Alhaji Fasasi Muhammed-Jamiu, the National President, Builders and Construction Skilled Artisans Association of Nigeria (BACSAAN) has urged governments to engage and empower the association in the fight against building collapse in the country.
Muhammed-Jamiu said that this would greatly reverse the spate of building collapse mostly associated with poor construction.
He made the call in Abuja on Saturday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).
NAN reports that the Nigeria Society of Engineers (NSE) and Nigeria Institute of Builders (NIOB) and other professional bodies work with government agencies in monitoring standard of buildings across the country.
He was speaking against the backdrop of collapsed buildings in Lagos and Ibadan on Wednesday and Friday.
According to him, existing regulatory bodies at different levels of governments are trying but don’t have the wherewithal to make much effective impact across the length and breadth of the country.
“Building collapses in Nigeria can be avoided if pre-adequate measures are taken by all key players in the sector.
“There are construction monitoring agencies in the country, but the ability to know where poor jobs are being done and true status of buildings lays with the artisans that work on them.
“Governments, especially, at the federal level have invited us for several meetings, its high time we were involved in the regulatory exercise.
“Our inclusion will complement efforts of the existing operators because we take part from the beginning to the end of each construction.
“It goes beyond academic brilliance to truly revealing the true status of completed buildings and those under construction.
“The major work in building construction is practical and use of energy which our members are ready to give but many building owners or governments are yet to engage us in that regards.
“Artisans have firsthand experience required to detect true status of the buildings and how to remediate construction defects,” he said.
On why some of his members were involved in erecting substandard structures, the association president said it was often due to survival need.
“Many building owners and investors influence artisans to use inferior materials in the construction of buildings to minimise cost.
“Governments also in their bid to minimise cost of building at all levels and reduce housing deficiency keep patronising middle men instead of organised artisans for building projects.
“These middle men or contractors most times underpay the artisans which make the job unprofitable and force them either to use substandard materials or quit the job.
“But I am appealing to government at all levels to work with BACSAAN in their bid to stem the tide of building collapse in the country.”