Moved by Lord Goddard of Stockport That this House takes note of
the current state of fire safety regulations in England and the
case for a new integrated review to update fire safety guidance.
Lord Goddard of Stockport (LD) My Lords, I declare my interest as a
member of the All-Party Parliamentary Fire Safety and Rescue Group,
one of the most active groups in Westminster. It is chaired by Bob
Blackman CBE MP, following the late Sir David Amess MP, who
noble...Request free trial
Moved by
That this House takes note of the current state of fire safety
regulations in England and the case for a new integrated review
to update fire safety guidance.
(LD)
My Lords, I declare my interest as a member of the All-Party
Parliamentary Fire Safety and Rescue Group, one of the most
active groups in Westminster. It is chaired by CBE MP, following the late MP, who noble Lords will
remember was horrifically murdered two years ago while
undertaking his constituency work. He was the chair of the APPG
for more than 20 years.
I was elected as a local councillor in Stockport in 1990. From
1992 onwards, I was a member of the Greater Manchester Fire and
Rescue Authority for more than 20 years, off and on. I was
inspired by officers in that authority, including people such as
Barry Dixon and Steve McGuirk, who have been excellent officers
dedicated to fire prevention and safety. I am both honoured yet
frustrated to lead this debate.
To understand the fears and concerns of the APPG and the fire
industry, the House needs to understand the problems. I will try
to encapsulate them in the next 10 minutes or so. The two
government departments principally involved in fire are the Home
Office, essentially for the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) order
and His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire &
Rescue Services, and the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities for building safety, building regulations and
housing, which have been moved to the Building Safety Regulator
and the Health and Safety Executive. Initially, fire was the
responsibility of the Home Office, but it was transferred to the
Department for the Environment, Transport and the Regions. It was
then transferred to the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister,
followed by the Department for Communities and Local Government
and then the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities. The latter has majority oversight of building and
fire safety, including building regulations. As noble Lords can
see, the number of departments grows as we progress over
time.
I can think of no better place to start this debate than with the
public inquiry into the Grenfell Tower disaster and the opening
statement of the second stage by Jason Beer KC, who was
representing the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and
Communities. He said that the Government apologise for failures
in the lead-up to the Grenfell Tower fire, admitting to errors
and missed opportunities that helped to create
“an environment in which such a tragedy was possible”.
He told the public inquiry into the disaster that the department
was “deeply sorry” and conceded that they did not know how
building regulations had failed to be applied on the ground. He
said that the system failed. Those admissions were made in his
opening statement to the final stage of the public inquiry that
investigated the role of dozens of government figures from junior
officers to former Ministers. The department also admitted that
it failed properly to learn lessons from previous fires in
high-rise blocks, including the 2009 cladding blaze at Lakanal
House in Southwark, where six people died.
Ironically, the then chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group,
the late MP, wrote 21 letters to
successive Ministers pleading with them to bring forward a few of
the life-changing, critical safety matters outlined by the
coroner before the planned three-year or four-year review into
regulations; they were all refused. Following the tragic loss of
72 lives in the Grenfell Tower, Sir David made the public
statement that, had Ministers listened to him, that
“fire … would not have happened”.—[Official Report, Commons,
12/7/17; col. 334.]
It was not just one Minister; it was a succession of
Ministers.
The APPG’s fire adviser and administrative secretary, Ronnie King
OBE, provided a 34,000-word statement and approaching 100
exhibits to the Grenfell public inquiry following a four-hour
interview and follow-up meetings with the legal team, which was
extensively quoted in the evidence. That was after a four-hour
interview under caution with the Metropolitan Police.
As noble Lords are aware, stage two of the Grenfell inquiry
finished in October 2022. In his closing statement, the lead
counsel to the inquiry, Richard Millett KC, said that many firms
giving evidence at the Grenfell inquiry indulged in a
“merry-go-round of buck-passing”
to protect their legal positions. He said that it was regrettable
that many of,
“those responsible for the buildings and the building environment
as it was on the night of the fire sought to exculpate themselves
and to pin the blame on others”.
He said, however, that the firms then blamed
“the professionals in the design team for not reading the
marketing leaflets”
which required a full system fitting test before the block of
flats was built.
The brief from the Home Office to Dame Judith Hackitt was clear
that she should undertake an independent review of building and,
in particular, fire safety regulations. Dame Judith’s
recommendations included a new regulatory framework to address
those weaknesses. The overriding theme was to move towards an
outcome-based approach to building safety, where industries take
responsibility for their own actions. The key proposals included
a new joint competent authority, comprised of local authority
building standards, fire and rescue authorities and the Health
and Safety Executive, to oversee the management and risk of
high-rise residential buildings.
A set of rigorous, demanding roles and responsibilities for duty
holders was introduced to give stronger focus on building safety
and a single, more streamlined regulatory route to oversee
standards across the board and to determine where enforcement can
and should take place. Dame Judith established six work groups to
consider those elements, including how to build effect
regulations to make homes safer for people. Some of those groups
had 10 people. Significantly, not one All-Party Parliamentary
Fire Safety and Rescue Group adviser was selected for to serve on
any of those groups, despite their enormous wealth of experience
in the fire industry.
I now turn to the overlap of grey areas in government departments
and will explain why we think this needs to be looked at. I will
give a couple of examples of the fragmentation across departments
and the need for greater integration, beginning with the
Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. The
All-Party Parliamentary Group had a second meeting with the
Minister only yesterday—quite surprisingly, as the debate is
today. That was because of frequent changes in the secretarial
staff in the department, but I suspect that it was not helped by
the number of government reshuffles. It must be said that the
Minister was very amiable and helpful; he attended the meeting.
He assured me that he was taking a horizon-scanning approach to
fire safety, and I wait to see what that means.
I point out that since Grenfell the department has taken numerous
policy decisions relating to tall blocks of flats, such as
setting a height threshold of 11 metres, at which new-build
blocks must have automatic fire sprinklers and protection,
removing the dangerous Class O certification from Building
Regulations Approved Document B. It also took the immediate
decision to remove ACM combustible cladding from all existing
tower blocks taller than 18 metres and broadened that out for
combustible cladding on less tall buildings. It is now working
hard to sort out leaseholder issues, but clearly that is more
complicated and a debate for another meeting.
The recent Luton Airport multi-storey car park fire followed an
earlier fire at Liverpool Arena. A report commissioned by the
Department for Communities and Local Government in 2006,
published in 2010, showed the impact that having automatic fire
sprinklers would have had on that fire and the earlier fire at
the Liverpool Arena in 2017. The report said that tests found
that sprinkler systems were effective in controlling developing
fires and equally effective at controlling fully developed fires.
In addition, without sprinklers, fires are likely to spread from
car to car. With sprinklers that is very unlikely. The report
found that structural steelwork was not affected by less than 30
minutes’ fire exposure. With sprinklers, the steelwork would have
remained unaffected. So why was that not implemented and why did
that fire at Luton Airport happen?
The second issue relates to the Department for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities and the charging of lithium-ion batteries
in e-bikes inside blocks of flats, where there have been several
deaths due to the ferocity of the explosion when a fire takes
hold. Most of these e-bikes are being charged in communal areas
that are the only exits for the people living in those flats.
This matter should be addressed. The Department for Business and
Trade and the Home Office are responsible for fighting fires, as
well as the Department for Transport which is now involved
because of e-bikes. We need clarity about which department has
overall responsibility for fire safety.
The third issue is a second staircase in new blocks of flats
taller than 18 metres, which was agreed. Second staircases must
be built. The Minister has now deferred that decision for further
consultation. Why?
The Department for Education produced a revised fire safety
design guide for new schools Design for Fire Safety in Schools:
Building Bulletin 100for a public consultation. Two years ago, it
received a resounding rejection by the whole of the fire sector
including the National Fire Chiefs Council, which still has not
had a response. The current BB100, which was prepared with the
oversight of the then Schools Minister, the noble Lord, , concluded that all
new schools, apart from a few low-risk schools, to be determined
by a risk toolkit, would be expected to have automatic fire
sprinklers installed. So, every new school should get a sprinkler
system. However, the recent Department for Education draft
provision reversed that decision and concluded that all schools,
apart from a few high-risk schools, will not now get a sprinkler
system. The risk toolkit will be scrapped and high-risk schools
will be determined by the Department for Education. They include
those taller than 11 meters, which are very few; special needs
schools, which are now integrated into mainstream schools, and so
there are very few such schools; and the sleeping parts of
boarding schools—not the whole boarding school, just the sleeping
part—and again there are very few.
The department did not do an impact assessment that fire damage
to the school has on its children’s attainment levels, until we
told it and it had to address it. The department did not provide
a compartment size for large single-storey schools before it need
fire suppression, and we had to tell it that. In the original
guidelines, a school could be half a square mile before any
regulations were needed. It has now set the size at 4,000 square
meters. The DfE confessed it did not have professional fire
safety adviser when we asked to meet the advisers. It is now
recruiting a fire service engineer and will meet the group before
seeing politicians.
The APPG has had one meeting with the Department for Education in
four years, at a time when fire has been high on the agenda with
school fires, Covid and the impact on children’s mental health
and development. Our children should be in schools interacting
and developing. Will the Minister tell us how the DfE can
continue to be permitted to manage fire safety, post-Grenfell
Tower, with such a poor risk attitude? Following the evidence of
asbestos and RAAC concrete in school buildings, it gives me no
confidence.
