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Friday, 3 October 2014

Southampton Landlords take note: Clapham landlord fined £10,000 for breaking fire safety laws

The London Fire Brigade (LFB) has successfully prosecuted a Clapham landlord who let tenants carry on living in his property despite fire safety inspectors slapping a notice on it to prevent its use due to serious fire safety concerns.
Panayiotis Chrysostomou was hit with a £10,000 fine after pleading guilty at Inner London Crown Court on Friday 26 September to breaking fire safety regulations by failing to comply with the prohibition notice placed on the building on Clapham High Street. He was also ordered to pay £2,000 court costs.
LFB inspectors were alerted to the property, which was divided into eight bedsits, after firefighters called to a blaze in a neighbouring building raised concerns.
When inspectors visited the property on 7 May 2013 they found it had:
• no smoke alarms
• no emergency lighting and no fire doors
• poorly managed cooking equipment in each bedsit
• a single escape route blocked by furniture
• electrics that were unmaintained throughout
• no fire risk assessment.
On 8 May 2013, due to the serious fire safety risks the LFB discovered, a prohibition notice was placed on the property to stop people living there.
Despite this, following a re-inspection in June, inspectors found tenants still living in the first three storeys of the four floor property and that almost nothing had been done to improve fire safety.
Following the sentencing on Friday, LFB deputy head of fire safety regulation Mark Andrews said:
“This property was a potential death trap. The lack of smoke alarms, absence of any fire doors, as well as the blocked escape route would have put the lives of those people living in these bedsits in serious danger if a fire had broken out.
“Landlords have a clear responsibility under fire safety laws to ensure that people living in their premises are safe from the risk of fire and this fine should send a stark warning that if we find landlords are ignoring those responsibilities we won’t hesitate to prosecute.

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