A fire risk assessment is a systematic, data-driven process used to identify, analyze, and mitigate potential fire hazards in buildings, industrial facilities, or communities. It evaluates the likelihood of a fire and its consequences, covering life safety, property loss, and business continuity, often guided by standards like NFPA 551 for evaluation. (NFPA)
A good fire risk assessment should protect people, property, and business continuity. Here’s where businesses often go wrong.
What a Fire Risk Assessment Really Covers
A fire risk assessment isn’t just about alarms, suppression, or extinguishers. It evaluates three core areas:
- People: staff, visitors, vulnerable occupants
- Premises: layout, exits, fire doors, construction
- Processes: how work is carried out day-to-day
Ignoring any one of these weakens the entire assessment.
Commonly Overlooked Fire Risks and Reviews
Often, assessments miss the dynamic nature of workplaces, especially when layouts, staffing, equipment, or activities change. Updates can introduce new hazards that must be reassessed. (APA)
- Poor storage of flammable and/or combustible materials
- Blocked escape exits
- Temporary risks from contractors or seasonal equipment
- Occupancy or building remodeling
If a risk wasn’t present when the assessment was written, it still needs to be addressed. Having a fire risk assessment on file doesn’t automatically mean a building is safe and compliant. The ever-changing landscape of business requires an ever-changing fire risk assessment. Stay on top of it; an assessment is only effective when it reflects reality and leads to action. Waiting for a problem to occur is already too late.
Understanding Roles and Responsibilities
Fire safety is a shared responsibility, but accountability matters. Clear communication between both business owners and facility managers is essential to avoid gaps in responsibility.
Business owners are ultimately responsible for ensuring assessments and fire safety measures are in place and acted upon. While facility managers often times coordinate assessments, implement the day-to-day safety precautions, and review systems with the business owner. (AFP)
Fire risk assessments shouldn’t exist just to satisfy regulations. When done properly, they reduce disruption, protect people, and safeguard the future of the business.
For business owners and facility managers, the goal isn’t just compliance—it’s resilience.