2010-06-26 / Front Page

City failed to enforce asbestos law for years

By J. LOUISE LARSON
Loopholes in the City of Kilgore’s permitting process have let small commercial renovations slip by without checking for asbestos. A state inspector made the discovery inadvertently while checking out a downtown project, said city special services director B.J. Owen.


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What is the duty? The duty

What is the duty? The duty to manage asbestos is contained in regulation 4 of the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2006 link to external website[4]. It requires the person who has the duty (ie the "dutyholder") to: * take reasonable steps to find out if there are materials containing asbestos in non-domestic premises, and if so, its amount, where it is and what condition it is in; * presume materials contain asbestos unless there is strong evidence that they do not; * make, and keep up-to-date, a record of the location and condition of the asbestos containing materials - or materials which are presumed to contain asbestos; * assess the risk of anyone being exposed to fibres from the materials identified; * prepare a plan that sets out in detail how the risks from these materials will be managed; * take the necessary steps to put the plan into action; * periodically review and monitor the plan and the arrangements to act on it so that the plan remains relevant and up-to-date; and * provide information on the location and condition of the materials to anyone who is liable to work on or disturb them. There is also a requirement on anyone to co-operate as far as is necessary to allow the dutyholder to comply with the above requirements. Who has the duty? In many cases, the dutyholder is the person or organisation that has clear responsibility for the maintenance or repair of non-domestic premises through an explicit agreement such as a tenancy agreement or contract. The extent of the duty will depend on the nature of that agreement. In a building occupied by one leaseholder, the agreement might be for either the owner or leaseholder to take on the full duty for the whole building; or it might be to share the duty. In a multi-occupied building, the agreement might be that the owner takes on the full duty for the whole building. Or it might be that the duty is shared - for example, the owner takes responsibility for the common parts while the leaseholders take responsibility for the parts they occupy. Sometimes, there might be an agreement to pass the responsibilities to a managing agent. In some cases, there may be no tenancy agreement or contract. Or, if there is, it may not specify who has responsibility for the maintenance or repair of non-domestic premises. In these cases, or where the premises are unoccupied, the duty is placed on whoever has control of the premises, or part of the premises. Often this will be the owner. What premises are affected? The duty to manage covers all non-domestic premises. Such premises include all industrial, commercial or public buildings such as factories, warehouses, offices, shops, hospitals and schools. Non-domestic premises also include those 'common’ areas of certain domestic premises: purpose-built flats or houses converted into flats. The common areas of such domestic premises might include foyers, corridors, lifts and lift-shafts, staircases, roof spaces, gardens, yards, outhouses and garages - but would not include the flat itself. Such common areas would not include rooms within a private residence that are shared by more than one household such as bathrooms, kitchens etc in shared houses and communal dining rooms and lounges in sheltered accommodation.

How would one find out about

How would one find out about a building having asbestos..by the age of the building? I worked at ******* manor (a nursing home) for 7 years and 2 years of that was in a very small laundry room with very little ventilation, the maintenence man tore the tile floor up and we worked in there anyway. so how would i find out? who do i contact to find out?

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