Shoosmiths LLP
  September 21, 2023 - Milton Keynes, England

Lessons from Grenfell: New fire safety responsibilities
  by Shoosmiths LLP

Amendments to the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 will add to the existing responsibilities of Responsible Persons under the Order which were expanded earlier this year by The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022[1].

Who is the Responsible Person?

Under the Fire Safety Order, the Responsible Person is the person who has control of the premises. For example, a leaseholder, a tenant, a building owner, or an employer in relation to a workplace (provided the workplace is to any extent under their control e.g. they are self-employed), can be the Responsible Person. There can be more than one Responsible Person for the same premises particularly for non-domestic parts of premises for which the freeholder, landlord or a managing agent could all be responsible. For further information on identifying Responsible Persons, please follow the link below[2]. 

What additional responsibilities will be introduced by Section 156?

In summary, all Responsible Persons are required to:

This applies where a building contains two or more sets of domestic premises.

What else does Section 156 do?

Comment

The enhanced status of Article 50 guidance reflects the legal status of Approved Codes of Practice issued by the Health and Safety Executive. The status of these Codes means that those defending alleged breaches of health and safety legislation will be convicted if it is proved a relevant Code was not followed unless they can show they complied with the law in another way. The new status of Article 50 guidance and the unlimited fines for breaches of the Act, indicate that prosecutions are anticipated for breaches which, if proved in court, may result in significant sentences. 

And finally…. 

Unsurprisingly, the section 156(4) requirement that, where the Responsible Person appoints a person to make or review a fire risk assessment, that person must be competent will not be brought into force on 1 October 2023. This awaits completion of the work on detailing the competency requirements under the Act and publication of regulations relating to duty holders and competency. Meanwhile, the Government recommends that Responsible Persons ensure fire risk assessors are competent “….in terms of having sufficient training and experience or knowledge and other qualities”[3].

We will publish a further article on the Section 156(4) guidance (which should be published before section 156(4) is brought into force) to continue to support Responsible Persons.

 

 

Resources

  1. Lessons from Grenfell: The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 (shoosmiths.com)
  2. Check your fire safety responsibilities under the Fire Safety Order - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)
  3. Fire safety responsibilities under Section 156 of the Building Safety Act 2022 - GOV.UK (www.gov.uk)



Read full article at: https://www.shoosmiths.com/insights/articles/lessons-from-grenfell-new-fire-safety-responsibilities