stevew5
What I quoted above was a newspaper report just after the fire, before all of the facts were known.
After your reply I investigated it a bit more and I came up with something which surprised me. Reports stated that the fire brigade was at the scene within 5 minutes. From this I had assumed that the call had been made by staff as soon as the alarm had actuated, or the system was linked to a third party who placed the call.
However the following report has indicated to me that the call was made by the Duty Nurse in Charge, ‘after’ she had found the fire. It would then seem that the brigade were in attendance within 5 minutes of 'receiving the call'. If this is the case, then in my opinion, the delay in calling the brigade is unacceptable.
The following report is from The Times
"Care home nurse tells of fire rescue battle
A NURSE described yesterday how care home staff battled through dense, choking smoke to try to reach elderly residents trapped in their upstairs bedrooms by fire.
Isabel Queen, 26, was in charge of Rosepark Care Home, in Uddingston, Lanarkshire, on Saturday when a blaze broke out in a linen cupboard on the first floor in the early hours of the morning, claiming 12 lives.
Ten of the victims, in their 80s and 90s, are believed to have died from smoke inhalation within minutes of the alarm being raised at 4.37am and before rescuers had a chance to reach them. The first fire engine was at the scene within five minutes but by then it was too late. Two more residents lost their fight for life in hospital yesterday.
Mrs Queen said that at first the fire alarm indicated a blaze on the ground floor and staff wasted precious minutes trying to locate it before discovering the mistake. “There was smoke everywhere. It was extremely difficult. We put pads over our faces and pushed open a fire door to let us into the corridor. We could not see, we could not breath,” she said.
“We took three steps in front of us. We were coughing so much we had to turn back.” She phoned the fire brigade while her male colleague ran round the building and tried without success to enter the corridor from the other side.
She said they realised then there was nothing they could do to save those trapped on the first floor until firefighters arrived with breathing apparatus. “We did all we could to get them out, but it was just not possible,” she said. The four staff on duty then began evacuating the other confused and frightened elderly residents."