In summary, the APPG and the entire fire industry feel we cannot
accept such poor standards. History tells us that with fire,
legislation normally follows disasters and subsequent inquiries
bring recommendations from the Woolworths fire in Manchester, the
King’s Cross disaster, Grenfell Tower and numerous train
accidents. This cannot be a coherent way to determine fire safety
policy. We must integrate fire in one place, where all the
standards and policies will be made and where one person will be
held accountable. It needs specialist advisers who will not
necessarily tell the Minister what he wants to hear, but what he
needs to hear. Will the Minister comment on why ex-police chief
constables seem to arrive in this House like London buses, but
not one ex-fire chief has ever be ennobled in its history? The
experience of 30 or 40 years in that industry, understanding the
issues, is to me unfathomable. Sometimes, it is that simple.
12.06pm
(Con)
My Lords, I say a sincere thank you to the noble Lord, Lord
Goddard, for his timely debate today. Indeed, we were even
reminded at COP that 10,000 wildfires throughout the world are
causing total devastation. Coming back to the United Kingdom,
before I do anything else I pay tribute to all the volunteer
firemen who turn out in the middle of the night and then do a
another job. They do it instantly. I live in Sandy, where we have
a local brigade. I am amazed at the way it runs so smoothly and
how volunteers, some of them very senior people in management,
will turn up at 3 am and deal with a fire. Secondly, I pay
tribute to the London Fire Brigade because it is a very
professional organisation. We see in the recent statistics that,
partially due to their performance and planning, the number of
fires that have been attended to in the UK in the most recent
year has dropped from the previous year from, I think, 7,000 to
around 5,000. Five thousand is a huge number of fires.
I was particularly prompted to take part today because I live in
Bedfordshire and we have a case history now: Luton Airport. I did
a little research on that particular situation. Just two months
ago, on 10 October, a fire broke out in the car park of Luton
Airport’s Terminal 2. It is somewhere I have parked on a number
of occasions. The net result of the fire was that the airport was
shut down overnight while the emergency services attended the
blaze. Hundreds of flights were subsequently cancelled and others
severely delayed. What happened? It was not an old car park. It
is a pretty new park at Terminal 2. Shortly before 9 pm on 10
October, somehow the fire quickly spread to other floors, and
that continued until the early hours of 11 October. Witnesses
heard car alarms going off and loud explosions. As a result of
the fire, there was a partial structural collapse that has
affected the safety of the building. More than 1,400 cars parked
there were written off. Just think of the sheer insurance
involved in paying off those cars.
As far as I can find out, Bedfordshire police have since
confirmed that the initial vehicle involved in the fire was a
diesel car—apparently not an electric car. A man in his 30s has
been arrested in connection with the fire and was later released
on bail, but the police investigation is on-going. As Mr , the operations director at
Luton Airport, said, the car park would need to be fully
demolished due to the extent of structural damage. This is a
tragedy all round and it raises and re-emphasises the points made
by the noble Lord, Lord Goddard, in his speech
There are myriad parts of the Government involved in fire safety
and we all know some of them: they run from the Home Office to
the Building Safety Act 2022, which is really a local authority
Act, and the Health and Safety Executive; the Department for
Business and Trade has responsibility for lithium-ion batteries
and the Department for Transport is apparently looking after
scooters and e-bikes. I am not sure why we have to have quite so
many departments involved. We certainly need some
co-ordination.
We now have two classic case histories. One is the huge tragedy
of Grenfell, where it has taken too long to bring the report out.
I hope that my noble friend on the Front Bench can confirm that
that report will now be published, in the next month or so, and
will not be put off even further. Will he also make sure that we
do a proper analysis of that second case history at Luton? These
fires should not occur, and something is going wrong in the
system when they do. I do not want to read in 2024 of a third
major tragedy somewhere in the United Kingdom.
12.11pm
(LD)
My Lords, I congratulate my noble friend Lord Goddard on securing
this important and timely debate. I associate myself with his
comments about the late , who was an absolutely
inspirational chair of the All-Party Fire Safety and Rescue
Group, of which I am the vice-chair. I am also a vice-president
of the Local Government Association. I want to thank the House of
Lords Library, the London Fire Brigade, Chris Waterman and others
for their very helpful briefings.
I thought it might be worth starting with a brief reflection of
what it is like to be in a fire. In my misspent student days, I
was president of the student theatre and on front-of- house
duty—luckily, it was a matinee and, luckily, of a fairly esoteric
play, so the theatre was not full—when the safety curtain failed
after a fire started on stage. I was the person who had to
evacuate the audience, as clouds of billowing toxic smoke ran
from the stage into the auditorium. It was absolutely terrifying.
I am not often pleased when a theatre is not full, but I am
really pleased there were not many people there. In the front
row, there was a very elderly, 85 year-old academic, who was
there to see one of her students in the production. She had real
trouble and I ended up having to carry her out of the building.
By the time the audience were out, the fire brigade had arrived
and everything then proceeded as you would like.
It is rare for a safety curtain to fail but, what hit me then,
and has remained with me for the rest of my life, was how fire is
not the only danger. Smoke is a real problem; as many people die
from smoke inhalation as they do from the direct effects of the
fire. I therefore acknowledge the extraordinary work of our
firefighters—men and women who, day after day, run towards fire
and many other dangerous situations. It is a hard calling and we
have to thank them for their selflessness and care in a very
testing work field.
I want to add another thing. It is well known that we have been
training Ukrainian service men and women with our Ministry of
Defence in the United Kingdom, since Putin invaded Ukraine 18
months ago. What is less known is that our fire services and
firefighters have run convoys of fire safety vehicles and kit to
Ukraine, which has helped its people to respond as their own
needs for fire safety and rescue have monumentally increased. I
would very much like to see the scheme that is used in the
Ministry of Defence also operating for the five service, because
we forget that the effect of bombing puts a very particular
burden on fire safety and rescue.
Grenfell stands as a marker for failure and we need to remember
the victims: 72 killed and many more injured. Many of the reviews
and changes in legislation outlined by my noble friend since 14
June 2017 have identified the problems that need addressing.
There is no doubt that some progress has been made, but, as we
are already hearing in this debate, there are still some gaping
holes. However, let us just note that progress. There is no doubt
that the current fire safety regulations have played a vital role
in reducing fires, fire deaths and injuries over the years.
We know that there is still much to do. One of the most urgent
things that has not been discussed so far is the updating of
Approved Document B, part of the building regulations guidance.
It is very out of date. Not one of the government fire-risk
assessment guides has been revised since its publication in 2006.
Especially worrying is the lack of clear guidance on evacuation
lifts and multiple staircases in high-rise buildings. At the
All-Party Fire Safety and Rescue Group, we have been chasing this
with Ministers since I joined it in 2011, but it is always just
around the corner. I understand why, post-Grenfell, there had to
be a pause, given the inquiry, Judith Hackitt’s report and
government departments having to decide what their priorities
are. However, 2017 is six years ago and the time must come for it
to be published. I ask the Minister: when can we expect to see
it?
There is a specific need for guidance for the disabled and the
vulnerable. The Minister’s predecessors wavered on personal
emergency evacuation plans, known as PEEPs, claiming they were
too hard to do in a high-rise block. But 40% of the disabled
residents in Grenfell died that night. That is shocking. Can the
Minister tell your Lordships’ House what progress there is on
keeping disabled residents safe in high-rise flats?
PEEPs are also important for other reasons. We need them in every
environment in which disabled and vulnerable people move around.
I was in Portcullis House about five years ago when the fire
alarm started going off. My PEEP is for the House of Lords; as an
involved member of the public in Portcullis House, I have to know
my own way round it. My problem was that nobody knew what to do
once the refuge had been closed off. I was literally on my own; I
had gone where I was told to and did not know how I could contact
people. I am really grateful to the House authorities because, as
a result of my experience, they have changed the arrangements in
Portcullis House. They now ask people when they are organising
their PEEPs where they are likely to travel in the building.
However, this is unusual. I went to a conference held earlier
this year—ironically, it was the fire conference—and four days
beforehand, I was asked to fill in a PEEP before I had ever been
to the building and to return it before I arrived. Training is
absolutely vital, because disabled people and vulnerable people
are the most vulnerable.
I turn briefly to sprinklers, already well covered by my noble
friend Lord Goddard. It is well documented that sprinklers play a
significant role, but I am appalled that the Government are not
considering adding them automatically to new builds, or even new
parts of buildings, particularly for the disabled and the
vulnerable. This includes new care homes, hospitals and schools.
Schools are a particularly sore point. As my noble friend
outlined, we have had a real problem in our APPG when trying to
get the Department for Education to engage. In 2003, when I was
the chair of governors of a primary school that was built in the
1960s, a young arsonist set it afire. It had RAAC, as we now
know. We did not also know, until it burned down, that the entire
structure of the building was reliant on the windows, and when
they caved in the entire building started to fall afterwards. In
the new building that went up, we were not permitted to have
sprinklers.
The change in the schools landscape in the past 10 years worries
me. When our school burned down, we still had a local education
authority that was responsible for ensuring that alternative
provision was made as soon as possible. Local authorities no
longer have the resources for that. Academy chains are finding it
really difficult to find alternative provision when they are
affected by fire. The other reason we need sprinklers is because
children need continuity in their education. It can take far too
long to replace what is lost.
I turn now to the emerging, life-threatening danger that is
lithium batteries. I thank both my noble friend Lord Goddard and
the noble Lord, Lord, Naseby, for their comments, and I say to
the noble Lord, , that there was a fire at
Bristol Airport last week. Luckily, unlike the Luton fire, it was
not in a multi-storey but in an open-plan area. Already, fire
service people in the area are saying that the fire was made much
worse by lithium battery cars which caught fire—not that they
were the cause of the fire, but the fire is so intense that it is
dangerous.
There are people dying regularly as a result of lithium fires. In
July, in Cambridge a mother and her two small children died in a
fire in a low block of flats. It is thought that an e-bike was
being charged in the flat, but, as my noble friend Lord Goddard,
said, in too many places, it is possible to use power points in
common-part areas, and a number of fires have been caused like
that. A firefighter described what happens when a lithium battery
catches fire. It is not like any other fire you have seen. It is
like a phosphorus fire, it is 1,000 degrees centigrade, it is a
complete explosion of fire and it is devastating. To have
anything able to be recharged in common parts is appalling.
