MAI-147 Response Accepted Self-assessed

Employer requirement to train in first aid

Recommendation

The Home Office should consider the introduction of a requirement into law, for example through regulations issued under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, that employers train all employees, or certain categories of employees, in first responder interventions.

Published Evidence Summary
The following publicly available evidence relates to this recommendation:
According to the gov.uk progress (2026-02-27) and UK Parliament (2025-04-03), the Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025, which received Royal Assent in April 2025, does not include a specific legal requirement for employers to train employees in first aid or provide associated equipment. However, according to the gov.uk progress (2025-11-14), the Home Office continues to provide advice and guidance products for relevant roles, and under Martyn's Law, workers will need to be sufficiently trained for procedural and counter-terrorism measures.
How was this assessed?
Assessed by gemini-2.5-flash on 19 Mar 2026
Checked data held on this site (government responses, progress updates, independent evidence)
External sources searched: www.gov.uk, mainquiry.dac.grid.civilservice.gov.uk, www.legislation.gov.uk, hansard.parliament.uk
Jurisdiction
UK-wide
Response
Accepted
Accepted UK Government
03 Nov 2022

The Home Secretary made a written statement to Parliament on 3 November 2022 following publication of Volume 2, acknowledging the findings on emergency response failures and stating the government would work with emergency services to implement improvements. The response committed to reviewing interoperability arrangements between emergency services and strengthening joint training and exercising protocols for major incidents.

Read Full Response
Progress Timeline
Official Report
27 Feb 2026

October 2025: The provisions of the Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act do not include a specific requirement relating to the provision of first aid or associated equipment. However, we continue to provide advice and guidance products for those in relevant roles. This is now complete and action closed.

Official Report
14 Nov 2025

Under Martyn’s Law, workers will need to be sufficiently trained or instructed in order to carry out their procedural measures in the Standard Tier and both procedural and CT measures in the Enhanced Tier.

Published Evidence

Published assessments of implementation progress from inspectorates, select committees, official progress reports, and other sources. Check the source type badge to see whether each assessment is independent or government self-reported.

Reasonable Progress
14 Nov 2025
Cabinet Office Other

Government published formal Manchester Arena Inquiry recommendations dashboard on GOV.UK (14 November 2025) tracking all 149 recommendations with implementation progress updates.

Manchester Arena Inquiry recommendations dashboar… View Source
Reasonable Progress
03 Apr 2025
UK Parliament legislation

Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025 received Royal Assent 3 April 2025. Creates two tiers: Standard Duty (200-799 capacity) and Enhanced Duty (800+). SIA will be regulator. Not yet in force -- at least 24 months before enforcement (expected April 2027).

Terrorism (Protection of Premises) Act 2025 View Source
Reasonable Progress
05 Jun 2023
National Police Chiefs Council Other

NPCC, Counter Terrorism Policing and College of Policing provided comprehensive updates to Sir John Saunders demonstrating "continued drive to improve collective response to terrorist incidents."

View detailed findings

Representatives working with UK Intelligence Community to address closed Volume Three recommendations. Cross-government monitoring ongoing.

NPCC Monitored Recommendation Hearings Update View Source
Source
Report Manchester Arena Inquiry: Volume 2: Emergency Response 03 Nov 2022
Responsible Bodies
Home Office Primary
Recommendation age 3.4 yrs
Last formal update 27 Feb 2026