Annual report on the health, sanitary condition, etc., etc., of the Royal Borough of Kensington for the year 1901.
- Kensington (London, England). Royal Borough.
- Date:
- [1902]
Licence: Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)
Credit: Annual report on the health, sanitary condition, etc., etc., of the Royal Borough of Kensington for the year 1901. Source: Wellcome Collection.
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No text description is available for this image![71 memorial to the Secretary of State; and practically the whole of the recommendations then made are embodied, more or less effectively, in the new Act, which came into force at the beginning of the present year. The provisions which more particularly concern the Council are the following:— Part 1.—Division (1), Sections 1-9.—Health.—Overcrowding of Factory or Work shop.—Section 3 (3) enables the Secretary of State, by a Special Order, to substitute a higher number of cubic feet of space (than 250 for each person), in any workshop or workplace occupied by day as a workshop, and by night as a sleeping apartment, and not being a domestic work shop. [It may be questioned whether such double occupation of a workshop-room should rightly have been countenanced.] Temperature.— Section 6 (Clause 30 of the Bill) enacts that in every factory and work shop a reasonable temperature shall be maintained, and the measures taken to secure this must not be of a character to interfere with the purity of the air in any room in which any person is employed. [This section, in effect, prohibits the use of unventilated gas burners for securing warmth, at the cost of vitiation of the air. Successful efforts to prevent the use of gas jets for warming workrooms in this borough, date back to 1893, when lady inspectors of workshops, etc., were first appointed. The section is administered by the factory inspector and not by the health authority.] Ventilation.—Section 7 (Clause 15 of the Bill) makes provision to secure means of ventila tion of a workshop, etc., and for the maintenance of sufficient ventilation; and a workshop in which there is a contravention of the provisions of the section will be deemed to be a nuisance liable to be dealt with summarily under the law relating to Public Health. Bakehouses*—Part Y.—Sections 97-102 (Clause 28 of the Bill) deal with this business. Section 101 (1) enacts that an underground bakehouse shall not be used as a bakehouse unless it was so used at the passing of this Act; and (2) that, subject to this provision, after January 1st, 1904, an underground bakehouse shall not be used unless certified by the District Council to be suitable for that purpose. Sub-section (3) defines the meaning of the expression under ground bakehouse, and (4) prescribes the conditions necessary to make an underground bake house suitable to be certified, as regards construction, light, ventilation, and in all other respects. Power of appeal, by complaint to a court of summary jurisdiction, against the refusal of a certificate by the Council, is given by (7), which enables the court to override the decision of the sanitary authority, by granting a certificate of suitability. Section 102 provides for the enforcement of the law as to retail bakehouses by the sanitary authority. Laundries.—-Clause 26 of the amending Bill not having been passed, the provisions of existing legislation as regards laundries, re-enacted in section 103 of the new Act, will continue in force until the Government shall have fulfilled their pledge to deal with the subject at an early date. One improvement in regard to laundries may possibly have been effected, indirectly, by section 8 (clause 15 (2) of the Bill), which enacts that in any room in a factory or workshop in which any process is carried on which renders the floor liable to be wet . . . adequate means shall be provided for draining off the wet. Should this provision apply to the case of laundries (the expression process causes doubt), it will strengthen the hands of the Council by enabling them to require, when necessary, the drainage of washhouse floors,, in workshop laundries, and so to deal with an evil at once common and detrimental to the health of the workers. Outworkers.—Part YI.—Section 107 (Clause 9 of the Bill) provides that copies of the lists of outworkers in certain trades, required to be kept by the occupiers of factories and workshops and others, shall be sent by the occupier to the Council of the district, half-yearly (instead of to the Factory Department, as formerly); and requires the Council to furnish the name and place of employment of every outworker in such list whose place of employment is outside its district, to the Council of the district in which his place of employment is. Places Injurious to Health.—Section 108 (Clause 11 of the Bill) enables the Council of the district to give the notice in writing mentioned in section 5 of the Factory and Workshop Act, 1895, relating to the employment of persons in places dangerous or injurious to health. The Act of 1895 authorised a factory inspector (the new Act forbids him) to give such notice; the giving of such notice is discretionary, and the provision can only be applied in the case of persons employed in such classes of work as the Secretary of State may specify by Special Order. * See Report on legislation with reference to Bakehouses, page 78.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b18045212_0071.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)