020 8763 6776
Our aim is to deliver a cost effective yet high quality service. We endeavour to draw upon our experience and knowledge to guide and advise practical and professional solutions to solve our client's fire safety problems.
Our services cover the following regions
Birmingham | London | Liverpool | Manchester | Derby | Nottingham | Leicester | Coventry | Sheffield | Leeds | Bristol | Northampton | Chester | Southampton | Wolverhampton | Redditch | Worcester | Newcastle | Greater London | Wales | Cardiff | Bath | Norwich | Norfolk | Kent | Middlesex | Brighton & Hove | Portsmouth | Bournemouth | Devon | Cornwall | Weston Super Mare | Dorset | York | Sunderland | Rugby | Peterborough | Preston | Ipswich | Woking | Darlington | Telford | Shrewsbury | Exeter | Essex | Hull | Grimsby | Middlesborough | Cheshire | Stoke | Swansea | Warwickshire |
Fire risk assessor and hotel manager jailed for fire safety offences
Posted by Intime at 01:23, January 17th 2012.
An external fire risk assessor and a hotel manager have both been jailed for eight months for fire safety offences.
David Liu, who runs The Dial Hotel and Market Inn, both in Mansfield, had previously pleaded guilty to 15 offences under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005, while John O’Rourke of Mansfield Fire Protection Services pleaded guilty to two offences under the legislation. Sentencing the two defendants last Friday (8 July) at Nottingham Crown Court, the judge said that the time had come to send out a message to those who conduct fire risk assessments, and to hoteliers who are prepared to put profit before safety.
Officers from Nottingham Fire and Rescue Service visited both hotels as part of a routine inspection. They found that both premises were being used to provide sleeping accommodation on the upper floors and that fire precautions, which should have been provided to safeguard the occupants in the event of a fire, were inadequate. Due to the serious risk to life, they issued prohibition notices preventing any further use of both premises for sleeping accommodation until suitable improvements had been made.
Mr O’Rourke was prosecuted because he had prepared fire risk assessments for both premises. However the fire risk assessments failed to identify a number of significant deficiencies, said the prosecution, which would have placed the occupants at serious risk in the event of a fire.
The offences common to both hotels to which Mr Liu, as the responsible person, pleaded guilty were:
In addition at the Dial Hotel, officers found both staircases from upper levels terminating in the same ground floor area with no alternative escape routes or separation, a locked fire exit door, and exit routes obstructed by combustible materials. The other offence at the Market Inn related to a missing fire door and a window not being fire resisting. Mr Liu was also ordered to pay costs of £15,000.
John O’Rourke, as a person other than the responsible person who had some control of the premises, pleaded guilty to two counts (one for each hotel) of failing to provide a suitable and sufficient fire risk assessment. He was ordered to pay costs of £5,860.