Scottish law applies.
T (tenant/occupier) has an office building, which has had change of use to office from former use and appropriate buildings works done. There is no Certificate of Completion under the Building Standards issued, but the local authority has issued a Certificate of Temporary Occupation and the building is occupied. T is a large employer and has a senior manager with responsibility for Health & Safety.
T does not carry out a formal fire risk assessment as the building is "still in building works".
The Fire (Scotland) Act 2005 [2] states:
Duties in relation to relevant premises
54 (1) Where a person has control to any extent of relevant premises
the person shall, to that extent, comply with subsection (2).
(2) The person shall-
(a) carry out an assessment of the relevant premises for the purpose
of identifying any risks to the safety of relevant persons in respect
of harm caused by fire in the relevant premises; and
(b) take in relation to the relevant premises such of the fire safety
measures as in all the circumstances it is reasonable for a person in
his position to take to ensure the safety of relevant persons in
respect of harm caused by fire in the relevant premises.
Scottish Government
guidance [1] states:
The duty to carry out a risk assessment applies to employers and others who have control of premises. There is no deferral of time specified in the legislation - this means that the duty applies whenever you have control of the premises.
T states that he is not in breach of the legislation because a certificate of temporary occupation has been issued and the building would not have been granted such a certificate if there had been any problems relating to assessment of fire risk.
Is T in error and has T committed an offence under s. 54 and s. 71 [3] ?
Offences
72 (1) If-
(a) a person fails to carry out a duty to which the person is subject
by virtue of-
(i) section 53;
(ii) section 54; or
(iii) section 55; and
(b) the failure to carry out the duty in question puts a relevant
person at risk of death, or serious injury, in the event of fire,
the person shall be guilty of an offence.
I am fairly sure this is the case but ideally I would like a definite pointer to something which shows that the Occupancy Certifcate under Building Standards is not the same as and does not meet the requirements
for a fire risk assessment.
Scottish Goverment
guidance [4] states:
"108. Monthly: ... Carry out
brief visual check of fire extinguishers and hose reels to ensure
there are no obvious faults" and "116. Records of the maintenance and
testing recommended in paragraphs 105 to 111 above, should be made and
retained. ... Records .. should include:
Fire alarm systems, including weekly alarm tests and periodic
maintenance; ...
Fire extinguishers, hose reels and fire blankets etc;"
T does not keep any written records of visual checks of fire extinguishers. A fire extinguisher is reported missing and is still missing 10 weeks later. T does not keep written records of the report of the missing extinguisher. Despite a missing fire extinguisher being reported, when T does subsequently carry out a risk assessment, the missing extinguisher is not noticed or recorded on the risk assessment. (Another wrongly positioned extinguisher is recorded - the assessor visually inspects other extinguishers.) T has a service contract where the extinguisher will be next inspected and serviced in 2012.
Has T committed an offence in failing to keep records, and under what section, or is the failure to keep records merely inability to demonstrate compliance with other legislation? Is the designated H&S
manager, or the employee who carried out the risk assessment, also committed an offence?
[1]
http://www.firelawscotland.org/v25e5e.html?pContentID=243[2]
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/asp/2005/5/section/54[3]
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/asp/2005/5/section/72[4]
http://www.firelawscotland.org/files/OSG-index.html