Seminar 1st March 2012, Edinburgh: Sustainable Fire Engineering is ‘The Future’. (CPD Event)

15 January 2012 by Jim Bennett

H G Tay (International President) and Jose Torereo
1st March 2012  1630 – 2000hrs

James Clerk Maxwell Building (JCMB), Edinburgh University, Mayfield Road
Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ
Tel: +44 (0) 131 651 7067

Does fire engineering consider sustainability when developing solutions?

  • Protection of the Health & Safety of all building users(users, visitors, contractors, emergency services)
  • Protection of property
  • Ease of repair following damage
  • Sustainability of the Human environment
  • Sustainability of the natural environment
Cost: Members £7, Non‐Members £10 and Students free
Pre ‐ registration required: please contact secretary@ife‐scotland.org.uk
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Registration fee

Linkedin Fire Engineering Group

31 July 2011 by Jim Bennett

Members may find the fire engineering discussions within this Group of  interest.

Click here please

President Represents Branch at Emergency Planning Conference, New Delhi

10 September 2010 by Jim Bennett

Our Scottish President, Jim Bennett,  ’Chaired’ and presented a paper at a New Delhi Conference on Emeregency Planning in Industries including HWM and Transportation of Petroleum, Petroleum Products, Natural gas by Pipelines and POL Tankers.

The conference  provided a platform for exchange of information and technical know-how to the entire Indian chemical industry including petroleum, petroleum products & natural gas industry. This will also help to reduce, through better emergency planning, the menace of on-site incidents and accidents associated with the handling, storage, warehousing and transportation of chemicals/petrochemicals leading to off-site emergencies.

Two areas of particular interest to Scotland were:

The Jaipur Terminal Fire - incident investigation report The Chief Factory Inspector Mr JB Verma gave a colourful update on his team’s ‘findings.’

The Bhopal Tragedy with 15,000 deaths?? –  The Supreme Court Re-opened the Bhopal Tragedy Case last week with a proposed charge of  Culpable Homicide.

Dr Bipin Verma, who was a first responder to the Tragedy, gave a medical update on the aftermath and the affect on the local communities.

Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Operational Guidance Board

26 March 2010 by Jim Bennett

The Scottish Branch of the Institution are now consultative members of the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Operational Guidance Board – for Terms of Reference please click here.

Details of the meetings can be found on The SFRAU section of the Government website by clicking here.

It should be noted that we are also consultative members of the Chief Fire Officer’s Association, Scotland Practitioners’ Policy Forum.

Further details may be obtained by contacting the Branch Secretary.

Details of the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service Circulars/Dear Chief Officer’s Letters can be found by clicking here.

The Association of Brirish Insurers have issued a paper entitled “Tackling Fire: a call for Action” – for details of their proposals please click here.

New COMAH (Control of Major Accident Hazards) rules become effective in April 2010

7 February 2010 by Jim Bennett

Major HazardsIn 2008 the COMAH Competent Authority (CA) initiated a fundamental review of its approach to regulating onshore major hazards in the UK – the CA has remodelled its key regulatory processes, and will implement a series of changes in April 2010.

Improvements include a better national coordination of the CA’s priorities, improving performance monitoring against existing, and emerging new priorities, and ensuring that the CA continues to focus on the right issues.

The Competent Authority comprises three organisations: the Health Safety Executive (HSE), the Environment Agency (EA – for England and Wales) and the Scottish Environmental Protection Agency (SEPA). These three organisations are responsible for the enforcement of the Control of Major Accident Hazards (COMAH) Regulations.

The Competent Authority Strategic Management Group (CASMG) will meet quarterly, setting a strategic direction and plan of work for the CA s a whole. It will be responsible for reporting back publicly on progress both in the UK and to the European Union.

For more information – click here 

In Scotland we are reviewing our regulatory environment as described in the “Interpretation and Legislative Reform (Scotland) Bill: Consultation Paper” 
The principle is to facilitate moving from an ‘enforcement model to and enabling environment’. – Please forward comments to the Branch Secretary.

Guidance on Testing and Exercising Business Continuity

28 December 2009 by Jim Bennett

The below link will give access to the BSI Published Document (PD 25666:2009) and relates to guidance on testing and exercising business continuity, emergency planning and general contingency arrangements. Although Information Technology is specifically mentioned, it is intended that the guidance can be used by any agency to test and validate their suite of plans. The document has been designed to aid the delivery of cost effective and efficient testing of all exercising formats and includes the following:

  •  A full glossary
  • Exercise programme management
  • Initiating testing and exercising programmes
  • The different types of exercises
  • Preparing to test and exercise
  • Advice on conducting exercises
  • Exercise debriefing
  • Exercise roles and responsibilities
  • A future full bibliography

 Consultation link

Testing and exercising is a critical area in all emergency management and business continuity arrangements and forms essential components of the profession. It is advisable that this document is read alongside other guidance that relates to testing and validation planning arrangements, some of which can be found at:

Guidance on Training Exercises   

and Planner’s Guide

SIFE will prepare and provide a submission on any comments on PD25666:2009 made by members. Please respond by 15th February 2010.