We need registration for lithium batteries. Part of the problem
is that we cannot get different departments to talk to each
other. Officers of the all-party group met with , the Minister for Trade
and Enterprise, who covers regulation of batteries, and he
absolutely understands the issue. But until every government
department looks at the use of batteries in whatever area of work
it is covering, we will not start to solve this problem.
I want to end on the future. We have already heard about the
plethora of government departments, with each having little bits
of fire safety to look after. There must be co-ordination across
all departments. I will not call for a Minister in Cabinet with
overall responsibility for fire, but it is not beyond the wit of
government to get people together to start to talk about this,
because, at the end of the day, this is about life saving,
ensuring the reduction of costs in destruction of buildings, and
we need to make changes.
Let me end on a positive note. At the Fire Conference 2023, which
I attended, I heard very encouraging dialogues between
firefighters, those making provision in the construction industry
and specialist fire services. All of them were saying that the
Government’s approach at the moment is too complex and too slow.
They are very willing, but they need more help from the
Government to make the changes that both the Grenfell inquiry and
the Judith Hackitt review demanded, if we are to keep people safe
in future.
12.23pm
(Lab)
My Lords, it is a great pleasure and honour to follow the noble
Baroness, Lady Brinton. Like her, I am a member of the APPG for
Fire Safety and Rescue. I congratulate the noble Lord, Lord
Goddard, on securing this important debate. Like him, I pay my
respects to the secretary of our APPG, Ronnie King, as well as
adding my respects to our former chair, , and our present chair, .
Although I spent most of my professional life engaged in matters
concerning industrial relations and employment law, from time to
time I have been involved in matters of fire—including, the
presence of the noble and learned Lord, , reminds me—my time three
decades ago in the King’s Cross fire inquiry. Since then, I
represented the bereaved at the Lakanal House fire inquest and I
advised the fire brigade, although I did not represent it, in the
Grenfell Tower inquiry.
I shall make only three points in support of all that the noble
Lord, Lord Goddard, and the noble Baroness, Lady Brinton, have
said already. The first point is to do with risk assessment. The
noble Lord, Lord Goddard, mentioned the extraordinary reversal of
policy in relation to the fitting of sprinklers prospectively in
schools, which is now confined to special cases only, as he
spelled out. I simply cannot understand how any sensible risk
assessment could have resulted in that reversal of policy. As a
lawyer, it seems to me that the general principles of risk
assessment are well established and simple. It is a computation
based on three elements: first, the likelihood of the specific
risk eventuating; secondly, an assessment of the magnitude of the
damage if the risk eventuates; and, thirdly, set against that,
the cost or inconvenience of taking the precaution necessary to
avoid that risk. These are not scientific matters—some are, but
the overall computation is not clearly scientific. There are many
questions and many points of judgment and discretion to be taken
into account. But the simplicity of the equation in general is
straightforward.
When one applies that to the risk of fires in schools, the
likelihood of the risk eventuating is well known to be far more
frequent in schools—unfortunately, often because of arson—than in
many other public buildings. On the magnitude of the damage if
the risk eventuates, true, it will not often cause death or even
injury, because evacuation is easy and schools often put on fire
at night when nobody is present. But that magnitude incorporates
the issues that the noble Baroness mentioned a moment ago. It is
not simply the cost of replacing the building; it is the
disruption to the lives of children and their families and to
other educational establishments in setting up alternative
education for those children while the building is replaced.
Against that, there is the cost of the precaution to avoid the
risk. The fitting of sprinklers prospectively is relatively
trivial in the cost of any building. Even retrospectively, it is
a minor cost. With the APPG, about 18 months ago, with in charge, we went on a visit
to a block of flats in Stoke-on-Trent to see a multi-storey block
which had been retrofitted with sprinklers. The cost was only
something between £1,000 and £2,000 per flat, which I do not
think is a lot of money. Even retrospectively, these things can
be done at reasonable cost.
I ask the Minister whether the relevant department would disclose
the methodology for risk assessment that led to this curious
reversal in policy, and whether he would accept some kind of peer
review by the experts—I do not include myself in this—who, as the
noble Lord, Lord Goddard, mentioned, are present in the APPG on
Fire Safety and Rescue.
Secondly, I will raise the question of compartmentation. This is
what led to the “stay put” policy adopted by the fire brigades at
the Lakanal House fire and the Grenfell Tower fire. I have no
doubt that this policy and the issue of compartmentation will be
dealt with in the Grenfell report when it emerges. I take the
point made by the noble Lord, , about the need for that report
to be produced as soon as possible, but I am sure he appreciates
the magnitude of the task and the extent of the evidence and
engineering and fire assessment reports that have been taken into
account by that inquiry. It is understandable that it has taken a
considerable amount of time to produce the report.
One of the most harrowing experiences of my professional life was
in the Lakanal House inquest. Many pieces of horrific evidence
were heard, but one of them was the transcript and recording of a
phone call made by a young woman resident in one of the flats in
Lakanal House to the control centre for the fire brigade, in
which she reported smelling fire and seeing smoke and flames; it
lasted for 40 minutes until the line went silent. The control
operator on the other end was giving her what advice she could
and telling her to stay put in accordance with the policy because
she would be rescued; unfortunately, she was not.
I felt that tragedy personally; I also felt it was a tragedy for
the poor woman who was the call operator dealing with that
call—and there were many like it, and many similar calls at
Grenfell Tower. The policy of “stay put” depends on the
construction principle of compartmentation, which means that the
building is so constructed that each housing unit will be able to
withstand fire for long enough for the fire brigade to effect a
rescue. The problem is that, although Lakanal House and Grenfell
Tower were built with that principle in mind, and no doubt were
effective when they were built, over years the compartmentation
was breached. There were obvious breaches in both cases: the
panel under the windows that caught fire in Lakanal House and the
cladding that caught fire in Grenfell Tower, with the compartment
breached by fire coming through the windows. At Lakanal House,
the compartments were defective in many other respects as well:
pipes had been driven through the walls and not sealed up
properly; and pipes had been boxed in with wooden shuttering,
which of course was material for fire to catch hold of.
The whole issue of compartmentation, as a building principle,
needs to be looked at again, because it is not good enough to
simply have a guarantee that the compartment will withstand fire
when it is built. Since the building will be standing for the
next 50 or 100 years, there has got to be some guarantee, or some
means adopted, to check that the compartment will still withstand
fire over the intervening years. Otherwise, fire brigade control
room staff are put in this awful position of assuring residents
that they must stay put when, in fact, the principle on which
that diktat is founded is defective. Can the Minister say
something about the protection of compartmentation, or the
inspection of compartments, and the assessment of risk when
compartments are broken in any way in future?
Thirdly, I will raise the issue of staffing. Recent developments
have required increasing numbers of experts in fire safety to
make risk assessments and carry out inspections. One of the
problems of the increasing inequality of income between the
public and private sectors is that the private sector—not
surprisingly—is luring away experts whose expertise is needed in
the public sector. It is not just a question of salaries; it is
also terms and conditions, training and promotion prospects. Can
the Minister say something about how this will be addressed in
the future? What overall increase in the number of suitably
qualified experts will be required and how will they be retained
in the public sector?
Finally, I will speak about the fire and rescue services. I share
with the noble Lord, , his respect for the heroic men
and women who serve in our fire brigades—both the paid and the
unpaid. The national salary increase that was awarded to
firefighters this year is, of course, most welcome. Can the
Minister say something about retention and recruitment, in
consequence of that salary increase: whether it is satisfactory
at the moment or whether we are losing firefighters? One
essential aspect of that salary increase is that it was achieved
by national collective bargaining in the fire service—I am sorry,
just give me one moment, this is my last sentence. There have
been suggestions of the ending of collective bargaining to
determine pay, terms and conditions; I wonder whether the
Minister is committed to maintaining it?
12.38pm
(LD)
My Lords, I will be brief. I will start by thanking my noble
friend Lord Goddard for his excellent introduction to this
debate, and I support his call for an integrated review of fire
services. I also add my name to the tributes to and to all the very brave
firefighters; luckily for me I have never had to call on their
services and I hope it never happens, but it is a great comfort
to know that they are there for all of us.
With my interests in health and education, I have always been
concerned about fire safety in schools, colleges and hospitals
Like all noble Lords who have spoken, I am concerned that
regulations about the installation of sprinklers have been
weakened. We know they can extinguish, or minimise, fires early
and enable evacuation and access for the fire services. The
London Fire Brigade’s briefing for this debate recommends that
all new schools and hospitals, and any new extensions to old
ones, as well as care homes, are fitted with sprinklers. The
noble Lord, , has said how cost-effective
retrofit is as well. This strikes me as common sense and
cost-effective, given the major danger to pupils, staff and
patients when there are major fires, in addition to the
disruption to pupils’ education, to parents and to local
communities. I agree with my noble friends Lord Goddard and
in asking the Minister to
assure us that all new schools and the so-called 40 new hospitals
will all have sprinklers.
The other school safety issue is combustible cladding. In
December 2018, the Government banned the use of combustible
insulation and cladding on the facades of certain high-rise
buildings, but many other types of high-rise buildings remain
outside the scope of the ban, including non-residential school
buildings. As a result, over 100 school building projects have
used combustible facade insulation since December 2018. I am told
that, in the past 10 years, 1,003 education building projects
will have used combustible facade materials. Will the Government
extend the scope of the ban to educational establishments?
