FIRE SAFETY IN SPECIALISED HOUSING GUIDANCE. Seamus Doyle Health & Safety Manager Pembrokeshire Housing Group

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FIRE SAFETY IN SPECIALISED HOUSING GUIDANCE Seamus Doyle Health & Safety Manager Pembrokeshire Housing Group

Why a new guide? Changing social care landscape (3/4 million residents) Impact of Fire Safety Order Disproportionate risk for residents of specialized housing Limited guidance available Lack of understanding of specialized housing Inconsistent enforcement Inappropriate fire risk assessments Unsuitable fire risk assessment BS 9991

NFCC GUIDE: FIRE SAFETY INSPECIALIZED HOUSING A long document (over 300 pages) Divided into almost stand-alone sections So, an element of repetition Sections follow those in Purpose-built flats Guide Significant amount of material in Appendices Summary of fire protection measures in Appendix 1 Index

LAYOUT OF THE GUIDE Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction Part A: Fires in specialised housing and their impact Part B: Fire safety how specialised housing differs from other residences. Part C: The law governing fire safety in specialised housing

LAYOUT OF THE GUIDE Part D: The person-centred approach Part E: Fire risk assessment for specialised housing premises Part F: Preventing fires in the building Part G: Managing fire risk fire protection for the person Part H: Managing fire risk fire protection for the building

LAYOUT OF THE GUIDE Part I: Managing fire risk ongoing control 12 Appendices Glossary Bibliography Index

APPENDICES Appendix 1: Summary of fire protection measures for sheltered, extra care and supported housing Appendix 2: Steps in a building fire risk assessment Appendix 3: Selecting a competent professional fire risk assessor Appendix 4: Steps in a person-centred fire risk assessment

APPENDICES Appendix 5: Further guidance on mobility scooters Appendix 6: Guidance when commissioning Telecare services Appendix 7: Fire safety advice for residents Appendix 8: Examples of fire action notices Appendices 9-14: Case studies

SCOPE Existing sheltered, extra care and supported housing What matters is not the name of the housing, but its purpose and intended residents Includes the residents accommodation as well as common parts

SCOPE Includes leasehold and rented Applies to England and Wales (in principle, to NI) Existing premises, but some recommendations for new build Does not include care homes, children s homes, hostel, foyer accommodation Does not include guidance on commercial premises within specialized housing Life safety, not property protection or continuity of service Not operational fire-fighting (but operational crews need to understand: - Categorization of the premises - Stay put strategy (where applicable)

APPROACH General principles only Not prescriptive Provides benchmarks not rules Allows for alternative approaches In some cases, standards above Building Regulations 2010

RELATIONSHIP WITH OTHER GUIDANCE DCLG sleeping accommodation guide Purpose-built flats guide LACoRS Guide

RELATIONSHIP WITH OTHER GUIDANCE Building Regulations Approved Document B BS 9991

RELATIVE RISK 7 7 6 5 5 4 3 2 1 1.1 2 Percentage of people living in sheltered housing Percentage of domestic fire deaths in sheltered housing Percentage of housing stock comprising sheltered housing Percentage of domestic fires in sheltered housing stock

18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 4.8 FATALITES PER MILLION POPULATION 7.9 17.8 General Population 65 79 years olds 80 years and over

CONCLUSIONS FROM RISK DATA & EXPERIENCE Vulnerable residents are at high risk Stay put is safe in sheltered and extra care Those who die are, very often, directly involved in the fire Justification for high level of monitored smoke/heat detection Fire suppression for all new sheltered/extra care and high risk supported housing Detection/suppression may not save resident in room of origin

CONCLUSIONS FROM RISK DATA & EXPERIENCE Need for person-centred approach for high risk residents High reliance placed on fire prevention Possible need for personal protection watermist systems for extreme cases

OVERVIEW OF FIRE SAFETY MEARSURES Means of escape traditional principles, apart from possible extra corridor doors Compartmentation (not in supported housing) AFD (flats, common parts for evac, common parts for smoke control) Emergency lighting (in all except very small premises) Limited signage (unless premises complex) No communal fire extinguishers in sheltered and extra care Sprinklers/watermist in new sheltered/extra care and existing high risk supported housing Person-centred fire risk assessments for highly vulnerable residents Sufficient staff, where necessary, in supported housing

THE PERSON-CENTRED APPROACH High risk residents need person-centred FRA. Only certain residents in sheltered/extra care. Can be all residents in supported housing. Person-centred FRA considers: - Resident contribution to likelihood of fire/fire development - Capacity of resident to respond to/recognize a fire alarm or sign of fire - Ability of resident to escape

THE PERSON-CENTRED APPROACH May need additional measures such as: - Fire prevention measures - Enhanced fire protection (e.g. detection/suppression) - Referral to Adult Social Care Need should be identified by anyone who engages with residents Non-specialists can be trained An appendix provides a template

THE PERSON-CENTRED APPROACH The person-centred FRA is NOT the building FRA

FRA FOR SPECIALIZED HOUSING: SPECIAL CONSIDERATINS Generic nature of residents Staffing level in supported housing Roof voids (especially sheltered/extra care) Info on vulnerable residents for FRS (premises information box) Check Responsibilities Matrix - Is it in place? - Is it still accurate? - Is it being applied in practice

FIRE PREVENTION Normal domestic fire safety advice plus: - Hoarding (appendix shows clutter rating scale) - Medical gases - Mobility scooters

MOBILITY SCOOTERS CFOA producing separate guidance Increase in use creating problems with storage and charging Fires can release large volumes of smoke and generate significant heat outputs Common causes include: - Arson - Electrical wiring - Charging equipment

MOBILITY SCOOTERS Appendix 5 provides hierarchy of options for storage and charging: External parking External storage Purpose designed internal storage rooms Internal area enclosed in fire-resisting construction Existing fire-resisting room Designated areas of corridor Residents own accommodation Common corridors and stairways

FIRE SAFETY MANAGEMENT Defined fire safety policy, with normal requirements for procedures, training, testing and maintenance One organization takes the lead Responsibilities matrix to be completed (example format provided) Engagement with residents critical Premises information boxes for sheltered and extra care Annual inspections of roof voids if compartmentation required (unless confident that no need)

QUESTION

Thank you