Pro Installer July 2014 - Issue 16 | Page 53

53 PRO INSTALLER JULY 2014 PRO BUSINESS @proinstaller1 Build Show Responds To The Queen’s Speech In response to HM the Queen’s speech at the recent State Opening of Parliament, the Build Show welcomed the announcements of reform and new legislation that will help the housebuilding sector to grow, including measures that will benefit the industry including: A reform to the planning system supporting small housebuilding firms, new legislation to sell high-value government land for development, a continued promotion of the Help to Buy and Right to Buy schemes and a pledge to increase the number of apprenticeship places to two million by the end of parliament. A crucial announcement to highlight is the change in Zero Carbon Homes, whereby the government is introducing ‘Allowable Solutions’ that will support small housebuilding firms that struggle to meet the ever-increasing environmental standards. The changes are designed to encourage the acceleration of housebuilding across the country by recognising the difficulty in building to the new level five standards for firms that lack large capital backing. Paul Godwin, Build Show MD, commented: “The Queen made some significant announcements that offer the sector real encouragement, in particular that small housebuilding firms will be supported and given a fair chance to grow through the easing of planning regulations and the release of more land for development. “The pledge to increase the number of apprenticeships is a welcome commitment that will help address skills shortages and enable the industry to flourish in future.” Brought to market by the organisers of the FIT Show (Fabricator Installer Trade Show), the Build Show will take place at the NEC from Tuesday 28th to Thursday 30th April 2015. www.buildshow.co.uk Fuel cards: the truth but not the whole truth? The Fuelcard People want to remind van users of the importance of verifying fuel card suppliers’ claims. Steve Clarke, group marketing manager, said: “Always remember the difference between truth and honesty. If a supplier tells you that it offers fixed weekly pricing, that might be true, but if it forgets to add that it also levies transaction charges, it is not being honest.” Failure to understand a supplier’s charging structure could be an expensive mistake. “You can usually expect any supplier to tell you the truth,” said Steve Clarke, “but it might not be telling you the whole truth, or nothing but the truth. Always check their claims and the small print.” The 2013 introduction of unexpected additional charges by some suppliers led to thousands of van users discovering ‘network fees’ and other transaction charges were buried within invoices, without explanation. Many switched suppliers. “A £2 charge may sound small,” said Steve, “but when you add £2 to each refuelling it soon adds up. We never impose network fees, transaction charges or anything similar, under any name.” Call 0844 870 6942. TRAFFIC HOLDUPS? SURVEY REVEALS 2,387 MILES OF INCOMPLETE ROADWORKS Britain has 25,955 miles of to be completed roadworks - equating to 2,387 miles in length. Figures were revealed by the breakdown service LV=Road Rescue who conducted the research. The company surveyed all 434 city, district, borough and county councils in the UK and estimated how many potholes and road work needed to be tackled. Information was provided by 91 councils about the number of roadworks in their area, with the unfinished projects in these areas totalling 10,499 an average of 115 per council. Some roadwork projects sti