Much of the briefing we have received reflects the difficulty for
local fire and rescue services in keeping up with the increasing
demands of current legislation on their professional advice,
monitoring and inspection. Fire safety assessments of schools are
done by school staff not trained to do so, with no requirement to
provide evidence. FR services believe they should check this
assessment but accept that this would put greater pressure on
their resources. However, it should be done, and appropriately
resourced.
Fire safety is, of course, not all that the fire brigades deal
with. They rescue people from all kinds of situations, including
the increased flooding events caused by climate change. It is
very concerning therefore that they are finding difficulty in
recruiting enough officers. Services are calling for more
flexibility in the fire uplift grant, which pays for prevention
services. In addition, in order to adequately meet fire safety
requirements, all FRSs need greater council tax flexibility, a
three-year government settlement and an allocation of the
protection grant that reflects local circumstances. Can the
Minister comment on this?
While many colleagues have focused on building safety, I would
like to focus the main thrust of my remarks on issues of the fire
standards for furnishings. According to UKRI research, the UK is
one of the highest users of chemical flame retardants—the
chemicals that extend the time it takes for a material to catch
fire. This is partly because of our open-flame ignition test.
However, there are both health and environmental concerns about
these substances. The researchers also found that a significant
proportion of fire deaths are caused by inhalation of toxic fumes
from these chemicals, as was mentioned by my noble friend Lady
Brinton, including cyanide gas and carbon monoxide. That is not
all: even before fires occur there are risks to health, including
increasing diabetes, obesity and cancer risks, as well as effects
on hormones, DNA, and heart and kidney function. Particular
concerns have been raised about potential effects on babies and
young children, who may be more susceptible to health impacts
while they are developing and are likely to frequently put their
hands in their mouths. This is because flame retardants migrate
out of the products through wear, abrasion and disposal or
recycling. They collect and persist, staying in the body, air,
food and drinking water, as well as on surfaces; they also enter
rivers and lakes.
What is being done? Not enough. In 2014 and 2016, the Government
consulted on ways and means of reducing the use of flame
retardants because of these concerns, but nothing was done then.
In 2019, the House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee
report, Toxic Chemicals in Everyday Life, identified concerns
regarding the use of flame retardants, including emphasising the
potential health impacts for babies and children. It pointed out
that the furniture and furnishings regulations have been under
review by BEIS, as it was then, and by its predecessor department
for 10 years.
In 2021, at last, the Office for Product Safety and Standards ran
a call for evidence on a UK product safety review. It published
research on fire risks of upholstered products this year. The
Government now propose new fire safety regulations for
upholstered products. The consultation ended in October. One of
the intentions of the draft regulations is to:
“Enable and encourage a reduction in the use of chemical flame
retardants.”
However, the draft regulations fall short of what is needed and
would, for example, exclude from scope items such as small
cushions and baby products, including playpens and carrycots. I
hope that I can correctly assume that mattresses used in
hospitals are included. Given that the smallest of items can
cause a fire, can the Minister tell me why baby products are
excluded from scope? There are also measures about better
enforcement and compliance, all of which would require additional
personnel and funding. Can the Minister tell me whether these
measures would be adequately funded, given the concerns I
expressed earlier about resources for the FRS?
I am not the only person expressing these concerns. In March
2023, scientists in the journal Environment Internationalasked
that
“a very high level of certainty about the human and environmental
safety of flame retardants is demonstrated before they are
approved for use”,
and to ensure that there are “monitoring systems” to rapidly flag
issues and replace flame retardants. Dr Paul Whaley, from
Lancaster University, said that
“there has to be a proper balancing of the harms and benefits of
flame retardants, that includes a comprehensive evaluation of the
effectiveness of flame retardants as a fire safety measure”.
The House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee followed up
its earlier report this month, complaining that
“many of the Government’s proposals stop short of what the
Committee had previously recommended”.
Like me, it wanted to know why baby products are being excluded
from scope, whether best practice from other countries is being
considered, and what measures the Government are considering that
would give more information to consumers on the chemical flame
retardants used in their furniture.
The Fire Brigades Union considers that the proposals are
deregulatory and put profits before firefighter and public
safety. The Chartered Trading Standards Institute also felt that
more products should be in scope, including products labelled for
use outdoors—because they are often stored indoors.
What does the Minister have to say to all that criticism of the
proposals? We need materials in our homes which deter fire risk
but do not damage our health. I would like to know what research
the Government are funding to identify such products and
disseminate their use.
12.47pm
(LD)
My Lords, I too am very grateful to my noble friend Lord Goddard
for bringing this important and timely debate today. I am
particularly looking forward to the Minister’s reply—I wish him
the very best of luck.
I must first declare my interests as co-president of London
Councils, the membership body that represents all 32 London
boroughs and the City of London, and as patron of the charity
Electrical Safety First. Both of these organisations have given
me very helpful briefings on which I shall rely today. I also
declare that I am a vice-president of the Local Government
Association. Today I will refer mainly to London—because that is
what I know about and where my experience lies—but I am sure my
comments will apply to all local authorities throughout England
with similar responsibilities to London boroughs.
I was prompted to take part in this debate after I attended the
London Fire Brigade’s drop-in event in Portcullis House two weeks
ago about e-bike and e-scooter fires. The London Fire Brigade has
given me much useful and important information, as has my Liberal
Democrat colleague on the London Assembly, , who has been very active on
this subject—it is a particularly important one in London.
As demand for e-bikes and e-scooters has expanded, there has
inevitably been a corresponding growth in fires from the
lithium-ion batteries that power them. When overheating through
damage or flawed design, or using a substandard charger,
lithium-ion batteries can create fierce, toxic fires, which heat
up very rapidly and can reach temperatures of over 600 degrees
centigrade.
Fires in e-bikes and e-scooters are London’s fastest-growing fire
trend. So far this year, the London Fire Brigade has attended 142
e-bike fires, along with 28 blazes involving e-scooters. This is
47% more than in the previous year, 2022, which was itself a
record-breaking year. Sadly, this year has also seen three deaths
and around 60 injuries caused by such fires.
Many of these fires are caused by faulty, non-compliant or
counterfeit products purchased from online marketplaces, or by
wrong chargers being used with batteries. Electrical Safety First
has found concerning trends in London-based e-bike and e-scooter
users. For instance, it found that 71% of Greater London-based
delivery riders using a converted e-bike did the conversion
themselves; and 48% of those delivery riders who had a converted
e-bike sourced the conversion kit and/or batteries from online
marketplaces, which are not regulated in the same way as high
street shops.
In a separate survey of e-bike and e-scooter owners, Electrical
Safety First found that 40% of e-bike and e-scooter owners
charged their batteries in the communal area of the property they
live in, such as a hallway or stairwell; 52% of e-bike and
e-scooter owners in Greater London charged their batteries
overnight while sleeping; and 39% of them in Greater London did
not have working smoke alarms in their properties.
Addressing the dangers posed by e-bike and e-scooter batteries
requires new UK-wide fire regulations. Electrical Safety First
proposes that new regulatory measures should include third-party
approval for e-bikes and e-scooters and their batteries,
mirroring regulations for fireworks.
In Committee, considering the Pedicabs (London) Bill on Monday,
the Minister said:
“The Government recognise that there are issues with e-scooters
that we need to address, but this Bill is not the appropriate
place to do so. As has been mentioned, we recently extended the
e-scooter trials until 31 May 2026 to continue to gather evidence
on how best to legislate for micromobility, including e-scooters,
in future. Given the pressure on legislative time, that
legislation will not come forward in this Session, unfortunately.
Ahead of that, the Government intend to consult on the detailed
approach for regulating e-scooters”.—[Official Report, 11/12/23;
col. GC 232.]
Given the obviously urgent need to deal with this rapidly
increasing problem, will the Minister, when he replies today,
tell us when this consultation will start and, particularly, when
it will end? Most importantly, will he confirm that it will not
wait until after the trials referred to have ended in 2026?
I turn now to another fire safety issue of particular importance
and concern in London—that of high-rise buildings. In July this
year, the Government defined 18 metres, or seven floors, as the
height at which buildings are at higher risk and the threshold at
which new buildings should have a second staircase. Some
67%—two-thirds—of all such high-rise residential buildings in the
UK are situated in London.
None of the Government’s fire risk assessment guides have been
revised since their publication in 2006. Two examples of issues
where current guidance is not clear are evacuation lifts and
multiple staircases. The timing for a revision is uncertain, so
can the Minister tell us today when it will take place? The
London Fire Brigade is also urging the Government to provide
further guidance and revised building regulations, including
those relating to access and use of buildings, particularly for
those with accessibility needs. Further detail is also needed on
the transitional arrangements for second staircases, to give
developers, local authorities, fire services and communities
clarity.
London local authority-managed housing stock is more likely to be
older, densified, and found in flatted blocks rather than houses.
London boroughs face multiple pressures beyond building safety,
such as the need to raise standards, meet net-zero targets and
supply new affordable homes. Housing revenue accounts in London
are under significant strain, as they are everywhere. The
Government’s 7% ceiling on social rent increases in 2023-24 is
estimated to have a £590 million impact on London boroughs’
housing revenue account finances over the next five financial
years. This exacerbated the impact of the four-year 1% rent
reduction policy in place from 2016-17, which, by 2021-22, left
London rents an estimated £459 million lower than expected.
Local authorities are facing an increasingly complex regulatory
environment, with a multitude of changes and different
regulators. Alignment between regulatory bodies must be central
to developing new regulatory practice and requirements. The new
fire and building safety requirements are stretching London
borough resources—and I am sure those of every other local
authority, too—and their capacity. The building safety regulator
charging regime will put significant additional financial
pressure on local authorities, particularly those with a high
number of complex buildings.
