Restaurant Fined £7,000 over Fire Safety Breaches

A York restaurant has been ordered to pay £7,000 after a number of fire safety breaches were found at the premises, putting occupants at ‘risk of death or serious injury’.

People sleeping in the nine rooms immediately above the Mr Happy food outlet in Blossom Street risked death or serious injury for two years, York Magistrates Court heard.

The list of failings included:

· The internal staircase to the two floors restaurant and takeaway was blocked and couldn’t be used

· an external staircase into a nearby alleyway had flammable objects and obstacles at its foot

· the building’s fire alarm and fire detectors didn’t work

its fire extinguisher probably didn’t work because it hadn’t been serviced for five years.

Fire officers served a prohibition notice banning the use of the rooms for accommodation after they discovered the fire safety problems during a routine inspection in May 2017.

But in December, immigration officers found a Romanian restaurant employee living in one of the rooms.

Kheng Koay pleaded guilty to failing to ensure the safety of employees and non-employees from May 13, 2015, to May 13, 2017, failure to carry out a fire risk assessment during the same period and failure to comply with a prohibition notice on December 7, 2017.

York magistrates fined him £5,000 and ordered him to pay the £1,989 prosecution costs of the North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service, plus a £170 statutory surcharge.

Fire and rescue incident statistics: England to June 2018

This release contains statistics about incidents attended by fire and rescue services (FRSs) in England. The statistics come from the Home Office’s online Incident Recording System (IRS).

The results show in the year ending June 2018 (1 July 2017 to 30 June 2018):

FRSs attended 556,884 incidents. This was a 3% decrease compared with the previous year (576,545). The

total number of incidents was on a downward trend for around a decade, though they have increased in recent

years mainly driven by increases in non-fire incidents attended. The small decrease this year was predomi

nantly driven by a decrease in fires attended.

FRSs attended 159,685 fires. This was a 9% decrease compared with the previous year (176,054). The de

crease in fires is driven by a fall in secondary fires with primary fires also showing a decrease.

FRSs attended 226,466 fire false alarms. This was a less than 1% increase compared with the previous year

(225,899).

FRSs attended 170,733 non-fire incidents. This was a 2% decrease compared with the previous year

(174,592). For around a decade, there had been a general decline in the number of non-fire incidents. How

ever, recent years have shown large increases, largely due to a rise in medical incidents attended. The recent

decreases in non-fire incidents are mainly due to a decline in emergency medical responding linked to many of

the trials stopping in September 2017.

Of all incidents attended by FRSs, fires accounted for 29% and non-fire incidents 31%. The remaining 41%

were fire false alarms, which continued to be the largest incident type.

There were 247 fire-related fatalities compared with 344 (including 71 from the Grenfell Tower fire) in the pre

vious year (a decrease of 28%).

There were 3,106 non-fatal casualties requiring hospital treatment3 in the year ending June 2018. This was a

7% decrease compared with the previous year (3,351).

FBU “horrified” by fatal fire increase

THE FIRE Brigades Union (FBU) has reacted angrily to the release of new figures on fires and fire deaths by describing both the rise in fires for the second year running and the rise in fatalities as ‘horrifying’.
Fire incidents have increased in England by 9% for the year ending September 2017, having already increased the previous year (2015-2016). More worrying still, say the FBU, is that fire fatalities have also increased, even with the death toll of Grenfell taken out of the statistic – 346 people in England died in fires for the period, including Grenfell, compared with 253 the previous year. With the Grenfell deaths removed from the total there were still 22 more people dying in fires than the year before.

The union said that this increase has occurred against a backdrop of severe cuts to the fire and rescue service, which was cut between 2010- 2015 by 30%, with another 15% of cuts being implemented between 2016-17 and 2019-20, according to the Local Government Settlement announcement earlier this week.

FBU general secretary Matt Wrack said: “All we hear from government when they attempt justification of butchering the fire and rescue service is that ‘fires are down’ – this is now clearly no longer a claim they can make. They wrote off last year’s rise in fires as a ‘blip’ – what will they put it down to this year?

“It isn’t complicated – the fire and rescue service is cut to the bone, and the result is more people dying in fires because crews can no longer respond promptly and in sufficient numbers to tackle fires professionally, quickly and effectively. How many more rises in these worrying figures before they join up the dots? How many more people are going to have to die?

FSM source

 

Fire breaches found at Wolverhampton property

 

A landlord from Wolverhampton has been handed a £34k fine for breaching a number of housing rules, including regarding fire safety, at an HMO under his ownership.

Fire hazards, electrical issues, damp and a large pile of waste were all found at the property when council inspectors visited in June.

That inspection followed confirmation that no approval had been sought for the conversion of the property to flats, therefore confirming it was a HMO and should be regulated under the HMO regulations.

The property consisted of two sets of flats – 11 flats in total of which seven were being lived in.

District Judge Murray said: “It was clear that the property was a high fire risk and that candles were being used at the property which also had loose wiring.

“The fact that one of the walls was separating from the structure leaving a gap, together with the blocked means of escape, missing banisters, an inoperative fire alarm system and disconnected smoke detectors created a risk of smoke penetration and injury in the event of a fire.

“Apart from the fire risk the damp throughout the property posed a risk to health.”

FIA