Organising for safety
41
➤
Ensuring access and egress and other appropriate
provisions for disabled people
➤
Arranging maintenance, testing and, where appro-
priate, inspection of:
➤
Fire
safety equipment
➤
Systems and procedures
➤
Emergency communication systems
➤
Monitoring any general maintenance/building works
that may affect fi re safety arrangements, includ-
ing the supervision, monitoring and instruction of
contractors
➤
Management of non-routine high fi re risk
activities
including the issue of hot work permits
➤
Notifi cation to the authorities (fi re authority, building
control) of any changes that may affect fi re precau-
tions, e.g. changes to internal layout, extensions or
structural alterations and where appropriate if highly
fl ammable or explosive mixture levels alter
➤
Ensuring that relevant
British Standards and other
appropriate standards are complied with.
The above list of responsibilities assigned to the fi re safety
manager appears quite extensive and it is likely that add-
itional competent persons will need to be appointed to
assist in the management of fi re safety. Therefore, add-
itional responsibilities of a fi re safety manager in a large,
complex organisation may also include the following:
➤
Appointment of fi re marshals/fi re wardens, fi re alarm
verifi ers, fi re incident controllers and members of
fi rst responder/fi re teams
➤
Undertaking a training needs analysis and develop-
ment of a training policy to ensure staff members
have
necessary competencies
➤
Organising/conducting
fi re safety reviews and audits
➤
Ensuring the continued effectiveness of any auto-
mated fi re safety system, e.g. fi re alarm and detec-
tion systems
➤
Pre-entry
fi re safety checks of the premises prior to
entry by members of the public
➤
Monitoring and reviewing the fi re safety manual
(log book) including false alarms and near miss fi re
events
➤
Recording of changes to the
building for inclusion in
the operations and maintenance manuals or health
and safety fi le under CDM
➤
Contingency
planning:
➤
Abnormal occupancy levels – failure or planned
preventive maintenance of fi re safety critical
systems
➤
Abnormal inclement weather conditions
➤
Collaborating with local authorities involved in
disaster planning and the assessment of poten-
tial environmental impact of fi re (see Chapter 13).
The level of responsibility and accountability of the fi re
safety manager will need to refl ect
the organisation;
however, any safety management structure should pro-
vide for clear lines of responsibility, authority, account-
ability and resources, in particular in relation to common
areas within multiple occupied buildings/premises.
The above management responsibilities may well be
assigned to a number of persons within an organisation.
Training records,
for instance, may be the responsibility
of the human resources department and the mainten-
ance of fi re safety systems records may rest with the
facilities management or property services department.
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