Lastly, I turn to building control. Local authority building
control teams are at the forefront of new responsibilities
relating to high-rise residential buildings, especially with the
formation of the building safety regulator’s multidisciplinary
teams that will come into force imminently. The Government must
work with local authorities to ensure that building control teams
are sufficiently resourced and enabled to meet new obligations to
ensure residents’ safety. London borough building control teams
urgently require clarity and guidance on their roles within the
multidisciplinary hub, to ensure that it is implemented
effectively. When will that clarity be given?
In conclusion, London borough resources and capacity are
stretched to the limit—I am sure all local authorities are in the
same position—as a result of financial pressures on the housing
revenue account and a lack of sufficiently qualified staff to
deliver these functions. Local authorities urgently need more
funding and greater financial flexibility in order to meet fire
and building safety requirements, at the same time as raising the
standards of tenants’ homes, meeting new consumer standards and
delivering new affordable housing. This should include allowing a
rent catch-up so that social housing providers can gradually
recover some of the reduced financial investment available as a
result of the 7% rent ceiling.
A post-2025 rent settlement that provides sufficient funding and
certainty is also needed, and London Councils encourages the
Government to launch a consultation at the earliest opportunity.
Specifically, the Government should recognise and unlock barriers
faced by boroughs attempting to access, and make best use of,
remedial funding to realise intended outcomes for residents. For
example, local authorities receive remedial funding only for
external cladding, not for other corrective fire and building
safety works.
I recognise that the Minister may not have been briefed on all
these points and may not anyway have time, even in his 20
minutes, to answer all the questions he has been asked today, so
I would be grateful if he would write to me, and indeed to other
noble Lords, answering the many questions that so far remain
unanswered.
1.00pm
The (CB)
My Lords, I welcome the opportunity to contribute to this debate
and congratulate the noble Lord, Lord Goddard, on his excellent
introduction; I certainly cannot match his expertise in this
field. I remind your Lordships of my professional involvement
with buildings and construction as a chartered surveyor and as a
patron of the Chartered Association of Building Engineers, to
which body I am very grateful for some background information. I
am also grateful to the Library staff for digging out a lot of
information and to Chris Waterman for his very pertinent
comments.
Under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, which came
into effect in 2006, we had a regime of responsibility on
individuals within organisations for risk assessments to
identify, manage and reduce fire risks. However, prior to this
order, all public and commercial buildings and all non-single
household domestic buildings, save for houses in multiple
occupation, needed a fire certificate issued annually following
inspection. Post 2006, that was replaced with a system of
third-party assessors but with no mandated timeframe for checks
nor any professional competence set out. Furthermore, it did not
normally apply to domestic premises.
I believe these changes were significant. In 2013, I am told the
fire service found that 14% of risk assessments were
non-compliant. In 2018, it was found that 500 out of a total of
800 assessors—a small enough number in itself—were not registered
with any accredited body, so their credentials were not
monitored. In between, there was a transfer of responsibility in
2016 from DCLG to the Home Office. As the noble Lord, Lord
Goddard, said, there are split departmental responsibilities,
gaps and all sorts of other problems. The past history has been
one of little regulatory enforcement since 2006; in the case of
much residential property, I would go as far as saying there is a
significant lacuna.
Moving on to the current situation, there remain inconsistencies.
While those occupying business premises are obliged to carry out
reasonably thorough risk assessments just to get insurance and
are driven by that aspect, for the freeholder it may be a matter
mainly of common parts. The responsible person in any given
instance may be several people. They are supposed to liaise but
very likely have an imperfect understanding of each other’s risk
profile. There is some guidance about risk assessments, but I see
no requirement for accreditation or need for any construction
knowledge.
That may be fine for straightforward, simple cases where there is
evidently low risk, but I do not think it is generally true. As
of now, for low and medium-rise residential property, there is
seemingly no obligation on occupiers at all, despite the concerns
around batteries and the use of certain types of equipment,
identified by the noble Lord, . The obligation of the block
manager seemingly is for common parts only, with no further
obligation to investigate in additional detail.
Yet the incidence of fires is, I am told, far greater for
domestic premises than for other types of use. I wonder how many
residents in Victorian terraced houses divided into say two,
three or four self-contained units are aware that they may now
have collective responsibilities? If we are not enforcing
regulatory compliance—and I hear the words of the noble Lord,
, about inadequacy of resources, a
point also made by others—one has to question the purpose and
direction of policy in this whole area.
I believe that it is not necessarily generally the failure of
equipment itself. The inherent safety in many cases is really
quite good, but it depends on the use and occupation and the
category of that occupation—for instance, as other noble Lords
mentioned, trying to charge lithium-ion batteries with unsuitable
chargers or inadequate storage space, with items packed into
areas that lack ventilation or a way to allow heat to escape.
While I am fine with a light touch for low-rise blocks of flats,
there needs to be a minimum standard of efficacy and the regime
has to be proportionate to the actual risks. In July 2021, the
independent experts advising the Government produced a statement
determining that low-rise buildings were at materially lower risk
from a life-critical fire safety standpoint. This fed into the
legislation, despite noble Lords, including me, contending in
this House that low rise did not equate to acceptably low risk.
Moreover, the independent experts did not consider other
structural issues of which fire safety surely forms part and
parcel in any holistic approach.
The position of the responsible person or persons seems
precarious if fire safety deficiencies are suspected but not
actually known, where they have simply never been looked into at
all, or where they are known but the original developer—as I am
told in one case—declined to step in to remediate because, as it
apparently put it, “the level of risk has not been established”,
or words to that effect. Residents are inevitably put at a degree
of unquantified risk.
But the statement from the independent experts did not cover
economic security or the effects on those in buildings requiring
remediation but with no clear recourse or defence against huge
costs, financial ruin, disruption to lives, lifestyles and life
chances because under the Building Safety Act they might not in
any way be protected against such eventualities. I also did not
detect that the structural integrity of buildings—which cannot be
considered in isolation from fire safety itself—was part of their
remit.
Turning to the points made earlier by noble Lords, I entirely
take the point about the calculation of risk assessment, but it
seems that at various points things are stopped part way for
policy reasons. I think this is fundamentally a dangerous
approach. There is a particular lesson that the noble Lord,
, will be familiar with: the year
before the independent experts’ statement came out, there was a
major fire in one of several similar blocks. This was not
mentioned by the independent experts, but it could have been. It
clearly indicated that fire risk in some low-rise buildings is a
critical matter and very much depends on the characteristics of
the buildings in question, especially construction quality and
use of materials internally. The noble Lord, , made exactly that point, and I
can verify it from my own direct experience.
The reason for half-hour or one-hour fire resistant
compartmentation is primarily to enable safe escape and, where
escape is not possible, to enable fire and rescue services to
control the outbreak. In a higher-rise building, it is clearly a
question of staying put, or at least staying put in certain parts
of the building, because of the sheer impossibility of people
getting down 20 floors to safety, so stay put has to be in place.
However, the fire that I am referring to that the independent
experts seem to have ignored was in fact in a low-rise building.
Were it not for the fact that the occupants decided they were
going to ignore to a man the stay-put advice and get out, several
of them would have been killed or injured because the building
was effectively completely ablaze after 11 minutes from the time
of the 999 call. It clearly was not going to maintain any
structural integrity, but buildings need to retain structural
integrity in terms of modern usage. For vulnerable occupants,
things are much worse still.
Yet there seems to be little appetite for a regime of
professional or other curiosity that might foresee and counter
risk that may be self-evident, or for a regulatory regime to
encourage that. It might be too much to insist on individual
owners and occupiers of residential flats carrying out
assessments or immediately ceasing the habits of a lifetime, but
I venture to suggest that a programme of public awareness, like
the ones with graphic images that I remember in relation to
drink-driving and the failure to buckle up your seat belt, would
be beneficial. We did that effectively with Covid. I invite the
Minister to agree that more needs to be done to tidy up, update
and clarify the regulation as to who is responsible and to create
a more holistic approach, leaving fewer things to differential
interpretation and avoiding the risk of matters being left to
happenstance or falling between the jurisdictions of different
government departments.
The noble Lord, Lord Goddard, referred to the situation in which
the standards of fire suppression that we now know are necessary
have been abandoned. That is lamentable. The noble Lord, , referred in detail to the
Luton Airport car park fire. I am told, I think on reasonable
authority, that the structure of that car park was lightweight. I
am tempted to wonder what the wider safety issues and possible
fire consequences would have been if all the cars had been
electric, with the weight considerations in such a structure.
There is a great deal that needs to be brought together here in
this Motion. The noble Baroness, Lady Walmsley, referred to
non-ACM combustible materials. I simply refer to the widespread
use within buildings of expanded polystyrene, a product that was
researched under commission from the Victorian Building Authority
in Australia and considered to be as bad as ACM or worse.
It is not acceptable to conduct public administration by
expecting safe outcomes from underspecifying assessments and
regulatory adherence. I wish not to add to regulation but to
design it to be efficient and likely to be observed. I am
therefore entirely supportive of the Motion from the noble Lord,
Lord Goddard.
1.13pm
(LD) [V]
My Lords, I too thank my noble friend Lord Goddard for initiating
this debate and for his powerful opening speech, which is a
reminder to us all of the devastation that fire can cause. None
of us will ever forget the appalling loss of life in the Grenfell
fire, which has already been referred to extensively. Out of that
has come a recognition that much more needs to be done to ensure
that all our built infrastructure is compliant with fire safety
requirements. Would that our hard-pressed fire and rescue
services had the financial support they need to undertake that
enormous task.
I will speak rather more locally on this matter. I live in a
beautiful part of the country, North Yorkshire, and I think we
were the first rural local authority to merge the police and fire
services. Looking at the latest draft Fire and Rescue Plan
2022-25 for North Yorkshire, I quote from the joint
commissioner’s objectives:
“The Fire Service should be at the centre of partnership efforts
to protect public safety as a trusted and very local public
service”.
