30 June 2026
How to Build a Culture of Compliance Post Grenfell: A Housing Association’s Guide to Life-Saving Health & Safety Standards
Health and safety compliance in social housing has never been more critical. The ongoing Grenfell Tower investigation serves as a sobering reminder of the catastrophic consequences when safety standards fail.
With the Metropolitan Police expected to present investigation files to the Crown Prosecution Service by the end of September, up to 20 corporate entities—including housing bodies and tenant management organisations—face potential criminal charges ranging from corporate manslaughter to fraud and health and safety breaches.
Alongside these organisations, 57 individuals may also face prosecution. For UK housing associations, this watershed moment underscores an inescapable truth: robust health and safety adherence is both a legal obligation and a moral imperative that cannot be compromised.
The Grenfell Tower Context: A Watershed Moment
The scale of potential accountability emerging from the Grenfell investigation represents an unprecedented moment for the social housing sector. The prospect of corporate manslaughter charges against housing bodies and tenant management organisations signals a fundamental shift in how regulatory authorities approach safety failures.
The investigation has exposed systemic weaknesses that extend far beyond a single building, revealing inadequate oversight, poor governance, and insufficient attention to resident safety across multiple organisational levels. The reputational impact on the sector has been profound, eroding public trust and intensifying scrutiny from regulators, politicians, and the communities housing associations serve. For every housing association in the UK, Grenfell has made one thing abundantly clear: compliance is non-negotiable, and the consequences of failure are severe.
CDM Regulations: The Foundation of Construction Safety
The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 establish the fundamental framework for construction safety, placing specific duties on housing associations when they act as clients in development projects. These responsibilities include appointing competent contractors and designers, ensuring adequate time and resources are allocated to projects, maintaining and providing comprehensive pre-construction information, and ensuring appropriate welfare facilities are available throughout construction phases.
Housing associations must also ensure that health and safety files are created and maintained throughout a building’s lifecycle, providing essential information for future maintenance and refurbishment work. Non-compliance with CDM regulations can result in prosecution, substantial fines, and enforcement action from the Health and Safety Executive.
More fundamentally, these regulations protect both construction workers during the building phase and future residents who will occupy these homes.
Proper CDM compliance ensures that safety considerations are embedded from initial design through to completion and beyond.
Code of Governance and Organisational Accountability
The National Housing Federation’s Code of Governance explicitly links effective governance with health and safety outcomes. The Regulator of Social Housing’s governance standard requires boards to maintain a clear framework for accountability and propriety, which necessarily encompasses health and safety oversight. Board members bear ultimate responsibility for ensuring their organisations have robust health and safety management systems, adequate resources, and appropriate expertise.
This responsibility cannot be delegated away; it must be integrated into risk management frameworks and regularly reviewed at the highest organisational level. Transparency and accountability to stakeholders—particularly residents—are essential components of good governance.
The Grenfell tragedy demonstrated how governance failures at board level can cascade into safety failures with devastating consequences, making it imperative that housing association boards actively engage with health and safety matters rather than treating them as operational details.
Site Inspections for New Build Properties
Regular, comprehensive site inspections during development represent a critical control mechanism for housing associations. Effective inspection regimes must verify compliance with building regulations, conduct quality assurance checks, monitor health and safety practices, and identify defects requiring remedial action before they become embedded problems.
The frequency of inspections should be proportionate to project complexity and risk, with comprehensive documentation maintained throughout.
Many housing associations employ clerks of works or independent inspectors to provide professional oversight separate from contractor self-certification. The cost of robust inspection regimes is invariably lower than the cost of post-completion remediation, quite apart from the potential safety implications of undetected defects.
Proper handover procedures, thorough snagging processes, and post-completion inspections during defects liability periods provide additional layers of assurance that properties meet required standards before residents move in.
Health and Safety Training: Building Competence
Competence at all organisational levels is fundamental to effective health and safety management. Board members and senior leadership require training to understand their legal duties and governance responsibilities. Development and asset management teams need detailed knowledge of CDM regulations, building safety legislation, and risk assessment methodologies.
Fire safety training has become particularly critical following Grenfell. Housing associations must also ensure their contractors and supply chain partners demonstrate appropriate competence through verified training records and competency matrices.
Creating a culture where safety awareness is embedded requires ongoing investment in training, regular refresher courses, and updates on regulatory changes. This investment in human capital is as important as investment in physical assets.
Practical Steps for Compliance
Housing associations should conduct comprehensive health and safety audits to identify gaps in current practices. Policies and procedures require regular review and updating to reflect evolving regulations and lessons learned from incidents. Contractor vetting and monitoring processes must be strengthened, with clear expectations and consequences for non-compliance.
Robust reporting and escalation mechanisms ensure that concerns reach appropriate decision-makers promptly. Meaningful engagement with residents on safety matters builds trust and provides valuable intelligence.
Learning from incidents and near-misses prevents recurrence. Adequate resources must be allocated for compliance activities, and external expertise should be sought where internal capacity is insufficient.
BSG Comment
The Grenfell investigation serves as a stark reminder that health and safety compliance is non-negotiable. Housing associations must review and strengthen their practices across all areas—from board-level governance to site-level inspections.
The potential criminal charges facing housing bodies underscore the serious consequences of failure. Ultimately, protecting residents must remain the paramount priority.
By learning from this tragedy and implementing robust health and safety systems, the social housing sector can build a safer future and restore the trust that has been so profoundly damaged.