Original article published by IFSEC Global
The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022 introduce new duties for building owners and managers under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. They implement most of the recommendations of the Phase 1 report of the Grenfell Tower inquiry and are due to come into force on 23 January 2023.
Under the regulations, for high rise residential buildings (at least 18 metres or seven storeys high) responsible persons must:
For multi-occupied residential buildings over 11 metres high, responsible persons must undertake quarterly checks on all communal fire doors and annual checks on flat entrance doors.
In all multi-occupied residential buildings, responsible persons must provide residents with relevant fire safety instructions and information about the importance of fire doors.
The regulations sit alongside the Building Safety Act amendments to the Fire Safety Order, and the government’s overhaul of supporting guidance under article 50 of the Fire Safety Order, due to be published later in 2022.
The two Grenfell Tower Inquiry recommendations on personal emergency evacuation plans (PEEPS), however, are not being implemented through these regulations. The government concluded that its consultation on PEEPs showed substantial difficulties of mandating PEEPs in high-rise residential buildings. So it has consulted on an alternative package of measures to deliver against the inquiry recommendations on PEEPs, referred to as emergency evacuation information sharing (EEIS+). The government asserts that since the inquiry recommendation on evacuation plans has a clear link with the issue of PEEPs, evacuation from high-rise and other residential buildings should be treated as a single issue.
The regulations will, however, require responsible persons to provide residents with fire safety instructions which set out how they should respond to a fire, and a reminder of their building’s evacuation strategy.