Amen to all that. It works in conjunction with other significant
partners—the health service, local government and of course the
police—in a much more co-ordinated, joined-up way now than it
ever did when I was a member of both the police authority and the
fire authority many years ago, and I very much welcome those
steps.
Here I must deviate for a moment and express my deep concern
about police and crime commissioners taking on the responsibility
for overseeing the work of the fire and rescue service alongside
that of the police. I am even more concerned to see proposals for
police chiefs to add on to their roles the job of being chief
fire officer. That is a ludicrous idea and is opposed by the
National Police Chiefs’ Council and, I imagine, the chiefs of the
fire services. The two roles are entirely different—in law, apart
from anything else—and in my opinion should never be merged. We
are not America yet.
To return to the theme of today’s debate, it is right that a new
integrated review to update fire safety guidance now takes place
in all parts of the country, especially in areas that have
high-rise buildings but also in schools and hospitals, about
which we have heard so much today. A recent example of that is
the school built just four years ago in Essex that had to be
demolished because of its modular construction—again, we have
heard about that today—which many new buildings now seem to
prefer but which can be a definite fire hazard.
Then there is the recent finding of RAAC, which is posing massive
concerns throughout the country in our schools, hospitals and
other public buildings. Can the Minister tell us how far we have
got with checking on all these buildings? Do the Government check
the use of construction materials coming into the country? Is
there a particular safety compliance for buildings with these
materials? Is their fire performance a prerequisite for obtaining
planning permission?
Modern buildings consist of large quantities of plastic and
vinyl-based materials that have a high combustion toxicity and
pose a risk to life. Fire suppression systems should be fitted to
all new high-rise buildings and, as we have heard, most of our
schools, while illuminating paint, additional signs and marked
pathways should be indicated as a matter of course. All new
buildings should have automated fire sensors installed. Between
2012 and 2016, smoke alarms failed to operate in an average of
25,700 home fires per year, causing 440 deaths and 1,440 injuries
annually. That is an appalling number.
Coming back to North Yorkshire, when the transfer of governance
to the police and crime commissioner for the overseeing of the
fire authority took place three years ago, there was already a
deficit of £2.5 million, so the service has had to make savings
equivalent to 10% of its budget over those three years. As I
mentioned previously, the draft plan for the fire service has
many ambitions, which of course I endorse, but enabling the fire
service to fulfil those ambitions and objectives on such a
reduced budget will be nigh on impossible.
North Yorkshire and the city of York combined unitary authorities
cover an area of 3,209 square miles with a population of around
830,000—an area that stretches almost from coast to coast across
the top of the north of England. It can take well over two hours
to drive across it in good weather. It is incredibly challenging
for all our emergency services, in particular our fire service.
We have only five whole-time shift fire stations, seven
whole-time day-crewed stations, 24 retained stations and two
volunteer-crewed stations. The firefighters may not have to deal
with significant numbers of high-rise buildings, being in a
predominantly rural area, but they have vast areas of land to
cover, with significant risk of moorland fires and the
concomitant problems of climate change and danger to protected
habitats, wildlife and livestock. The Vale of York suffers badly
from flooding, as do parts of the Yorkshire Dales. These are all
difficulties our fire service must deal with and overcome. The
public expect it to do so.
Here, I too extend my thanks for the many lives and buildings
that our firefighters have saved, often in dangerous and highly
toxic conditions. The North Yorkshire brigade attended 8,256
incidents in the year ending June 2023—13% more than in the
previous year. There were 3,252 false alarms; we have not heard
much about those today. There were 2,055 fires and 2,949 non-fire
incidents, almost certainly road traffic accidents. That is quite
a workload for only 592 firefighting personnel.
The fire and rescue national framework requires each fire
authority to produce an integrated risk management plan. The
public must be able to see this. The plan must reflect all
foreseeable fire and rescue-related risks and set out its
management strategy, as well as showing that effective
consultation with communities has taken place. It must also
consult its workforce and other partners, and cover a three-year
time span. Those are all important requirements, which
presupposes that there will be money for the service to undertake
these duties—duties that require the very highest calibre of
personnel, who will all require extensive training and
first-class equipment.
My next concern is how all this will be paid for. The Fire
Standards Board produced national professional standards but
recruiting firefighters is becoming more difficult, especially
for hard-pressed local government, precisely because the private
sector can poach the brightest and best as it pays better money;
that was referred to by the noble Lord, . Indeed, privatisation of the
service is looking increasingly likely. From buying expensive
safety equipment to high-vis jackets, you can see adverts all
over the internet for essential firefighting use.
Surely it is time we had an integrated review to look at updating
fire safety guidance and ensuring that all areas of our country
are protected as much as possible from the ravages of fire—from
our high-rise buildings to our vast areas of underpopulated but
important habitats, from our schools and our hospitals to other
public buildings where people should be able to feel safe. All
are important and need the assurance that they have been
inspected by well-trained, professional people with the right
skills to undertake such a specialist task. An integrated review
looking at all these issues would be the right way forward; I
urge the Minister to support this.
1.25pm
(LD)
My Lords, I remind the House of my relevant interests as a
councillor in Kirklees in West Yorkshire and a vice-president of
the Local Government Association.
My noble friend Lord Goddard has inspired a well-informed debate
on a matter of life and death—literally. He started his
introduction to this debate by exposing the incoherence in the
management of fire risk in buildings across various government
departments. My noble friend Lady Harris pointed to a more local
incoherence and the difficulty of merging the police and crime
commissioner’s responsibilities with the fire and rescue
responsibilities in her county of North Yorkshire, but it is a
growing trend across the country. It seems to me that
incoherence, both local and national, is at the very heart of
today’s debate. The fact that we are not able to have an overall
fire safety strategy, agreed and implemented in a coherent way
across all government departments, seems to be at the heart of
what we are debating today.
I am unashamedly going to start by talking about the fire at
Grenfell Tower in 2017 because that tragedy powerfully reminded
us of the vulnerabilities that we all face when fire comes: 72
people lost their lives. The Fire Safety Act and the Building
Safety Act, which the Government implemented as a consequence of
the Grenfell fire, have made substantial improvements to fire
prevention in buildings, particularly domestic ones—but, as all
speakers have referenced, there is still much to do.
Although fire and rescue services have enabled a steady decline
in fires in homes, and deaths from such fires, each year more
than 300 people still die from fires and just under 30,000 fires
occur in dwellings. Grenfell exposed the callous decisions made
by manufacturers of cladding, who knew that the products they
were promoting were flammable. Action has been taken by
government to remove dangerous cladding from high-rise blocks,
but the Government have turned their back on those who live in
blocks under 11 metres; they are getting no help at all in
removing this dangerous cladding. I have raised this issue many
times in your Lordships’ House and will continue to do so in
order to raise the concerns and anxieties of leaseholders who
continue to live in flats covered with dangerous cladding.
Many areas of reform and improvement in fire safety have been
raised during this debate. Taking buildings as a whole, several
noble Lords have referred to the use of automatic fire
suppression systems, such as sprinklers. My noble friends Lady
Walmsley, Lord Goddard and Lady Brinton—and others—raised the
importance of including sprinklers in buildings, particularly
residential and nursing homes, schools and hospitals. It would be
good to hear what the Minister makes of the strong arguments that
they have made on this issue.
My noble friend Lady Brinton again made the powerful case for
making sure that people with disabilities are able to evacuate
buildings when needed. I suggest that people might like to read
Show Me the Bodies, the book on the Grenfell fire by Peter Apps.
It is not a joyful read; it details the awful fact that 41% of
the 72 who died were people with disabilities, who were simply
and tragically unable to get out. A second staircase in Grenfell
Tower may have helped many more people to evacuate safely. This
year, the Government have mandated that new buildings over 18
metres must have a second staircase. However, as my noble friend
Lord Goddard pointed out, the implementation of this has been
deferred. It is important in high-rise blocks for there to be an
alternative escape route. My noble friend also pointed to the importance of
improvements in building regulations in improving fire
safety.
As many noble Lords will know, the Grenfell Tower fire was
started by a fault in a fridge. Nearly one fire a day in London
is caused by faulty white goods. Improving the safety of
electrical goods in the home will lead to a reduction in domestic
fires. My noble friend has long been an advocate of
improving electrical fire safety and he spoke powerfully on this
issue.
Another issue exposed by the Grenfell Tower fire was
compartmentation. As pointed to by the noble Earl, , and the noble Lord, , it was very clear that
structural integrity had been compromised by poor fire safety
doors and the installation of new windows which were shabbily put
in—they did not fit and were made to fit using filler. That
increased the intensity and rapidity of the fire in Grenfell. It
is very important to have building inspectors and building
control who have the power to be able to put those matters right.
The Hackitt report made it very clear that that was at the heart
of what had to happen. We are still waiting for the Government to
implement that element of her report. Maybe we will see it when
the second phase of the Grenfell Tower report is published next
year.
I will move on to other areas noble Lords referred to. Other
electrical fires come from small batteries, and we are
increasingly using small batteries in all our lives. We all have
phones, chargers, e-bikes and e-scooters. My noble friend has drawn attention to the
dreadful fires resulting from these. We have probably all had a
briefing from the London Fire Brigade, which said that the fire
service has attended 142 e-bike fires and 28 e-scooter fires this
year. As we have also heard, three people have sadly died from
these fires. Many noble Lords who raised this issue have urged
the Government to regulate battery charging and for greater
control of the battery chargers you can get online, which may not
be adequate when it comes to safety. I look forward to the
Minister’s response on this.
