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NSI on police alarms URN model

by Mark Rowe

In this year’s Parliamentary Review, the National Security Inspectorate (NSI) urges policy decision makers, legislators, politicians and senior business leaders to adopt third party certification in the fire sector and learn from the police-private sector alarms partnership.

Distributed to over 500,000 business executives, policy makers and others, the Parliamentary Review, a non-partisan publication independent of Parliament and Government, combines political commentary with sector specific insight from Secretaries of State, Ministers and MPs. It has several editions, each focusing on a policy area with the aim of raising standards by highlighting best practice.

Every year the publication brings together leaders and policy makers across business, industry, education and the public sector to share insight and help organisations confront the challenges of an ever-changing political and economic landscape. It highlights significant developments, opportunities and concerns for business.

Co-Chairman of The Parliamentary Review, Lord Pickles, has praised the 2020 publication as one of the most comprehensive yet. As Britain looks ahead he commented, it is “essential that politicians have a firm understanding of the challenges with which British organisations must contend”.

Writing in the 2020 Fire & Security edition, NSI Chief Executive Richard Jenkins, pictured, underlines the necessity of a robust approval regime in keeping people safe, with third-party certification bodies such as NSI playing a key part in making that happen. In the security sector a compelling example of certification making a positive difference is its longstanding alignment with the police in terms of monitored intruder alarms. Founded on agreed standards, third-party certification has been delivering substantial benefits here for over 30 years and continues to do so.

Richard Jenkins says: “The ‘police alarms URN model’, if adopted into fire safety, and with particular regard to critical infrastructure, could have significant effect. A similar approach can and should be adopted by the fire and rescue service, where even greater benefits could be achieved in terms of saving lives and property, reducing false alarms, and lowering attendant costs.

“Third party certification can help embed standard practices through robust on-going audit and inspection of service providers and their installations, and the infrastructure is ready to deploy in terms of all fire safety disciplines. The world is safer as a result of partnership between the police and private sectors based on a standardised approach underpinned by third party certification.”

Richard’s article sets out why and how third-party certification would achieve these significant gains within the fire safety sector as a whole, thereby acting on behalf of the general public, fire alarm and detection system users, the fire and rescue services charged with responding to alarm-generated incidents, as well as the service providers specifying, designing, installing and maintaining these systems.

View NSI’s article here: https://www.theparliamentaryreview.co.uk/organisations/national-security-inspectorate

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