It’s 8:04 AM. You're in the plant room, standing next to a hot water cylinder with a digital thermometer that’s seen better days. You hold it under the flow and wait. It creeps up… 39.1°C, 42.7°C… and stalls. Is that enough? Should it be more? Was this the right tap? And wait—did it even calibrate properly last time?
Legionella doesn’t care that you’re using your “best guess.” And neither will an auditor.
Temperature checks are one of the most common compliance tasks in school estate management—but they’re also one of the easiest to do badly without realising it.
And the risk? Legionella bacteria thrives in water systems left between 20°C and 45°C. It's not a theoretical hazard. According to the UK Health Security Agency, cases of Legionnaires' disease in England rose 25% in 2023, with aging water systems and gaps in routine checks among the contributing factors.
In schools, where water systems often include under-used outlets, legacy pipework, and blending valves, the risks need active management—not assumptions.
Let’s be honest. Some site teams have been using the same thermometer for years—knocked about in the toolbox, battery hanging on by a thread. It’s “good enough”, right?
Not quite. Here’s what the Health and Safety Executive’s Approved Code of Practice L8 and HSG274 Part 2 say you should be doing:
Hot water outlets: Must reach at least 50°C within one minute of running
Stored hot water: Must be maintained above 60°C
Cold water outlets: Should be below 20°C after two minutes of running
Blended outlets (e.g., TMVs): Should deliver between 38°C and 46°C—safe for users, but outside the danger zone for Legionella growth
So yes, the numbers matter. But only if your readings are accurate.
You don’t run the water long enough: It reads low, but the system’s actually working fine. You’ve logged a fault that isn’t one—or worse, missed the real issue.
You use the wrong thermometer: they are not all equal!
You measure blended water like hot water: Wrong range, wrong standard.
You test the same outlets every time: Neglecting half the building, especially those deadleg-prone, little-used taps.
And maybe most commonly: “It’s always around that, so I just log that each time.”
Let’s not pretend that never happens on a busy week.
Here’s the weekly testing routine expected in schools and MATs with proper Legionella management:
Flush all outlets (hot, cold, showers, blending valves) every week during term time—and before the start of each new term.
Test at least two outlets per category (hot, cold, blended) each week per building, rotating through the site so that all outlets are covered over time.
Use a stem-type digital thermometer with an immersible probe, calibrated at least annually.
Run the water:
Cold water for 2 minutes — must be <20°C
Hot water for 1 minute — must be ≥50°C
Blended outlets — must be >38°C and <46°C
Log your results using digital tools, so you can easily trace outlet IDs, trends, and faults over time.
Flag any failures and arrange remedial work immediately, logging the action taken.
And every three months, showerheads and blending valves should be removed, disinfected, de-scaled, and recorded.
No need for lab-grade kit, but you do need a thermometer designed for water systems:
Digital, with a stainless steel probe
Range of around -50°C to 150°C
Reads to 0.1°C
Costing £50–£100
Calibrated (either manufacturer-certified or checked against a known temp source annually)
If it lives in a drawer with loose batteries, it’s probably not helping.
When it’s done properly, there’s no panic when the local authority, insurers, or Ofsted ask about your Legionella management. You’ll already have the evidence, the logs, and the tools in place—plus the confidence that your system caught any issues before they escalated.
Audits aren’t something you can bluff. But with the right structure—like a dedicated statutory compliance platform—and basic tools in hand, you’re already ahead. And if you’re not quite there yet, this is your sign to take action today.
In the battle against Legionella, almost isn’t good enough.
It has to be accurate.
It has to be consistent.
And yes, it really is your thermometer’s moment to shine.
So please forward this article—because if it’s been a while since you checked your kit, or your recordings are as bad as Dave’s memory, today’s a great day to raise the bar.
That flow temp reading? It’s not just a number. It’s a health and safety decision.
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