William 29
Take a look back in time on these pages to page 11, scroll down to HD in hotel bedrooms and see post no 4, very interesting histoty lesson on this matter from our old grandmaster Mr T
Lambie, dont let things grind you down, I can sense you are frustrated with certain inspecting officers (IO's) as you call them, just please dont forget there are many competent ones out there who do care, and are doing their level best to get with it and switch over to the new culture of fire risk assessments we all now find ourselves involved with, (difficult as it may appear to many), and allow the person with the responsibilities the opportunity to conduct their own risk assessments with or without competent assistance and then justify/stand or fall by their decisions, and ultimately be presented with whatever decisions the enforcing authorities decide to place upon them, from no action/informal action or formal enforcement action, a decision which should be decided following consultaion between the IO and his line manager,but I guess there are many (IO's) who cant manage/won't accept the change (maybe old dinausars)and prefer to stay with prescription and hope they get away with it.
One thing is consistently clear with all the guides available north of the border is the sentence" Enforcing Authorities should not seek to compel the benchmarks contained within these guides on a prescriptive basis.
Prescription is not compatible with fire safety risk assessment and all premises will be different, with each risk assessment being site specific and decisions in respect of fire safety standards should at all times be based on judgement of risk and be justifiable, both from a compliance and an enforcement perspective.
This is a message that needs to get accross to many IO's in my opinion.