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Building Safety Starts With Local Government

Written by Cloudpermit | May 7, 2026 5:31:46 PM

International Building Safety Day is almost here, and the yearly awareness day on May 22 is a good opportunity to highlight the critical role of local governments in making building safety possible.

The 2026 theme, “Built to Last,” recognizes the connection between sustainability goals and building safety. It’s a chance to emphasize the benefits of constructing more durable buildings — including reduced maintenance and replacement costs and greater community resilience following a disaster.

Local governments participate directly in building safety every day by overseeing permitting, code enforcement, recurring inspections, and other critical components of keeping citizens safe.

What Building Safety Really Means Today

Building safety includes structural safety, of course, but it goes far beyond that. Other factors, including health, sustainability, and resilience, are also critically important when considering the safety of the places we rely on every day.

Structural factors are crucial to address to prevent injuries or deaths from fires or collapses.

Health factors, including air quality and accessibility, must be considered when assessing a structure's safety.

Sustainability matters, too, because more durable buildings are more resilient in the aftermath of weather events and natural disasters.

Modern expectations for buildings have changed — and citizens today expect that the places where they live, work, shop, dine, and visit in their communities will be safe.

Local Governments' Role in Building Safety

Across the country, local governments are on the front lines of building safety in their communities.

Every week, municipal staff enforce building codes, review permits and plans, conduct inspections, and ensure ongoing compliance.

But there are many potential barriers to their work. Challenges include:

  • Increasing volume of development
  • Aging infrastructure
  • Slim staffing and unfilled positions
  • Manual or outdated systems
  • Lack of real-time access to critical information

Increasingly, municipalities need to find new ways to do more with less as their communities grow and new challenges emerge.

How Technology Supports Building Safety

Towns and cities of all sizes directly support local building safety efforts by ensuring that structures meet important standards that help them stand today and withstand disasters better in the future.

But the job can be difficult to keep up with if a municipality’s processes are stuck in the past, making staff reliant on outdated systems or paper-based workflows that are much more prone to error and confusion.

The right software for local governments can make a lasting impact on how staff work through these challenges, especially if they have specific features designed to help:

  1. Digital permitting
  2. Mobile inspections
  3. Real-time data
  4. Centralized systems

1. Digital Permitting

Paper-based applications and scattered spreadsheets make it much harder to navigate the permitting process in a timely, well-organized manner.

With online permit tracking software, the days of slow responses and delays are in the past.

Instead, staff can get through permitting much more quickly, applicants can be automatically updated whenever their status changes, and important building decisions can be easily tracked and reported.

2. Mobile Inspections

Inspections don’t happen in the office, but outdated workflows can force staff to double up on work and re-enter notes and photos at their desks.

Making time in the field more productive with a mobile inspections app means inspections can be completed anywhere, at any time, without duplicating effort or driving back to the office to finish up.

3. Real-Time Data

Better decisions don’t just happen on their own.

When staff can access real-time data in the field or office, they’ll always know the latest status of inspections, permits, and approvals — as well as any deficiencies or problems that need immediate attention.

The right software levels up this access to information, all in the same platform where staff complete building safety inspections, approve permits, and keep up with local code enforcement needs.

4. Centralized Systems

Scattered systems lead to misinformation and confusion.

When everything is in the same place, and all necessary info is in a single shared property database, the full building history is available on demand, and work improves.

It’s all about consistency, visibility, and efficiency — and streamlining how details are stored and accessed is one of the most effective ways to achieve these goals.

Supporting Building Safety Over the Full Lifecycle

Safe and sustainable buildings are the result of years and decades of work, not overnight success.

Houses, stores, restaurants, apartments, and other buildings need adequate oversight before they’re built and long after they’re occupied.

Local governments provide this oversight before construction starts with planning and permitting. As the structure takes shape, inspections become a vital tool for catching potential issues before they become dangerous problems.

Maintenance needs to be closely monitored throughout the full lifecycle of structures.

The importance of recurring inspections, including fire safety inspections, cannot be overstated: they are a primary means of keeping people safe long after the ribbon is cut and residents or workers have moved in.

More than ever, local inspectors, building officials, engineers, enforcement officers, and planners are pivotal figures protecting citizens who rely on proactive government oversight.

Safer Communities Start With Strong Systems

Building safety is an ongoing effort, not just an annual reminder we observe on International Building Safety Day.

Everyone in the community plays a part in this collective effort — especially municipal staff who work to keep residents safe every day of the year.

Local governments do essential work every day, and modern tools help municipalities build safer, more resilient communities.


Learn how Cloudpermit helps local governments streamline permitting, inspections, and compliance by booking a demo.