It is not just electrical fires inside the home that can be a
problem. As my noble friend Lady Walmsley said, furniture and
furnishings can also create a hazard—though not so much a fire
hazard, because of the regulations of 1988 that ensured that soft
furnishings were treated with fire retardants. The excellent
Library briefing has drawn our attention to the fact that fire
retardants have succeeded in reducing household fires but that
these are not without their own problems. There is evidence that,
during a fire, some flame retardants release toxic gases and
smoke, as raised by my noble friend Lady Brinton. The UK Research
and Innovation study explained that a
“significant proportion of … deaths are caused by inhalation of
toxic fumes, including cyanide gas and carbon monoxide”.
My noble friend Lady Walmsley has drawn our attention to the
seeping toxicity of some of these flame retardants, which over
the years can have an adverse effect, especially on children, as
they are bio-accumulative.
There have been several attempts by Governments to address these
findings and, finally, change is coming—but next year, and
perhaps not in as comprehensive a way as those who are concerned
about fire safety would wish. For example, the Fire Brigades
Union has stated that Ministers should ban flame retardants which
cause toxic fumes to result or introduce testing for toxicity
before enabling them to be used. Draft regulations will enable
manufacturers to continue using flame retardants if manufacturers
decide they are the most “practicable” solution. There is a huge
gap there in improving fire safety in the home.
This has been a very good debate on a vitally important subject.
Firefighters across the country bravely save lives. While the
Government have an incoherent approach to fire safety, they will
continue to have to go out and put their lives at risk to save
the lives of others. This Motion is to take note; I hope the
Minister will urge the Government to take action.
1.37pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I welcome the noble Lord, . I know he has done
Questions before, but I think this is his first debate, so I
welcome him to the Dispatch Box to speak for the Government. I
also congratulate the noble Lord, Lord Goddard. I noticed the
changes being proposed and consulted on by the Government with
respect to fire regulations. Given their importance, the noble
Lord has done us all a service by bringing them before this
Chamber to be discussed in this important debate.
Fire is an ever-present danger, and something we must all
consider and take into account in our personal and professional
lives. Noble Lords will remember that, just a couple of days ago,
we had a fire drill in this place—the marshals went out and
procedures were looked at. That is very important and shows that,
here and everywhere, you have to take account of the threat that
fire can pose to us.
The figures show a drop in the number of fires and related deaths
and injuries. This is to be welcomed. It would be ridiculous for
us not to say that it is really good news to see that the number
of fires and fire-related incidents across our country has
declined. But one of the things that has come from this debate,
as the noble Lord, Lord Goddard, and others have said, is that
you cannot be complacent: you cannot believe that the job is done
and not worry or be concerned about where we are. Our efforts
must continue.
Many noble Lords have recognised the efforts of our firefighters
and fire services, and all of those who are working on that. I
will not make the political point that it is a shame we have seen
such a reduction in their numbers—but I thought I might drop it
in there. The work of firefighters has been quite brilliant.
Barely a day goes by without reference to a serious fire
somewhere, sometimes tragically involving the loss of life. None
of us will forget the horrors of the Grenfell Tower fire. It is
worth repeating that that was a tower block of some 24 storeys.
We saw the television pictures, with flames and smoke billowing
out: 72 people died, 223 managed to escape and 70 were injured.
You can only imagine the consequences for people living with that
horror for the rest of their lives. It was a horrific wake-up
call to us.
The inquiry and reports are asking why and how it happened. What
could have been done? That is why the reports coming out are so
important. I know the second phase of the report is supposed to
be next year, but it would be helpful if the Minister could tell
us when that might be, because we all want that report to come
out as soon as possible. As many noble Lords have said, it will
make some quite significant points and, from that horror, we must
do all we can to make sure we minimise risks.
That is why these regulations are so important. Noble Lords
raised Luton Airport and what happened in the car park there. Are
there lessons to learn from that? All of us have to use
regulations to try to minimise risk and bring about overall
improvement.
What is the state of the current fire safety regulations? Can the
Minister update us on that? There are reviews, consultations and
refreshes, and the noble Lord, Lord Goddard, talked about
updating them. All of that is apparently going on, but there is a
plethora of it. The landscape is very cluttered, and it is very
difficult to understand who is doing what and where we have got
to with these different regulations. Given the importance of all
that, some clarity from the Minister would be welcome.
We heard that the Government have been consulting on new
regulations on the fire safety of various products. The
consultation on upholstered products ended on 24 October. When do
the Government expect to publish the results? What is their view
on some of the criticisms that we have heard about small items
not being included? Many fires start from small items: this may
be the right thing to do, but it would be helpful to understand
the rationale. I read the regulations and some of the small items
included babies’ cots and cushions. There must be a rationale for
that—somebody has not just made it up—but what is it and why?
Do the Government accept concerns about the use of flame
retardants? Dr Paul Whaley, an expert from Lancaster University,
said:
“There are longstanding concerns about the effectiveness of flame
retardants and the health risks associated with them”.
We heard about some of those—smoke inhalation and so on—and those
criticisms were echoed by the House of Commons Environmental
Audit Committee, which said that the Government’s proposed new
regulations do not go far enough and are a wasted opportunity to
further improve fire safety.
The FBU has also criticised the new proposed regulations, saying
that they are, in fact, “deregulation” that puts firefighters and
public safety at risk. I suppose it is asking why the Government
would deregulate small cushions and babies’ cots from the
regulations when, as even somebody who is not an expert on fire
knows, those things do catch fire. I am trying to understand
that.
As we have just heard, there is a more general issue with
enforcement. Whatever regulations we have, they need to be
robustly enforced and all the buildings checked. Fire inspections
and the work of the fire service must be robustly supported. Can
the noble Lord explain how the Government seek to support the
enforcement of fire regulations? Does he have any figures on the
numbers of inspections and any consequential action that has
followed them, including the number of prosecutions following
enforcement notices that have been issued? I had a look, although
not for hours on end, and I could not find those figures. They
would be useful to understand what is happening with
enforcement.
The Building Safety Act 2022 set up the new building safety
regulator to regulate high-risk buildings, raise safety standards
and help professionals improve their competence. High-risk
buildings were defined, and there is a duty to regulate care
homes and hospitals through their design and construction phases.
That is a really good and important change. If you are regulating
care homes and hospitals through their design and construction
phases, you are clearly trying to minimise the risk of fire,
which is a good thing. Local authorities are now involved in this
important work, as well, but how will all that be monitored? Will
there be an annual report to Parliament, so that we can see how
the work of the building safety regulator is going?
The London Fire Brigade has called for a number of changes to
fire regulations and for a number of things to be done more
broadly. As we have heard in the debate, these include the
provision of second staircases in tall buildings. The Government
accepted this for new buildings over a certain threshold, but
what about older buildings and other buildings? Why are second
staircases appropriate in some buildings but not others?
Sprinklers in buildings are another demand. Again, they are
required in certain buildings, but many of us find it very
difficult to understand why you would not put sprinklers in new
care homes, hospitals or schools. I understand the difficulty
with old buildings, but if they are part of the design, that will
minimise the cost. What is the Government’s rationale for their
policy on sprinklers in both new and old buildings? Knowing that
would help us understand, particularly when it comes to care
homes. Given the number of people who were trapped in Grenfell
and could be trapped in other buildings, that is one of the
things that sprinklers are designed to overcome.
We have also heard about the increasing risk with lithium ion
batteries in e-bikes and e-scooters. I do not know if other noble
Lords were aware of this, but I did not know how prevalent fires
caused by e-scooters parked in communal areas are. I had no idea
that this was now the newest threat and the cause of fires in
various buildings. The figures are worth repeating. The London
Fire Brigade has attended 142 e-bike fires and 28 blazes caused
by e-scooters. I was quite surprised by this. Does the Minister
have any figures for the rest of the country? What are the
Government proposing to do about what appears to be a new threat
of fires stemming from the increased use of e-scooters?
We all welcome the reduction in fires and in fire-related deaths
to which I referred earlier. This remains a work in progress. It
requires us to keep demanding more. Tragedies, large or small,
cannot just be the spur to action. It cannot be that, when a
tragedy occurs, we debate why on earth we did not do anything
about it; why the regulations to stop it were not in place, or
how on earth we allowed this to happen. This cannot be how public
policy is determined. It needs rational and calm debate where
people like us demand that the Government respond. We want to
know that as much as possible has been done to prevent fires in
future. I do not want a situation where a tragedy is the spur to
action. This is not a good enough way to make public policy.
1.49pm
(Con)
My Lords, I start by thanking the noble Lord, , for tabling
this debate, and to all noble Lords who have contributed. I am
grateful for all the work done in this area. I found it quite
moving, listening to the experiences which noble Lords have
shared. Along with other noble Lords, I also thank the APPG and
the late
The Grenfell Tower fire was a terrible tragedy which rightly
shone a light on the need for reform. Fire safety is rigorously
debated in this House. We owe it to every one of the victims and
their families to ensure that we continue to give it the scrutiny
it deserves. As many other noble Lords have done, I too express
thanks and gratitude to the firefighters for all that they have
done in putting their lives at risk in keeping us safe.
It might be helpful if I first talk about the work that we have
undertaken to significantly strengthen the regulations that
govern fire safety in the wake of the Grenfell fire. In the time
since the fire, as has been noted, the Government have delivered
the Fire Safety Act, the Building Safety Act and the fire safety
regulations. Alongside the fire safety order, these changes
deliver a comprehensive approach to the regulation of fire safety
in England and improve existing legislation.
Since 2006, this order has been the main piece of fire safety
legislation in England. As noble Lords will know, it places legal
duties on responsible persons, including the need to undertake a
fire risk assessment, put in place fire safety precautions and
operate a suitable system of maintenance. It rightly places the
onus on building owners to ensure that their properties are safe.
While the Government publish guidance to help them do so, both
the FSO and the guidance are purposely non-prescriptive. This is
because no two buildings are the same and a case-specific
approach must always be taken.
