Finally published is the latest Annual
Report of the Crown Premises Fire Safety Inspectorate (CPFSI), which
regulates fire safety measures in government buildings including prisons. But it
covers not the last financial year but 2021-22, so up to date it isn’t. It’s
also not clear how reassuring a picture it provides of fire risk in prisons and
the steps being taken to reduce it.
Positively, the report says the data on fires “masks some
improvements in fire safety management in the custodial sector which creates a
reasonable expectation that fire risk will be driven down if this continues to
improve.”
Yet CPFSI also notes that “the rise in injuries is of serious
concern therefore even more concerted action is necessary to continue to reduce
the numbers of fires.”
On the face of it, the chart below shows injuries to prisoners and staff have doubled in a year.
But this is apparently due to the recent inclusion of ‘Precautionary Assessments’ in the data, which cover cases in which no injuries are reported, but a check is made by prison medical staff to confirm this. The breakdown of injuries chart shows that 87% of “injuries” fall into this category.
CPFSI say that the overwhelming cause of fires in prisons is deliberate ignition. This is driven by a range of factors – "such as status, regime challenge and self-harming".
Beyond the ignition itself, the lack of suitable in cell fire
detection has been the biggest cause of injuries, something which the prison
service has a major capital programme to address.
The latest (much timelier) 2022-23 Annual
Report by HMPPS noted there were still 26,000 places in need of investment in
March this year with a target of meeting fire standards by the end of 2027. An
interim solution of placing domestic smoke detectors in or just outside cells
has, say CPFSI “proved to be a major managerial challenge for prison staff to
prevent tampering and vandalism.”
There are other challenges too – the inadequacy of smoke
control systems and fire-fighting equipment; and of course neither the staff
nor the prisoners can escape from fire as easily as in other types of buildings.
CPFSI have also found that “the smoking ban in prisons has, somewhat
surprisingly, negatively altered the nature of fire risk. Whilst opportunistic
fire-setting has reduced, we have seen an increase in serious fire injuries
linked with substance abuse. The repeating nature of those incidents has raised
a fresh challenge for prisons in their duty to safeguard those in custody.”
CPFSI conclude that HMPPS are aware of the problem of the
lack of automatic detection at least and “are taking urgent steps to address
this problem more quickly.” But are they?
The HMPPS report says that in 2022-23 4,000 cells were
upgraded. They’ll need to accelerate this pace of progress considerably if they
are to finish by 2027. Troublingly, the HMPPS report also notes how “capacity
pressures have restricted our ability to take places out of use for
refurbishment and compliance works”. Moreover, the Custodial Capital Maintenance
Programme which pays among other things for fire safety improvement “has
undertaken a review of all major maintenance projects across the adult male
estate in preparation for potential decisions to halt or defer”.
The Justice Committee should check with HMPPS and
with Peter Holland the Chief Inspector of the Crown Premises Fire Safety
Inspectorate that fire safety work has not been halted or deferred because of population
pressures.
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