Statlog News & Insights

The HSE Isn't Your Only Regulator Anymore

Written by Richard Melis | 10-Mar-2026 16:18:20

At the end of January 2026, a fundamental regulatory shift took place: the Building Safety Regulator (BSR) separated from the HSE to become an independent body. This changes everything for school estates.

While structural government changes can easily slip under the radar, for anyone running a school or a multi-academy trust, this separation marks the start of a completely new way of working.

The dual-regulator reality

For years, we have looked to the HSE for almost everything safety-related across our school estates.

But following the Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 2 report, it became clear that building safety requires dedicated, specialist oversight.

Schools and trusts are now navigating a "dual-regulator" environment.

  • The HSE continues to focus on how your staff and pupils interact with the school—everyday workplace safety.

  • The BSR is now the strict authority for the physical integrity and statutory compliance of the buildings themselves.

This means dealing with two different regulators with distinct expectations.

Any new capital projects, refurbishments, or major planned maintenance across a trust or school will now fall under a much stricter building control regime overseen by the BSR.

If your estate teams are still managing statutory compliance, building condition, and day-to-day helpdesk workflows in fragmented silos or disconnected spreadsheets, proving your school buildings are safe is going to become an administrative headache very quickly.

(Want to see how replacing those fragmented tools with a single, joined-up system gives you complete visibility? Just ask!)

The "golden thread" in education

The updated government strategies make it clear: estate-wide visibility of structured data is now the standard.

The BSR expects to see a digital, joined-up record of your estate—often referred to as the "golden thread" of information.

Regulators now expect to see this structured data for all of your school buildings. They are not interested in seeing a pile of paper in a cupboard; they want proof that you are maintaining a safe environment proactively.

This replaces the need for frantic weeks spent digging through emails to prove a school or trust is meeting standards.

Moving from reactive to planned

It is easy to see more regulation as just another hurdle, but there is a massive practical benefit for your estate and leadership teams here.

Moving away from reactive fire-fighting allows school and trust leaders to make planned, informed decisions.

By replacing messy spreadsheets or basic systems with a single, joined-up system, you gain complete clarity and accountability.

When the BSR asks for evidence of building integrity, having a clear system of record means you have the answers ready instantly. You move from hoping your schools are compliant to knowing they are.

The next steps for your school or trust

The independence of the BSR is a clear signal that building safety is now its own professional discipline.

The responsibility for building safety sits firmly with school and trust leaders. It is no longer just a site-level issue; the BSR expects a top-down culture of compliance and clear accountability across the entire organisation.

This makes a real difference to how you manage your estate. It is the perfect time to look closer at how information flows across your schools and trusts.

Adopting a structured approach does not just satisfy a new regulator—it supports your site teams with practical day-to-day tools and creates a safer, more predictable environment for your pupils and staff.

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