If care needs can be met with two staff, is it reasonable to expect additional staff on duty just in case theres a fire?
Fire brigades had the chance to influence care home design many times in the past both in the formulation of the old draft guide and the current RRO guidance. What matters is not how many staff there are but how realistic are the expections that are placed on the staff that are available.
Why, in full knowledge of staffing levels that have been largely unchanged since the 1984 care legislation, are fire brigades now saying that two staff are insufficient and 12 bedrooms too many? Why wasn't this flagged up before now?
Care needs and fire safety needs are totally different things and can not be compared
The RRO guides do try and address this problem and I believe CFOA were very vocal in their veiws towards minimum staffing levels in care homes.
Due to the restrictions placed on us by the FPA 71 and the Workplace Regs we couldnt really make comment before the inception of the RRO
And though we want to we still cant really comment now. Its very hard to get staffing levels increased. If care staff can evacuate a compartment within 2.5 mins (comes from RRO guide) and have someone available to meet the fire brigade on arrival with just two members of staff, particularly if bed ridden service users are involved then they must be superhuman. Even if you recongised the guide was wrong and allowed an 8 minute compartment evacuation you still end up urinating into the wind.
You know as well as I do that politics come into play CFOA told the government of these concerns but they went unheard because they were reluctant to crate too much financial burden it would create on care homes.(and yet these establishments charge their residents £300 to stay there)
Care home owners make money and pay their staff peanuts.
Plus many carehomes used to be run by councils and brigades wont enforce on local authorities because the Cheif Officer and Cheif Exec are often members of the same masonic lodge or golf club and the political fallout would be to severe.
So whilst the legislation is sort of there to do something about this (its still very tenuous at that despite what Johno says) Briogades wont because politcally they wont get anywhere.