Redone,
the term fire officer in the UK fire service covers a plethora of 'abilities, training , experience and qualifications' from 'whole time, retained, operational, civilian, trainers, fire safety etc.etc. I agree with your points and I hope you and the home owner have written to the CFO of the brigade to pout their shortfall, because we don't let the FRS know they are faulty, they will not mend it.
Kurnal,
A good standard of fire precautions in residential care 'may' be provided by good standards of enclosure, detection, management, staff training, testing amd maintenance procedures, short travel distances, high staff to resident ratio ( straight away) even possibly suppression etc etc. .
It may be that if we believe you, that the homes you are invoved with, and are the second coming to the local fire authorities. May actually have those things in them as well ( but was not mentioned ), and you have done a good job, but the point in question that I think of as 'a bit silly' is that as a main part of an evcuation strategy, there is a telephone tree and 15-30 minutes 'possibly ' - ' damned good show' staff input !
If you go and loiter around any fire service headquarters ( whatever floats your boat ) you will see that any finances are going into community fire safety eg. 500 vans and 500 civilian advisors ! Many brigades are down grading the number of ariel appliance, whole time stations to retained or day manned and cross jumping appliances. Their role is now 'containment' not 'fire fighting' ( this admission upsets a lot of long serving firefifghters, but ask the senior management who have targets to hit ), their rescue role is (as mentioned by both of us) now mainly RTA , or urban search and rescue etc., The role of safety in buildings is down to business, not the fire service, go and ask CFOA or the CLG, don't believe me.
Also, I believe many CFO's of FRS's are stating there is a reduction in funding from this year, read the journals.
Finally, which home are you in ?