BillyDee
Wants a more interesting tag
- Joined
- May 20, 2013
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So it's not going to be "No Deal" but it might be an "Australian Deal". But the Australians don't have a deal, despite negotiating for two years...
I don't think it is looped - that was the live interview
Might be worth asking the council that took the tenders why they didn't take the essentially fireproof cladding options like GRC that cost a lot more and therefore never made the tender process before attacking those that met the tender requirements...
For a second time, they haven't asked for immunity from prosecution though...Not sure where else to post this but the chair of the Grenfell inquiry has asked the Attorney General to grant immunity from prosecution for the commercial companies responsible for designing and installing the cladding on the tower. They could still be prosecuted if the Met find evidence but anything disclosed at the Inquiry would be inadmissible.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-51404218
For a second time, they haven't asked for immunity from prosecution though...
"The BBC's home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds said this deal - if it is backed by the Attorney General - would not provide immunity from prosecution, as the police can still gather their own information.
But he added: "They couldn't use what a witness said at the inquiry as evidence at a trial."
anything disclosed at the Inquiry would be inadmissible
There are a lot of different directions the finger could ultimately point in...
The TMO as the client for the works would bare the final responsibility in some eyes but then they've probably appointed an independent PM to manage the whole project and procurement who you would expect to provide some guidance, a lot of times the client doesn't really have much of a clue of the detail they just know what they want as an end result and leave their appointed team to make it so.
Then you'll have the architects who would've most likely specified the desired cladding system, there will be some sign off on whatever product is proposed by the client but again they might not really have any knowledge of what's being offered and pick purely on aesthetics or costs whilst relying on the advice of their appointed team to make sure everything checks out. Some client's will have more control, their own in house specifications and guidelines which have to be following but it isn't always the case, hotel chains seem to be the most on the ball in this regard from my experience.
Then there's further consultants that the architect would've employed and relied on advice from, building control experts to make sure their proposals comply with local authority guidelines, fire consultants too for specific advice on fire safety and perhaps even facade consultants to give an overview that all elements of the works combine together to work as planned. You'd expect them to be employed anyway, there's always the potential that these parties aren't bought to the table at this stage and then responsibility would be passed on to the selected contractor to satisfy themselves that everything was designed as it should before starting work.
Eventually you get to the contractor(s) responsible for the works, your main contractor managing the whole project needs to be confident that the design works, that their bid is compliant with that design and then ultimately they're responsible for the installation adhering to that design, whether directly or via vetting of suitable subcontractors for different elements of the works.
Could be a big oversight by one party somewhere along the line or several small infringements by several parties that lead to a perfect storm.
I was referring to the misleading part of your post and then clarifying the position. You know, so there isn't any confusion...Try reading the final sentence of my post brightspark.. you know, the
bit.
Flammable products have been used in construction for years, and still are, you design the system in such a way as to contain fires and prevent the spread across large areas.i really don’t see how several small infringements results in wrapping a residential building in cladding that acts as a fire accelerant. that would be a total cop out. it seems to me that whoever knew about it and did nothing is culpable. whoever was involved in the approval of the cladding or any health and safety sign of for it is culpable. if other buildings are similarly wrapped in the stuff they should be emptied before anyone else dies due to someone’s ‘small infringement’
The National Audit Office (NAO) inquiry found the figure did not represent the true number of benefit-related suicides, in part because the DWP had until recently failed to actively seek information from coroners and families, or investigate all of the cases that were reported to it.
The government watchdog said that although the DWP said it regarded the internal investigations as a way of improving the safety and quality of its services, it had admitted that it has no idea whether lessons from the reviews were ever learned or their recommendations ever implemented.
Flammable products have been used in construction for years, and still are, you design the system in such a way as to contain fires and prevent the spread across large areas.
It could be that the fire consultant got their bit wrong and they layout of fire breaks and cavity closers wasn't sufficient to do the job, or maybe the cladding company had to alter their fixing detail last minute because of something they uncovered on the existing structure and that compromised the fire strategy. The company installing may have wilfully ignored this design in an attempt to save money, skimping on materials, or individuals may have failed in their workmanship, missing crucial elements or simply doing them incorrectly.
I doubt anyone has looked at that scheme from the off and made a conscious decision to create the situation that ultimately came to pass. There would always be an element of risk in using a flammable material, just as there is with any material choice in any industry, but you manage that risk through proper consultation and design, which has obviously failed somewhere along the line here.