 The Oregon State government says it is doubling efforts to regulate and enforce rules on a variety of building collapse in the state. The Commissioner for Fiscal Planning and Urban Development in the state said the government is set to introduce what he termed a non-destructive test for all new buildings in the state. Our Oregon State correspondent Habibat Ajayi reports. 2021 saw a number of building collapse in the country. In Oregon State is not an exception. A classroom building of Nazarete High School recently collapsed during school hours at Emequafo, Oregon, SW, killing one pupil. A report shows that in the last 10 years, spanning 2009-2019, the SW recorded 34 building collapses, representing 60.71%. Commissioner for Fiscal Planning and Urban Development in Oregon states Olatuji Odolami argues that the building collapse has been under-reported. The other cost is like sustainable materials, use of quarks on building sites. It is a source of work. We discover that in the market, other as a result of high costs of procurement of those materials or determinants of people to cut quarks, there are a lot of, so that the materials can stay in the towns across the states, across from the building states. Now, where the building state is that every block that will be used on building sites in the state will have a stamp of the owner, of the maker, of the block there. So that we are already working to ensure that in a new state, the plants that will be cut in the soil may or that will be sold in the soil may will meet the specifications. Stakeholders are challenging the regulatory authorities at all levels to rise up to the responsibility of eliminating quarks in the industry, as masses are the worst eats. So we need to ask ourselves how effective are regulatory agencies to be able to ensure that the industry stays in the soil, so that even if there are some other blocks in the sustainable materials and sites, the person who has engaged quarks to establish his building, regulatory agencies should be able to come and say no and not use this material no, this person is not satisfied. Ogham State is restating its resolve to put its eyes on the quality of plaque, block and order building materials produced in the state to ensure they meet the standard. Abibat Ajayi plus TV Africa Ogham State.