The week 16th - 22nd September
is ‘Gas Safety Week’ and landlords
are being urged to make sure they comply with the law.
The
warning follows a recent Health &
Safety Executive (HSE) prosecution of a landlady for failing to provide
evidence that a gas safety check had been carried out at one of her tenanted
properties.
Matthew Claxon, a specialist health and safety lawyer at Fenton’s
Solicitors LLP, said: ‘in light of this recent HSE prosecution, it is
crucial that landlords are aware they are responsible for safety of their
tenant, and that tenants in turn, are aware of carbon monoxide poisoning.’
When a
request by Lichfield District Council
for a Staffordshire landlady to produce a gas safety certificates for boilers
at two properties she owned in Burntwood went unanswered, the council referred
the matter to the HSE.
‘Landlord’s
certificates are required to confirm that gas appliances, installation and
flues at a property have been checked annually for safety by a suitably
qualified Gas Safe registered engineer,’ said Matthew Claxon, ‘Gas safety laws are there to protect us and the
law requires that all landlords who provide a domestic gas service to tenants
have those registered to ensure they meet the requirements of the Gas Safety
register.’
South Walls Magistrates’ Court told that despite numerous requests,
the landlady failed to provide the certificates. As a result, the HSE served
two improvement notices requiring her to arrange for a competent gas fitter to
carry out an inspection of the gas appliances in the two premises and produce a
certificate for both.
After the
court heard that she complied with one of the notices but failed to provide a
certificate for the second property despite repeated requests by the HSE, the
woman pleaded guilty to breaching gas safety regulations and was fined £1,500 and ordered to pay costs of £3,209.
‘Although
some landlords choose to put the safety of their tenants at risk, it was
fortunate that in this case no-one was killed,’ said Claxson, ‘faulty gas
appliances and flues are responsible on average for 20 carbon monoxide related
deaths in the UK every year. Many more suffer serious health effects from
inadvertently inhaling the highly toxic gas – which can be extremely hard to
detect without proper equipment as it has no colour, odour or taste.’
If
inhaled carbon monoxide can quickly enter the bloodstream and affect breathing
causing drowsiness, unconsciousness, coma and even death. As
well as carbon monoxide poisoning, badly fitted and poorly serviced gas
appliances can also cause gas leaks,
fires and explosions.
Landlords
have specific legal responsibilities to their tenants when it comes to gas
safety, for more information please visit: http://www.gassaferegister.co.uk/advice/renting_a_property/for_landlords.aspx
Gaurav Ahluwalia
Thanks for organizing the Gas safe week..Now Many Landlords gets the gas safety certificate. If anyone looking for that certificate. Please visit Landlord gas safety certificate London
ReplyDelete