Independent Review of Building Regulations and Fire Safety

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction of the new Canada Consumer Product Safety Act Technical Briefing January 29, 2009.
Advertisements

ENTITIES FOR A UN SYSTEM EVALUATION FRAMEWORK 17th MEETING OF SENIOR FELLOWSHIP OFFICERS OF THE UNITED NATIONS SYSTEM AND HOST COUNTRY AGENCIES BY DAVIDE.
Audit Commission Hertfordshire Housing Conference Housing Inspectorate Developments in inspection and assessment Roy Irwin Chief Inspector of Housing.
CQC into the future Malcom Bower-Brown
1 Our new approach: now and for the future Barbara Skinner Inspection Manager - Adult Social Care January 2015.
Representing Central Government in the South East Monday, 27 April 2015 Vivien Lines DCSF Safeguarding Adviser VCS Safeguarding Seminar 17 December 2009.
Jane Jobarteh Midlands and East May 2013 The Future of Social Care Patients First and Foremost.
RNHA What CQC expect 16 October 2014 Nick Kerswell 1 1.
A Snapshot of TEQSA Dr Carol Nicoll Chief Commissioner Festival of Learning and Teaching University of Adelaide Tuesday 6 November 2012.
Modernising Pharmacy Regulation An inspector calls: A new regulatory model in pharmacy Mark Voce Head of Inspection, GPhC Date.
The reforms: Opportunities for getting it right for children whose behaviour challenges Christine Lenehan Director.
ARTSA Improving Heavy Vehicle Safety Summit Chain of Responsibility and its potential to improve safety Marcus Burke National Transport Commission 16 April.
Signs of Safety Toni Morkin, Senior Manager
United States-Canada Regulatory Cooperation Council United States-Canada Regulatory Cooperation Council January 30, 2012 Washington D.C
Signs of Safety Barb Lacroix Child Intervention Practice Specialist
Health and Safety Executive Health and Safety Executive Discretion and Judgement: HSE’s approach Mike Cross 3 June 2014.
Inclusion Ireland Annual Conference 28 March 2009 “Living Life to the Full” So where do Standards come in? Niall Byrne Deputy Director Office of the Chief.
Public Bodies (Joint Working) (Scotland) Bill. Health and Social Care Integration Not a new concept - policy goal for UK governments over the last few.
The Future of Adult Social Care John Crook March 2011.
Global APC Content Review Project Update February 2015.
The role of governance in self-assessment NATSPEC conference Sue Preece HMI March
Code Administrators Working Group Introduction 28 August 2008.
Setting the context Christine Lenehan Director CDC.
Main Requirements on Different Stages of the Licensing Process for New Nuclear Facilities Module 4.1 Steps in the Licensing Process Geoff Vaughan University.
1 The new world of regulation – October 2014 and beyond Rachael Dodgson - Head of Adult Social Care Policy October 2014.
HELPING THE NATION SPEND WISELY Evaluating the quality and use of Impact Assessments The role and approach of the NAO.
Better Regulation Executive Making regulation work for everyone Karen Hill Better Regulation Executive 01 March 2007 From Enforcement to Compliance: Delivering.
United States-Canada Regulatory Cooperation Council TBWG Fall Plenary November,
Fair Go Rates System Dr Ron Ben-David Chairperson MAV Rate Capping Forum 26 November 2015.
Linking the learning to the National Standards for Safer Better Healthcare Joan Heffernan Inspector Manager Regulation – Healthcare Health Information.
PROTECTING THE INTERESTS OF CONSUMERS OF FINANCIAL SERVICES Role of Supervisory Authorities Keynote Address to the FinCoNet Open Meeting 22 April 2016.
HEALTH AND CARE STANDARDS APRIL Background Ministerial commitment 2013 – Safe Care Compassionate Care Review “Doing Well Doing Better” Standards.
Revised Quality Assurance Arrangements for Registered Training Organisations Strengthening our commitment to quality - COAG February 2006 September 2006.
Grant Timms Senior Examiner Assignment brief December 2013 / March 2014 Marketing Leadership & Planning.
#SVscot Developing a Framework for Hearing the Voice of Citizens in Health and Social Care.
National Scheme overview Chris Robertson
March 2012 Social Care Reform Integration – where we are now and where are we going David Behan – Director General Social Care, Local Government and Care.
Signs of Safety Toni Morkin, Senior Manager
Andy Cloke Station Manager Technical Fire Safety Central support
ALEO East Midlands Wednesday 18th January
Embedding the golden threads that lead to quality care every time……
Improving Governance Governance arrangements in complex and challenging circumstances Ofsted HMCI survey Dec 2016.
Asset Management Accountability Framework
Raising standards, putting people first
Fair Go Rates System Dr Ron Ben-David Chairperson
2016 IPWEAvic Public Works Conference
CQC Inspections: seeking assurance of good practice
The Efficacy of Statements of Assurance prepared by Fire & Rescue Authorities in England Research Presentation Thomas Spencer, Jo Hayden and Pete Murphy.
A new way of delivering adult social care
Regulating new care models
OGA overview and update
ComPliance Essentials LTD
NMC – Where are we now? Jackie Smith Chief Executive and Registrar
Principles for a robust MRV System Lessons learnt from Kyoto Mechanisms Workshop 15: Accounting and accountability: Towards a credible and robust carbon.
Review of the Family Law System
Our new quality framework and methodology:
The Place Standard, housing and local environmental quality
Standards for student supervision and assessment (change title as required) Add in presenters name; title & date.
Fair Go Rates System Dr Ron Ben-David Chairperson
So you’ve been inspected…. communicators driving improvement
Introduction of the new Canada Consumer Product Safety Act
An Integrated Decision Making Process for Children with Complex Needs
Scrutiny and Empowerment Partners Limited
Consumer Conversations and Aged Care Standards
Scrutiny. Net at WVHT, 4th July 2018 Yvonne Davies
Yvonne Davies Housing Green Paper Consumer Regulation Review - what is it asking tenants? Scrutiny.Net 4th October.
Remedial Action for High-rise Buildings Sir Ken Knight
Together with Tenants 2 April 2019
Building Safety Update October 2019
Presentation transcript:

