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Duty calls: Training up building safety managers

With the Building Safety Act looming, there are fears the industry lacks the skills required by the new duty-holder roles. But one housing group has seized the initiative, and is training up its own building safety managers. Neil Gerrard reports.

Shortly before the third anniversary of the Grenfell Tower disaster, in last month’s CM, CIOB past president and chair of its quality commission Paul Nash issued a warning to construction: Too many organisations were acting too slowly to develop competencies for the new duty-holder roles that will come in with the Building Safety Act.

Under official plans, the Building Safety Regulator will oversee the safety of all multi-occupied residential buildings of 18m or more in height, or more than six storeys. It will also have responsibility for a new duty-holder regime operating over a building’s lifetime, with greater onus on designers and contractors to explain how they are managing safety risks.

With hundreds of companies owning buildings expected to fall into the scope of the regime, there’s expected to be a need for thousands of building safety managers (BSMs), appointed to manage the fire and structural risks. “And yet many organisations appear to be waiting for the Building Safety Act to arrive before preparing,” Nash warned.

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