Although respondents to the 2019 call for evidence were clear
that the FSO is widely regarded as a highly effective piece of
legislation, they also highlighted some areas where they felt it
could be strengthened. Section 156 of the Building Safety Act
delivered our response by amending the FSO to make it easier for
enforcement action to be taken in cases of non-compliance, compel
the owners of multi-occupied residential premises to share fire
safety information with their residents, and increase the need
for different duty holders in the same building to co-ordinate
their activities, thus ensuring a whole-building approach to fire
safety.
The Fire Safety Act further strengthened the FSO by putting it
beyond doubt that, for buildings containing two or more sets of
domestic premises, the structure, external walls and flat
entrance doors must be considered as part of the fire risk
assessment. That was a crucial step in addressing the potential
for fire to spread throughout a building in the way in which it
did at Grenfell.
Alongside these amendments, the fire safety regulations created
new legal requirements for the owners of multi-occupied
residential buildings to share building plans and other important
fire safety information with fire and rescue services, helping
them to plan their response in the case of an emergency. They
also placed new legal requirements on building owners to
regularly check fire doors in their building to ensure that they
remained in full working order.
Through the Building Safety Act, we created a new regulatory
regime for higher-risk buildings or—more
specifically—multi-occupied residential buildings that are 18
metres or more in height or more than seven storeys. The Act also
established a new building safety regulator within the Health and
Safety Executive and a new construction products regulator within
the Office for Product Safety & Standards. The building
safety regulator will work in partnership with local authorities
and fire and rescue services to oversee compliance with the
building regulations during design and construction. From October
2023, the building control body for higher-risk buildings was due
to commence regulation of fire and structural safety once a
building is occupied.It is already a legal requirement to
register existing occupied higher-risk buildings with the
regulator. As of 24 November 2023, more than 14,000 registrations
had been completed or started.
As we all learned from the tragedy of Grenfell, fire safety in an
occupied building relies heavily on a building being constructed
correctly in the first place. So, alongside these changes, we
have amended the building regulations that apply to new building
work, including a ban on combustible materials for residential
buildings, hotels, hospitals and student accommodation above 18
metres, with additional guidance for residential buildings
between 11 metres and 18 metres, and a lower threshold for the
provision of sprinklers—which I will come on to in more detail—in
new blocks of flats from 30 metres to 11 metres.
I will now at least try to address some of the excellent points
that have been made. As the noble Lord, said, if I cannot address
everyone’s concerns, I will certainly write.
A number of people raised the issue of sprinklers and related
issues. As I said, there have been some updates to the guidance
on building regulations. I was asked about retrofitting.
Retrofitting sprinklers is not always the right option, and other
fire safety measures could be taken instead which may be more
appropriate for an individual building. I was asked about school
buildings. School building contractors must meet the requirements
of the building regulations and are required to install
sprinklers where there is a life-safety issue.
The noble Lord, Lord Goddard, the noble Earl, , and I think the noble
Baroness, Lady Pinnock, raised the issue of departmental clarity
and cross-government work. The Home Office holds overall
departmental responsibility for fire and safety. It is obviously
very complex, as we have said, and there are many departments
that work together, particularly the Department for Levelling Up,
Housing and Communities. That is why we work in conjunction
across all departments, but, as I say, the Home Office takes the
lead.
A number of noble Lords, not least the noble Lord, Lord Goddard,
and my noble friend raised the fire at Luton
Airport. As I may have said in my previous remarks, we are
committed to carrying out a comprehensive review of Approved
Document B. I understand that regulators are overseeing this
review, including the fire resistance of car parks, and we are
looking at this and committed to change. We will communicate that
in due course.
On the response to the report of the second part of the inquiry,
I understand that it is still ongoing. As the noble Lord, , said, there is a huge amount
of work, which is ongoing, and we continue to await what is
said.
The noble Baroness, Lady Walmsley, and the noble Lord, , asked about baby products.
There are several proposed changes in the new approach, and the
consultation sets out a list of products not in scope in this new
approach. All products removed must still meet the requirements
of the General Product Safety Regulations. I hope that provides a
bit of clarity.
Something that was raised by a number of noble Lords in the
debate was lithium-ion batteries and the fires that come from
them. I shall touch briefly on e-scooters after this. There is a
lot of activity going on currently across government to gather
evidence and develop mitigations. Part of the work that is taking
place is about awareness, safe usage and, crucially, storage and
charging. Some of this work is being done through our existing
Fire Kills campaign, I believe. Product safety laws require
products to be safe and manufacturers must ensure safety before
placing a product on the market.
On the related issue concerning e-scooters, as I say, it is all
being looked at while evidence is being gathered and it is
something we are absolutely looking at to see what more can be
done.
The noble Lord, , asked about staffing and
salaries. The Government remain committed to ensuring that the
fire and rescue services have the resources they need to keep us
safe. Overall, fire and rescue authorities will receive around
£2.6 billion in 2023-24. Decisions on how resources are best
deployed to meet their core function, including recruitment and
retention, are a matter for the authorities, based on local
needs. I am afraid the Home Office does not have a role in
negotiations on funding of the firefighters or their pay.
On a related note, the noble Lord, , asked about general pressures on
local authorities, and other pressures. It goes without saying
that we all know that social housing providers have several
priorities and obligations that they must consider when balancing
all this out, and we want to balance the imperative to move
quickly to drive up standards with the need to take into account
the challenging environment that they will be in. We will be
asking about this in our upcoming consultation.
The noble Baroness, Lady Brinton, and a number of others raised
the very important issue of mobility-impaired persons and PEEPs.
As has been said, it is worth remembering those disabled people
who lost their lives in the fire. We are committed to supporting
the fire safety of disabled and vulnerable residents, and we are
acutely aware of the need to ensure the safety of residents with
mobility concerns. I know that the noble Baroness, Lady Brinton,
has raised this issue previously with ministerial colleagues of
mine, as have a number of other noble Lords. Indeed, I know it
has rightly been scrutinised in this House, as well as some of
the challenges which are required to be overcome. It is something
which I too have discussed with the department, in advance of
this debate, and the noble Baroness is right to raise this very
important issue. I know the department and others are working on
it, and a response will come in due course.
I turn now to some of the issues raised by the noble Lord, . Before I do so, I thank him
for his very kind remarks. It was not that long ago I gave my
maiden speech, before joining the Front Bench, in which I talked
about the kindness and warmth I have felt from everyone across
this House, on all sides of the Chamber, since I was introduced.
I have engaged closely with the noble Lords, and , on a variety of issues of
late in relation to my ministerial responsibilities. I pay
tribute to the noble Lord for the candid, often frank but
cordial, and—crucially—warm way in which he has dealt with me,
and I am extremely grateful, given that I am the new kid on the
block.
Turning to some of the remaining points, on the regulator, which
I think the noble Baroness, Lady Pinnock, also raised, we expect
the regulator to carry out its work in a proportionate yet
pragmatic way. Obviously, it is still very early days to see how
it works, but this is something that will be taken forward, given
it has not yet come into force.
The noble Lord asked about statistics and enforcement, and I am
afraid I will have to write to him about that—I assure him I will
do so.
A number of noble Lords, including the noble Lord, , asked about the issue of
second staircases. As I am sure noble Lords will be aware, it was
designed with the engagement of the sector but also fire safety
services and local authorities, as well as the insurance
industry. This approach seeks to provide an evolution of safety
standards which, taken with our other measures and reforms,
ensures the safety of people in tall buildings, both new and
existing. The Government are clear that existing and upcoming
single-staircase buildings are not inherently unsafe. There is no
evidence to suggest single-staircase buildings require
remediation or mitigation when built in accordance with the
relevant standards, are well maintained and properly managed.
Finally, the noble Lord, Lord Goddard, asked why there are no
Peers from the fire services. It is a very good question. I am
afraid that is not currently within my remit—as I say,
currently—but it is a point well made.
There have been lots of great points raised, as the noble Lord,
, said. There are far too many—I
have tried to listen and address them at the same time. Noble
Lords must forgive me that I will have to follow up, where I can.
I am also aware that not everyone will be entirely satisfied with
everything I say. I will try and respond, if I can, on the other
issues.
In closing, I genuinely thank noble Lords for their contributions
in the debate. The reforms we have delivered will take time to
fully implement and take hold. We will reflect on the many points
raised today, as we continue to monitor the impact of our
reforms, which is something noble Lords asked about. I assure the
House of the Government’s enduring commitment to improved fire
safety, as we seek to ensure everyone is safe, and feels safe, in
the buildings in which they live and work.2.03pm
(LD)
I thank all Members who took part in this debate, which I put
down in some trepidation because it seemed a little bit dry and
technical. The expertise in the House has shown itself again,
from all four corners. It would be wrong for me to name
individual Peers, but the knowledge is in the Members. These are
life-changing decisions that we make on behalf of the public out
there.
One noble Lord talked about Ukraine. On the last sitting day
before the Summer Recess, I was fortunate enough to go with
Ronnie King to see the Ukrainian Minister at his embassy. He
commented on the support of the British fire service in
delivering things to Ukraine in their darkest hour, when they
needed ladders and equipment. The fire service took the kit out
there and dropped it off. This is the first opportunity I have
had a chance to thank, on behalf of Ronnie and the APPG, the
Ukrainian Minister for bringing that up with us.
The noble Lord is a new Minister, and this is probably a—dare I
say it—baptism of fire. However, there are questions that need
clarifying and answering, because some of this seems unfathomable
to right-minded, simple people like myself. The noble Lord,
, has asked those questions on
my behalf, because of the time. People might think that we do not
care, but a number of speakers today went over their time, which
was 12 minutes—a long time to speak. That is because of the
passion and the knowledge that they are trying to impart to the
Minister to take back to people in the other place to make things
safer. On behalf of everybody, I thank the Minister for listening
and for his replies.
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