Independent Review of Building Regulations and Fire Safety CHC Safety Summit - 20th July 2018 Andrew Pattison

The Independent Review was commissioned in the wake of the Grenfell Tower fire but with a broader remit to look at the regulatory system for high rise buildings The brief Review announced on 28 July 2017. Reporting jointly to Housing Secretary and Home Secretary. End-to-end review - system and people. Assess effectiveness of current building and fire safety regulations, focusing on high-rise residential buildings. Consideration of new build and life cycle management of occupied buildings including refurbishment work and ongoing integrity management throughout the lifecycle Make recommendations that will ensure we have a sufficiently robust regulatory system for the future. Analysis of the system but not the detail or how it evolved – matters for the Public Inquiry

Since July, the review has covered a lot of ground… Timeline 30 August 2017 – Terms of Reference Autumn 2017 – Mapping, call for evidence, stakeholder bilaterals, industry and resident roundtables December 2017 – Interim Report published Clear statement of direction of travel January 2018 – Summit February and March 2018 – Working groups 17 May 2018 – Final Report published 53 recommendations which will result in a simpler but more robust regulatory framework and overall system for high rise buildings

The current system is clearly broken and not fit for purpose Interim report findings Current regulatory system for ensuring fire safety in high rise and complex buildings is weak and ineffective. Industry behaviour characterised as a “race to the bottom” with significant evidence of gaming the system Guidance is prescriptive but siloed, confusing and inconsistent Design and change management is poor, both during construction, occupation and refurbishment Experts are not listened to Residents are not listened to and have no reliable means to recourse Problems connected to the culture of the construction industry, building management and the ineffectiveness of the regulators that oversee Product testing, marketing, labelling and approval processes are flawed and unreliable

The Independent Review mapped the current regulatory system..

….and the final report recommended fundamental reform of the system. A stronger and tougher regulatory regime: Joint Competent Authority comprising the Health and Safety Executive, Local Authority Building Control, Fire and Rescue Authorities A stronger enforcement and sanctioning package – criminal sanctions and large fines Introduction of a safety case approach and permissioning regime which will only allow buildings which are demonstrated to be safe to be constructed and occupied Consideration of high rise buildings as a complex holistic system Clear responsibilities to actively manage on-going safety during occupation: Continued ‘safety case’ regime whereby building owners will need to demonstrate to the regulator that safety risks in their buildings are managed and controlled and buildings remain safe for occupation A nominated a ‘building safety manager’ whose contact information would be displayed at the building and should be the day-to-day contact for residents on building safety matters

..and the final report recommended fundamental reform of the system. Fundamental overhaul of guidance Simpler, clearer and easier to sue to support a systems approach to building safety More rigorous requirements where needed particularly for high rise residential buildings Industry to be engaged in producing detailed guidance on how to meet standards but under scrutiny/control of new regulatory body Industry to lead on strengthening competence of professionals and set out a credible proposal within a year. Stronger testing, labelling and traceability of products used in construction which are critical to building safety. Empowered residents: Greater access to and transparency of safety information by building owners. A culture of engagement and government funding to support residents’ associations. An independent, no-risk route for redress on safety issues. Responsibilities to maintain safety features in their dwellings.

The review has set out important key principles… Clear accountability and responsibility at the heart of the system. A joined up permissioning approach to regulation of high rise complex buildings through a tougher single regulatory body. Holding dutyholders to account: Simpler but more robust A preventative approach with serious penalties for those who fail to comply before an incident or tragedy occurs Incentivises good practice and responsible behaviour Mechanisms in place to react to learnings and information quickly. An outcomes-based approach to encourage real ownership and accountability: – those undertaking building work and managing buildings must be responsible for delivering and maintaining safe buildings.

…and created a new regulatory map.

This is a major step in the right direction but will not be enough on its own This is a big change, but not a leap into the unknown. Immediate actions can and should be undertaken both government and industry to maintain the momentum for change this may include addition of new tougher standards. Implementing the package of recommendations will take time, and some recommendations will require legislative change but this needs to be prioritised. Further lessons and learning may need to be incorporated in the light of further evidence from the Public Inquiry Collaboration and partnership across all parts of the system will be crucial for delivering consistent solutions and real culture change. Systemic change needs everyone to change - Local Authorities and Fire and Rescue Authorities have a key role to play

A framework for better and stronger regulation for the future HackittResponse@communities.gsi.gov.uk