Close Menu
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Wellbeing & Mental Health
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
Trending
  • Curves Scales Community Driven Fitness Franchises with 7.5% Year-on-Year Membership Growth
  • 4 key steps leaders can take to boost team performance through cultural intelligence
  • Supporting neurodivergent employees in the workplace 
  • The pension mistakes people make every March
  • Jurit helps salmon producer land employee ownership future
  • Health & Safety Trends To Look Out For In 2026
  • Social Care Tech Platform Agorastaff Named In Google Govtech  Top 30
  • Background Screening Expert Explains New DBS Check Rules For Self-Employed Workers
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Wellbeing
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • RSS
You are at:Home»Health & Safety»Lessons From Grenfell Are Still Being Learned
Andrew Wilkinson of Secure Safety Solutions

Lessons From Grenfell Are Still Being Learned

0
Posted By Greg Robinson on September 18, 2025 Health & Safety

AUGUST saw the publication of a new training framework for fire risk assessors to try to avoid another Grenfell Tower tragedy in which 72 people lost their lives, according to health and safety expert Andrew Wilkinson.

This means that landlords and owners of commercial properties and blocks of flats must ensure they employ a competent and highly qualified fire risk assessor. This professional must now show considerable competency including demonstrable technical knowledge, practical experience, and ethical conduct especially for those working in sensitive or high-stakes environments.

These professionals will be expected to have qualified at foundation, intermediate and then advanced levels – the latter expected in the most highrisk settings such a high rise buildings, schools, hospitals, care homes and ‘complex’ buildings.

Andrew Wilkinson of Secure Safety Solutions, based in Swindon, is currently undergoing training to becoming an Advanced assessor having already qualified at an intermediate level. He will complete his training by the end of this year.

“This formal clarity is a long-overdue step in the right direction. Since the Grenfell Tower tragedy in 2017, the fire safety sector in the UK has undergone a period of painful reflection. The public inquiry exposed fundamental failures in how fire risk was understood, managed, and communicated from the use of combustible materials to the lack of clarity over who was responsible for protecting residents.

“This year marks a critical turning point. BS 8674:2025, expected to be published this month  represents the final changes and what has been the biggest shift in fire legislation for many years.”

The impact will be that owners and landlords of large commercial premises or complex buildings with mixed residential use will have to ensure they employ a risk assessor who has proven Advanced level competence. Failure to do so could have far reaching consequences under HSE legislation. Enforcement action could be taken by a local fire service or local council and penalties can include substantial fines, imprisonment and a criminal record. Businesses can face legal action, closure as well as reputational damage.

For Andrew, who has run his own business for three years and was a health and safety specialist for 10 years before at Heathrow Airport, still sees fire risk assessments which are inadequate and wouldn’t meet the new legal requirements.

“I still see too many outdated assessments being used that wouldn’t stand up to scrutiny today. Clients get in touch asking for a new fire risk assessment and will send over the previous one for reference.

“You open it and realise quickly: sections are missing, assessor qualifications aren’t listed, and the content includes generic control measures that don’t reflect the specific risks of the building.

“Most of the time, the client genuinely believed they were acting in good faith. Often, they had no idea the previous assessment wasn’t up to standard. But as soon as you start reviewing the documentation and walking the site, you notice the gaps areas of risk that had been overlooked, assumptions that had been made. And unfortunately, this isn’t rare. It happens in care homes, offices, high street shops places where people live and work

The Fire Safety (England) Regulations 2022, which came into force in May 2022, added further duties especially for high-rise residential and mixed-use buildings. A designated ‘Responsible Person’ (business owner, board of trustees, premises owner) now has to provide building plans to the fire service, share external wall information, carry out regular inspections of lifts and firefighting equipment, and install secure information boxes which provide vital information for the fire service in an emergency situation.

“Too often, Grenfell is talked about in the past tense,” said Andrew, “but the lessons from that night are still shaping what good practice looks like today. What we learned is now woven into the standards and reforms coming into effect this year and next.

“Personally, I believe we need to keep pushing for higher standards not just because legislation demands it, but because morally and professionally, we know it’s the right thing to do. A fire risk assessment is not a document to file away. It’s a process designed to save lives.”

For more information visit Secure Saftey Solutions

 

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Health & Safety Trends To Look Out For In 2026

Businesses Step Up Their Washroom Standards As Loo Of The Year Figures Reveal Big Changes

1 in 3 employees anxious about lack of first aiders at work

Comments are closed.

Follow SME Today on Linkedin and share all the topics you find interesting
ISO/IEC 27001 roadmap: A practical guide for UK SMEs
ISO/IEC 27001 roadmap: A practical guide for UK SMEs
Mastermind9
Events Calendar
    • Marketing
    March 3, 2026

    Cold outreach remains one of the most debated topics in B2B sales and marketing. 

    February 19, 2026

    Intuit Mailchimp Unlocks a New Era of Profitable Ecommerce Marketing

    • Finance
    March 17, 2026

    The pension mistakes people make every March

    March 10, 2026

    Two fifths of SMEs can’t pay staff on time due to late payments

    • People
    February 26, 2026

    Engineering A Happier Life Using The ‘Lean’ Methodology

    February 26, 2026

    New Chief Product Officer Joins CBS As Company Continues To Grow

    • Health & Safety
    March 16, 2026

    Health & Safety Trends To Look Out For In 2026

    December 22, 2025

    Businesses Step Up Their Washroom Standards As Loo Of The Year Figures Reveal Big Changes

    • Events
    February 18, 2026

    Former Special Forces Soldier & Team GB Athlete Ben Gallagher to Speak at Thames Valley Business & Community Awards

    February 9, 2026

    South West Business & Community Awards 2026 Announce Shortlisted Nominees

    • Community
    March 3, 2026

    Westspring CEO Invited to Bristol IWD

    February 26, 2026

    Family Wise Celebrates 14 Years of Growth, Global Reach and Community Impact

    • Food & Drink
    February 26, 2026

    Kids Travelling By Train Can Now Enjoy Allergen-Free Snacks Thanks To Creative Nature

    February 26, 2026

    1 in 8 UK pubs face insolvency as experts urge immediate action

    • Books
    January 21, 2026

    The CEO Mirage: Exposing the hidden traps that take smart leaders down

    December 23, 2025

    Communication Expert Celebrates Book Launch At Oxford’s Saïd Business School

    The Newsletter

    Join our mailing list for the best SME stories, handpicked and delivered direct to your inbox every two weeks!

    Sign Up
    About

    SME Today is published by the same team who deliver The Great British Expos’. We have been organising various corporate events for the last 10 years, with a strong track record of producing well managed and attended business events across the UK.

    Join Our Mailing List

    Receive the latest news and updates from SMEToday.
    Read our Latest Newsletter:


    Sign Up
    X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    Categories
    • Books
    • Community & Charity
    • Education and Training
    • Environment
    • Events
    • Features
    • Finance
    • Food and Drink
    • Health & Safety
    • HR & Recruitment
    • In Profile
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • News
    • People
    • Property & Development
    • Sponsored Content
    • Technology
    • Transport, Travel & Tourism
    • Wellbeing & Mental Health
    • ABOUT SME TODAY: THE GO TO RESOURCE FOR UK BUSINESSES
    • Editorial Submission Guidelines
    • Privacy
    • Contact
    Copyright © 2025 SME Today.
    • ABOUT SME TODAY: THE GO TO RESOURCE FOR UK BUSINESSES
    • Editorial Submission Guidelines
    • Privacy
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.