Colt, Compliance and Competence

Following the tragic events at Grenfell Tower, the subsequent Hackitt Review into Building Regulations and the ongoing Public Inquiry, Colt are proud to establish their viewpoint on Compliance and Competence.

Compliance



The word compliance appears in the Hackitt Review Final Report 46 times and competence appears 152 times - these are clearly important terms for the fire safety industry, yet a recent conference on competence from the Construction Industry Council (CIC) working groups representing specific sections of the construction industry struggled to provide a clear single interpretation of what competence really means.

At Colt we strive to deliver our projects in an ethical, compliant and competent way, but what does this really mean and how do we demonstrate that we deliver on this commitment?
Ethical is captured by subjective terms such as legal, honest, decent and truthful but also described by integrity, respect, rigour and leadership.

Colt demonstrates leadership not by market position but from a moral position. We endeavour to lead by commitment to educating our customers and supply chain, by developing standards and guidance through partners such as CEN, BSi and trade associations such as CIC and the Smoke Control Association but also engaging with regulators such as MHCLG and other governmental departments, BCOs, LABCs, fire brigades and others.

What does Compliance mean to Colt?

Compliance to Colt means an adherence to standards and regulations, but not a blinkered, unthinking adherence, as not all standards and regulations fit all buildings and applications. Adherence needs to be considered, practicable and justifiable. There will always be instances where non-conformance and deviation need to be considered and these will be assessed and proposed on a case by case basis. Where non-conformance is unavoidable, Colt will takes steps to ensure the client is clearly aware of the decision taken and the reason(s) for it, and of any subsequent compromises and potential consequences.

What does Competence mean to Colt?

It could be argued that competence could be demonstrated by signing up to quality plans such as ISO 9001 and at Colt we have numerous badges, which we are more than happy to offer for review.

Following Grenfell, the Smoke Control Association launched a 3rd party certification scheme, under the governance of International Fire Consultants Certification (IFCC).  Colt was the first to gain certification which verified our ability to follow a design, install, commission and maintain smoke control systems, smoke curtains and fire curtains.

We welcome scrutiny, we are proud of our processes and believe that the way we deliver our life safety installations is the best in our industry and we continue to learn and strive to be better.
However, competence, as indicated above, is a hard concept to define and is not simply a matter of collecting badges through audit trails. At Colt we conclude competence to be an amalgamation of knowledge, skills, training, experience and limitations - knowing the how, what, where, when and why we do what we do - but also knowing where to stop and draw the line, the red line that we cannot justify crossing.

Knowledge and skills encompass employing the right people for the right jobs. For example, our technical team is drawn from graduate engineers as a minimum, Masters degrees are preferable, but even these are employed at a trainee level, with a clear plan to mentor, develop and train them to understand the limitations in their skills. Where knowledge is lacking, training is provided to fill the gap. Experience is provided in a controlled, supervised environment where a mentor can explain the importance of the information being provided.

Of course we recognise that many people think they are competent beyond their present environment and this is where limitations must be respected. All our processes are developed so that critical functions are subject to a peer review process. For example, all technical reports are reviewed by a senior engineer, all drawings for construction are reviewed by the technical team for content and by the operations team for scope.

So competence is not just about knowing what is the right way to do the job, it is equally about knowing what is the wrong way to do it and about knowing where a person’s knowledge, skills and experience stop. We encourage our staff to question what they see, to stop when they are unsure and call out when they see something that is wrong.

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