An Operational Framework for Resilience

by Jim Bennett

An Operational Framework for Resilience, Jerome H. Kahan, Andrew C. Allen, Justin K. George

Abstract
There is growing interest in the subject of resilience on the part of President Obama’s Administration, as well as lively discussion regarding this issue in academic, business, and governmental circles. This article offers an operational framework that can prove useful to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and stakeholders at all levels, both public and private, as a basis for incorporating resilience into our infrastructure and society in order to make the nation safer.

Three interrelated, mutually reinforcing objectives or end-states shape the approach to resilience: resistance, absorption, and restoration. If these objectives are realized as part of applying practical programs to critical systems and key functions, then these systems and functions will reflect resilience features appropriate to their individual needs.

Click here for more information

Emergency Preparedness Consultation: collaborative working between responders

16 December 2009 by Jim Bennett

Civil Contingencies ActAs part of the Civil Contingencies Act Enhancement Programme the UK Government have undertaken a project to identify ways to achieve better engagement and collaborative working between responders to support them in fulfilling their duties under the Civil Contingencies Act 2004 (CCA).

This project formed part of Phase 1 of the programme which focused on improving the standard and consistency in the way the existing legislative framework was implemented.

 Through engaging with a range of stakeholders, we identified opportunities to improve Chapter 2 (Co-operation) of the existing statutory guidance, Emergency Preparedness, and have produced a draft revision for consultation.
The closing date for the consultation is  Friday 19 February 2010. Comments to Branch Secretary for 10.02.10 please.

ICL Disaster Report Update

1 October 2009 by Jim Bennett

Yvette CooperUpdate from   Yvette Cooper (Secretary of State, Department for Work and Pensions; Pontefract & Castleford, Labour)

On 16 August I announced the publication of Lord Gill’s report into the causes of the tragic factory explosion at ICL Plastics Ltd in Glasgow on 11 May 2004. At the same time I asked the Chair of the HSE and its board to consider the report’s findings and to report back to me on progress by the end of September, addressing both Lord Gill’s criticisms of its actions since the explosion and how the report’s recommendations could be taken forward. I said that I would report back to Parliament on progress in the autumn.

The HSE has now responded to me. I have placed a copy of its response in the Libraries of both Houses and it is also available on the HSE website at http://www.hse.gov.uk/gas/lpg.htm .

In the response the HSE chair acknowledges that, while primary responsibility for the tragic accident rested with the site user, there were failings within HSE which need to be addressed. The chair also reiterates the apologies that both she and the chief executive of HSE made for these failings both during and after Lord Gill’s inquiry, and explains the steps that have already been taken since the accident.

HSE has worked closely with members of UKLPG, the trade association of the liquefied petroleum gas industry, to develop plans for the replacement of buried metal pipework with polyethylene pipes, which do not carry the risk of corrosion. It has been agreed that the replacement programme will include domestic sites, which goes beyond Lord Gill’s recommendations. The programme, which is scheduled to be completed by 2015, will be prioritised using an established risk model to ensure that sites identified as high risk are dealt with first. In parallel with this, HSE is also preparing an inspection campaign with local authorities focusing on sites identified as high risk, and is working with the industry to review and update user guidance materials and codes of practice for suppliers and installers.

The HSE also launched a two-stage consultation to address those recommendations of the Gill report where action is not already underway. The initial stage of the consultation seeks views from interested stakeholders in the LPG industry, the wider business community, and those with an interest in health and safety, and will run until 19 November. I hope hon. Members will take the opportunity to feed their views into this.

Following completion of this initial stage, the Government will in the new year publish the full response to Lord Gill’s report. This will include firm proposals for action which will form the basis of the second stage of the consultation, supported by a formal impact assessment

Managing Chemical, Biological and Nuclear Risks

27 August 2009 by Jim Bennett

Business Protection Seminar
CBRNManaging Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear risks

8 October, 2009, Leicester Square, London 8:30 am – 11:00 am

For more information please click here

News

Technical Sprinkler Seminar Tuesday 21st February 2012, Stirling (CPD Event)
15 January 2012 by Jim Bennett
Seminar 1st March 2012, Edinburgh: Sustainable Fire Engineering is ‘The Future’. (CPD Event)
by Jim Bennett
POLICE & FIRE REFORM CONSULTATION
22 September 2011 by Gordon Gilmour
SIFE AGM Minutes 2011
20 September 2011 by Gordon Gilmour
6 September 2011 by Gordon Gilmour

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Contact Us

For General enquires the Branch Secretary can be contacted be e-mailing secretary@ife-scotland.org.uk or by phone on + 44 (0)1334 840839

Specific Branch Council Member's may be contacted by clicking here