What The Law Says About Fire Safety In Offices If you run a business or any other non-domestic premises, one of the legal requirements is that you are responsible for fire safety. This applies if you are the employer, the owner, a landlord, an occupier, or...
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What The Law Says About Fire Safety In Offices If you run a business or any other non-domestic premises, one of the legal requirements is that you are responsible for fire safety. This applies if you are the employer, the owner, a landlord, an occupier, or anyone else with control of the building, such as a managing agent or building manager. This comes under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, and you are known as the Responsible Person. This can get even more complicated if you run an office in a building where there are several businesses because there will be several Responsible Persons and the law requires that you all work together. As the Responsible Person you must: carry out a fire risk assessment of the premises and review it regularly. tellemployees or their representatives about the risks you’ve identified. put in place, and maintain, appropriate fire safety measures. plan for an emergency. provideemployee information, fire safety instruction, and trai
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