Lt d
When it comes to inspecting Crown Premises, there are only a few people who can do the job. FIRE Correspondent Catherine Levin talks to Chief Inspector Peter Holland and finds out about the work of the Crown Premises Fire Safety Inspectorate
an dM ed
T
ia
Inspecting the Crown
Pa
vil io
nP ub
lis
hin g
he Crown Premises Fire Safety Inspectorate is the lesser well-known branch of fire inspection. It is responsible for enforcing the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 in government buildings, parliament and other Crown Premises. CPFSI published its first annual report in May this year, shedding light on its activities and plans for the future. Covering over 10,000 premises, the CPFSI has a wide reach and a great deal of work to do. From prisons in Bristol to the job centre in Luton; from Ascot racecourse to Sheffield City Airport. Unsurprisingly, the largest number of crown premises is in London, with over 1,600 spanning Whitehall and beyond. Peter Holland is the Chief Inspector, having taken on this role from Sir Ken Knight in 2013. Peter has a long history in fire, having been Chief Fire Officer in Lancashire and Bedfordshire; he was President of CFOA and Chairman of the Institution of Fire Engineers. He is the fourth generation of his family to serve in the Fire and Rescue Service. The Chief Inspector role used to be combined with the role of Chief Fire Adviser, but the latter role was abolished in 2017. Peter’s focus is now entirely on the work of the CPFSI. He is based in the Home Office and is assisted by 13 inspectors, a team that has grown in size in recent years. Talking to Peter by phone during lockdown, he expresses his delight in being able to publish the first annual report about his team’s work. Originally the team that inspected Crown Premises was called the Crown
Premises Inspection Group with the unfortunate acronym of CPIG. He is clearly happy for the change in name. “We are now called an inspectorate, because that is exactly what we are,” he says. CPFSI is one of many inspectorates. Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire and Rescue concern themselves with inspecting fire and rescue services. Fire and rescue services inspect buildings in their area in accordance with their own risk-based inspection programmes, but they do not touch crown premises. Interestingly, HM Inspectorate of Prisons (HMIP) does not inspect fire safety in prisons, leaving that to CPFSI as all prisons are Crown Premises.
“I am pleased to say I have noticed a marked improvement in fire safety awareness particularly in government-occupied buildings” 14 | July/August 2020 | www.fire–magazine.com