Kong's deadliest blaze in decades. A Fire Services Department official testified that another contractor failed to alert authorities after finding the estate's fire water tanks drained and power switches for hose reels and alarms turned off. The revelations emerged at the ninth hearing into the November fire in Tai Po that killed 168 people.

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