Fire Authority

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In the United Kingdom a Fire authority or Fire and Rescue Authority is a statutory body made up of a committee of local councillors which oversees the Policy and service delivery of a fire and rescue service.[1] [2] [3] A fire authority is made up of either councillors, officers or representatives from the local principal councils in the geographical area that the fire service operates. In the case of the London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority, there is an additional layer of governance above in the form of the London Assembly.

The mix of statutory bodies involved in fire and rescue service structure, planning and provision is complicated with the advent of devolved governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, but the central government body in England and Wales is the Department for Communities and Local Government.

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In simple terms a local fire authority is a body which ensures that the local fire service is doing its job properly by serving the community as it should. It means that the fire service is answerable for its actions and performance to the general public. One of its main functions is to collect funding from each local council via a precept - a portion of council tax allocated to the FRS.

Although a fire safety officer is actually an employee of the fire service and is authorised and answerable to the Chief Fire Officer to exercise powers of inspection, any enforcement or prosecution action taken against organisations by the fire service is actually undertaken under the name of the fire authority, using the primary legislation: Fire and Rescue Services Act 2004 [4] This act provides the legal basis for fire authoritites to carry out fire safety functions.

There are many specific acts of parliament which deal with fire safety, inspection and enforcement; in October 2006 (later than anticipated), many outdated acts were repealed, and placed under the umbrella of the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005[5]

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