Principal J7 service

Fire Safety Policies & Procedures

Premises-specific written arrangements that define responsibilities, routines, emergency procedures, records and review.

Controlled J7 instruction

Scope, evidence and deliverable are confirmed before work proceeds

The service is shaped around the premises and client responsibility rather than a pre-written package.

Information required

Current fire risk assessment, existing policy, responsibility structure, emergency arrangements and relevant maintenance or training records.

What is confirmed

The premises, areas, service, attendance, fee, VAT, timescale, exclusions and payment or approved account terms are recorded in the quotation.

Expected output

A controlled policy and procedures document aligned with the premises, responsible-person arrangements and the way fire safety is managed.

Usable management arrangements

From assessment findings to clear responsibilities and procedures

A policy should reflect the organisation, the premises and the way control is exercised—not read like a generic legal template.

Responsibilities

Define who owns fire-safety decisions, routine checks, training, maintenance, contractor control and review.

Arrangements

Set out practical controls for prevention, evacuation, visitors, people needing assistance and communication between dutyholders.

Records and review

Identify the records that demonstrate control and the triggers for reviewing the policy after change, incident or assessment.

Defined evidence and deliverable

A policy built from the current assessment and the way the premises are managed

Existing assessments, emergency arrangements, maintenance records, responsible-person information and operational procedures are reviewed before the document is finalised.

Information reviewed

Premises use, occupancy, management responsibilities, significant findings, system arrangements, contractor controls and relevant records.

What the client receives

A controlled policy and procedures document that can be communicated, implemented, reviewed and updated when responsibilities or circumstances change.

Connected support

Connect policy with assessment and emergency planning

Assessment findings, written arrangements and ongoing management should reinforce one another.

Common questions

Clear scope before instruction

These answers explain the usual service boundary. The accepted quotation confirms the exact scope for the premises and client.

Is a generic fire-safety policy sufficient?

A useful policy should reflect the responsible-person arrangements, premises, occupancy, assessment findings and the way fire safety is actually managed. A generic template cannot verify those facts.

What information is needed?

The current fire risk assessment, evacuation arrangements, maintenance and testing records, management responsibilities, training arrangements and relevant contractor or landlord information are useful starting evidence.

When should the policy be reviewed?

Review is appropriate after relevant change, an incident, a material assessment finding, a change of responsibility or evidence that the existing arrangements are not working as intended.

Clear next steps

Develop or review your fire-safety arrangements

Tell us about the premises, the service required and any deadline. J7 Fire Ltd will confirm the scope, fee, VAT and applicable payment or account terms before work proceeds.