Insurance industry left to shoulder risk in Grenfell fire aftermath – Insurance Times
The Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017 has left the insurance industry to shoulder the increased risk for the failure of building safety and standards.
The Grenfell Tower fire in June 2017 has left the insurance industry to shoulder the increased risk for the failure of building safety and standards.
Today we launch this survey to gauge senior executive views on the Building Safety Case and the Building Safety Regulator. We plan to repeat this process quarterly to track changes in sentiment and preparedness.
With the draft Building Safety Bill 2020 underway, TrackMyRisks’ CEO, Matt Hodges-Long tells Insurance Times he is seeking to evolve the Building Safety Register into its own organisation.
With the release of the Draft Building Safety Bill 2020 at the start of this week, the government have pushed the full cost of building safety works on to leaseholders.
Following our Buildings Insurance Crisis event with Insurtech UK last week, Insurance Times published this detailed article about the draft Building Safety Act 2020.
How close are English housing associations and local authority landlords to proposed new Building Safety regulations? Download our Building Safety Report…
Despite repeated promises that “we will learn from the Grenfell tragedy” and an intent to create the Building Safety Regulator (BSR), I remain cynical that this will positively impact building safety any time soon.
The Grenfell Inquiry clearly shows us that every High Rise Residential Building (HRRB) needs a Digital System of Record (DSoR)
On the second anniversary of the Grenfell Tower tragedy, we still await decisive action to prevent a recurrence. Every high-risk building needs a Digital System of Record (DSoR).
Risk & compliance documents could save your business in the event of prosecution, regulatory enforcement, employment tribunal or a complex insurance claim. Do you have them under control?