Fire safety checks in Lancashire hit record low

Lancashire firefighters carried out a record-low number of safety audits on buildings last year, new figures reveal.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

Fire services conduct audits on most public buildings and the shared areas of residential properties such as flats to make sure they are in line with safety laws.

But with inspections hitting a record low across England last year, the Fire Brigades Union warns the scale of the building safety crisis – exposed by the Grenfell Tower fire – is “beyond all current comprehension”.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Home Office data shows the Lancashire Fire and Rescue Service completed 1,418 fire safety audits on buildings in 2019-20.

Lancashire Fire and Rescue Service completed 1,418 fire safety audits on buildings in 2019-20Lancashire Fire and Rescue Service completed 1,418 fire safety audits on buildings in 2019-20
Lancashire Fire and Rescue Service completed 1,418 fire safety audits on buildings in 2019-20

This was the lowest number of inspections since comparable records began in 2010-11.

Across England, the number of audits completed also fell to a record low of 48,400 last year – 43 per cent fewer than in 2010-11.

Buildings tested include care homes, hospitals and high-rises, as well as schools and shops.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Local breakdowns on the type of buildings checked were unavailable, but nationally 3,500 were undertaken on blocks of flats.

This was a slight decrease on 2018-19 and far fewer than the 6,500 done in 2017-18.

The Home Office said the higher number that year was likely to be in response to the Grenfell Tower disaster, which killed 72 people in June 2017.

Matt Wrack, Fire Brigades Union general secretary, said more than a decade of government cuts had led to preventative work being slashed.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“The Grenfell Tower fire exposed the shameful state of building safety in the UK,” he said.

“The scale of the building safety crisis is beyond all current comprehension – and firefighters have a crucial role to play in tackling it.”

Mr Wrack said the union supports the Government’s new bills on fire safety and building safety, which aim to expand firefighters’ prevention and protection work.

“But to be effective, the fire and rescue service must be properly funded,” he added. “As things stand, the Government is trying to do public safety on the cheap.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Of the audits undertaken in Lancashire last year, 1,081 (76 per cent) resulted in an “unsatisfactory” rating.

Crews issued 968 informal notifications to premises that had failed an audit, explaining what action needed to be taken.

If informal notifications fail, they can take tougher action and Lancashire crews handed out 110 enforcement notices – formal warnings that a building breaches the law.

Prohibition notices, ordering access to a building to be restricted or for it to be closed altogether, were issued on 42 occasions.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

And there were two convictions for failure to make changes ordered in a formal notice.

A Home Office spokeswoman said the Government was committed to providing fire services with the resources they need.

She said: “Funding for standalone fire and rescue services has increased by 3.2 per cent in 2020-21.

“We’ve also made more than £20m of funding available to the sector to support fire protection work – £16m of which is being invested directly to increase the number of audits and qualified officers.”