TW I am in the dark as much as you on this.
I thought I had a reasonable understanding of the situation but I started to doubt this having read Colins postings 13, 16 and 20 in this thread.
Colin appears to take the firm view that in the scenarios quoted the Owner is NOT an RP. He is just a person having control. I would very much like to understand the issues behind this.
Till then I thought that in this scenario all employers and the owner were classed as Responsible Persons. A view reinforced by my reading and re-reading of the Guidance Note No 1.
Now if we take Colins position to be correct in the scenario quoted, as the building contains a workplace and we have an employer in the building, nobody else but the employer will be a responsible person. The owner of the building will be a person having control.
But even allowing for the broadest description of a workplace as set out in the European directive, it seems to me that some parts of the building are not a workplace and that some parts of the common areas will be outside the control of some of the employers. Article 3 says:
Meaning of "responsible person"
3. In this Order "responsible person" means—
(a) in relation to a workplace, the employer, if the workplace is to any extent under his control;
(b) in relation to any premises not falling within paragraph (a)—
(i) the person who has control of the premises (as occupier or otherwise) in connection with the carrying on by him of a trade, business or other undertaking (for profit or not); or
(ii) the owner, where the person in control of the premises does not have control in connection with the carrying on by that person of a trade, business or other undertaking.
This is then clarified in the guidance note as follows:
35. Article 3(a) provides that in a workplace the employer is the responsible person if
the workplace is under the employer’s control. This reflects the Framework Directive
(89/391/EEC), which imposes unconditional obligations on employers by having the
ultimate responsibility for the safety of their employees in case of fire, even where
others have obligations in respect of the premises.
36. If the premises are not a workplace, or are a workplace but are not under the
employer’s control, the responsible person is determined by whether the person who
has control over the premises does so in connection with the carrying on of a trade,
business or undertaking (whether or not for profit ).
37. If so, article 3(b)(i) provides that the person with control is the responsible person.
That is my understanding. I think that the guidance note is correct and the owner is a responsible person.
Article 29 says:
29. —(1) The enforcing authority may serve on the responsible person a notice (in this Order referred to as "an alterations notice") if the authority is of the opinion that the premises—
(a) constitute a serious risk to relevant persons (whether due to the features of the premises, their use, any hazard present, or any other circumstances); or
(b) may constitute such a risk if a change is made to them or the use to which they are put.
Guidance note No 1 says:
Article 29 – Alterations notices
130. The purpose of an alterations notice is twofold. First, it is intended to assist enforcing
authorities in maintaining a risk-based inspection programme by highlighting potentially
high life-risk premises where risk levels may change and affect the outcomes of the fire
risk assessment. Secondly, it notifies the responsible person (and other persons who
have duties in respect of premises) that the enforcing authority considers the premises
to be of high or potentially high risk. This will affect those persons’ consideration of risk
in the premises.
Reading article 29 at its face value- the alterations notice is served on the responsible person. This seems to imply it cannot be served on a person having control, though the guidance note 1 para 130 seems to blur this a little by referring to other persons who have duties in respect of premises.
Sorry for banging on about this - I just want to understand it.