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Legionella Risks during the Coronavirus Pandemic

Employers, the self-employed and people in control of premises, such as landlords, have a duty to protect people by identifying and controlling risks associated with legionella.

If your building was closed or has reduced occupancy during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, water system stagnation can occur due to lack of use, increasing the risks of Legionnaires’ disease. HSE have issued full guidance to help you prevent legionella growth.

You should review your risk assessment and and manage the legionella risks when you:

reinstate a water system or start using it again
restart some types of air conditioning units
If the water system is still used regularly, maintain the appropriate measures to prevent legionella growth.

You can find out what Legionnaires’ disease is, where it comes from, how people get it and symptoms and treatment by reading our guidance What is Legionnaires’ disease?.

THE LATEST 52 WEEK DATA FROM KANTAR WORLD PANEL IS NOW AVAILABLE TO BFFF MEMBERS

Members can now access the market data from Kantar Market World Panel for the 52-week period to 21 March 21…

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CONTAINER CONGESTION

The Federation has received information that because of the recent issue with the Suez Canal, experts in the container industry are forecasting that due to the blockage many container ships were delayed and then released en-masse caused a surge of ships going through the canal.

They are advising this will lead to severe congestion in European Ports in the coming weeks. This may mean some containers will be unloaded at different Ports than originally intended.

Given members are already seeing issues, especially Felixstowe, this development is unwelcome.

STOCK ISSUES

We have been made aware that members who supply product into the Food Service Market are still facing issues with excessive stock levels.

Whilst the BFFF guidance on extending the shelf life on stock should help to ensure food does not go to waste there are still costs associated with this.

We would be keen to hear from any member with issues as we would like to feed the information back into Defra to ‘press our case’ for more support.

Please send details to Jilly Wallis or ring myself – 07930 345326.

Richard Harrow, CEO

Fire Risk Assessment Levels

Last July we published an article on things to look out for when completing a Fire Risk Assessment (FRA), this time around we intend to look at the fact that there are actually 4 levels of FRA that can be carried out on buildings of all types and how can they affect you.

The first two appertain to all areas of a building covered under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 (RRO), so therefore any building where people will congregate or work.

The second two are more aligned to blocks of flats, where the common areas do come under the RRO and therefore a type 1 is acceptable, but the flats themselves do not.

 

A Type 1 Fire Risk Assessment (FRA) is non-destructive, and the most common. A Type 1 FRA assesses all the common parts of a building.

A Type 1 FRA has the purpose of ensuring that common parts of a building have the arrangements which allow people to escape if there was to be a fire – such as clear signage pointing to entry and exit points.

The results of a Type 1 FRA may reveal the requirement for further FRAs. If this is the case, the Type 1 FRA will list reasons why this would be required.

It should be borne in mind that with the introduction of the upcoming Fire Safety Bill, external walls will have a more prevalent role within RA’s

Type 2 Fire Risk Assessments are rare, and normally only recommended if a Type 1 FRA concluded that there may be serious structural flaws in a building which may increase the risk of fire spreading.

A Type 2 FRA includes destructive sampling such as if it is believed that compartment walls do not meet the required standard, ducting cannot be inspected, cavity barriers cannot be identified etc.

This increases the cost of this type of assessment because a contractor would be required.

A Type 3 Fire Risk Assessment is comprehensive – and covers more than the law requires. This type of assessment covers all common areas of a building – and individual dwellings (outside the RRO).

A Type 3 FRA considers all means of escapes (including those within individual dwellings), structures, and compartmentation between flats and any means of fire detection. A Type 3 FRA is non-destructive – and is usually only considered necessary if there are fire risks within individual dwellings.

Type 4 Fire Risk Assessments are similar to Type 2 FRAs, as they include a destructive sampling, but in both the common parts of a building and living areas – such as apartments. Type 4 FRAs are more comprehensive – and complicated to complete. This is because access to individual dwellings is required and destructive sampling can lead to a need for repairs.

 

If a building was built pre-2000 – then building owners must consider asbestos, before carrying out a Type 2 or Type 4 FRA, as they include destructive sampling.

In these cases, a Refurbishment and Demolition (R&D) survey is required. This identifies the risks of destructive sampling required for an FRA.

CONSUMER COUNTDOWN TO REOPENING – PART 2

CGA have kindly shared with us the second part of their four-part Consumer Countdown to Reopening. CGA have highlighted 5 key takeout’s as follows:

  • Consumers personal financial positions are having an impact on their plans to visit and spend more or less than previous
  • Those who plan to engage more with the market are younger, and were already well engaged pre-Covid
    • those who plan to visit less are less affluent and an older consumer
  • Restaurants, Pubs & Bars are the 3 key channels people plan to visit
  • Venues local to consumers are likely to be their main port of call, though “local” has different definition by age groups
  • Local and British will also play a part in drinks choices – with ethical considerations also growing in importance for consumers

To read the full report please Click Here

Member Benefits

Exclusive Partnership deals on key products and services:

  • BFFF energy deals and rates
  • Vypr member deals and introduction
  • Defib Plus deals
  • Company Shop – membership
  • Mentor – MHE training health check

Exclusive access to networking opportunities and events:

  • Meet the Buyer events (retail & foodservice)
  • Annual Business Conference with networking dinner
  • Specialist H&S and Technical Conferences
  • Special interest groups (packaging, frozen food temperatures)
  • Annual Lunch
  • Awards Night
Upcoming Events More Events
Sponsorship Packages

We offer a range of sponsorship opportunities to BFFF members across our events throughout the year, with flexible packages that can be tailored to suit your business objectives.

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