
![]() |
Brian Sims
Editor |
Home> | Facilities | >Health and Safety | >BIFM plans new life safety training for FMs |
BIFM plans new life safety training for FMs
24 May 2018
THE BRITISH Institute of Facilities Management (BIFM) has announced plans to develop a new certified accreditation and a suite of training for facilities managers (FMs) in charge of life safety in buildings.
FMs play a crucial role in both the management of buildings in use and in the commissioning and acceptance of new and newly refurbished buildings. Responding to Dame Judith Hackitt’s review on the Building Regulations and Fire Safety, the Institute plans to ensure that FMs have access to high quality training and professional development that can certify their competency to uphold the highest standards of life safety in the buildings they manage.
In the spirit of the report’s call for continued collaboration on competency building between professional bodies, towards an overarching framework, BIFM says it is keen to work with other bodies representing the built environment to ensure a joined-up response.
The Institute’s Life Safety Working Group (LSWG) will play a key role in the development of a specific competency programme for facilities managers, alongside relevant CPD. The Group has been an active participant in the Hackitt Review team’s work, helping to articulate how fire safety can be achieved best when maintaining buildings as well as feeding into work to develop competency in such maintenance.
LSWG Chair Rob Greenfield said “Given the vital role that FMs can and do play in ensuring high standards of life safety in buildings, it’s important to strengthen the competency of those involved. My experts group will lead work to develop a dedicated accreditation programme for a specific FM standard as a first step in ensuring that FM best practice plays a part in the response to Hackitt”.
BIFM CEO Linda Hausmanis said: “We are fully behind Dame Judith’s proposals to strengthen competencies in building management and across the wider construction and built environment professions. As the leading professional body for facilities management, I am keen to ensure that BIFM leads the way in setting and upholding fire and system related professional competencies for facilities managers; and that the Institute contributes fully in ensuring coherence across the piece.”
- London Fire Brigade issues new alert in wake of e-bike battery explosion
- One-in-ten affordable homes “lost to building safety costs”
- Euralarm members “disappointed” over proposals for new CPR
- Mayor of London makes determined move to protect front line policing
- Security systems boss jailed
- NFCC chair reflects on the start of 2019
- Recommendations emerge in wake of Cameron House Fatal Accident Inquiry
- MEPs support inclusion of fire resilience within EU Green Deal initiatives on buildings
- Brigade gives Government bad school report
- “Car park design must evolve to ensure fire safety” asserts IStructE