Support grows for fire safety register
Proposal to create a national fire safety register to promote competence and compliance for installers, maintainers and registered fire risk assessors was discussed during a Parliamentary seminar.
The plan, which was first discussed at the Fire Sector Summit in October, is for an umbrella register that would gather together all the existing accredited schemes under a single brand, which could be widely promoted.
The issue was further debated on 4 December at a seminar in the House of Commons, which was organised by the Association for Specialist Fire Protection (ASFP). Delegates heard that clear evidence from incidents such as at Lakanal House indicates that significant problems lie with installations in buildings that are less than fit for purpose and with key professionals failing to ask the right questions at the right time, or cutting corners and eroding specifications along the construction chain. With the fire safety order raising concerns, a register could give assurance to those lacking in-house expertise to decide if an installation is correct.
Speaking at the seminar, Chair of the Passive Fire Protection Federation Mike Wood explained that an online survey, conducted by BM TRADA, had shown strong support for such a scheme, with over 90% of respondents agreeing that there should be a National Fire Safe Register and 95% of those respondents saying that they would use it.
Mr Wood declared that this was the strongest indication that such a scheme would be well supported and, if implemented, would provide an essential step in improving standards across the UK. He said: ‘A National Fire Safe Register is the natural next step and I trust the fire safety sector through the Fire Sector Federation will plan to take it. As the responsible body, I don’t see how we can avoid that step. It is simply an obligation to those who rely on fire safety.
‘Installation and maintenance are critical. We know as a sector that correct installation for all fire protection systems is fundamental in achieving proper function in protecting against fire, according to product and system design. We also know from industry feedback that too many installations are carried out below standard.’