1. Doctor Retty, We are straying off topic, but while I acknowldge the difference between imposed risk and voluntarily accpeted risk- I was taught that as a student 33 years ago actually and have been practising the principles continuously ever since without delving off to other career activities. My point is that some correspondents with a clear lack of experience or understanding of the underlying principles are on the basis of nothing objective but merely their subjective opinion are suggesting that HMG guidance, substantial research and the views of specialsit stakeholders who drafted the guidance are all wrong and that there is some risk that all these bodies (and indeed you and I Dr R) are missing and is so serious that all this guidance is to be set aside. I was just curious if the risk is so awful, why they arent bothered that their loved ones are exposed to it.
2. Baldy, a)your assumption about my assumption is correct and is shown to be correct by years and years of experience. b)Yes we treat disabled people differently and rightly so. So what. c) yes I know the difference between someone setting fire to their clothes and someone exposed to a fire while they are asleep. I was merely being magnanimous to messey and accepting that it is not quite true to say that no one dies in the room of origin, and then I went on to show that to the extent it was not true the single case between 2001 and 2006 inclusive was irrelevant, which I am glad you too perceive. d) if someone did die in bedroom of origin in blackpool or anywhere esle for that matter it was not in the 5 year period 2001-2006, for whch the data is as I have already indicated.e) No we dont need to give the earliest possible warning if it is not reasonably practicable to do so (ie if the risk does not justify the cost time and trouble). If you want the earliest possible warning, you had better install a high sensitivity aspirating system in every sngle room because that will operate even earlier than a point detector. No, Messey, thats not reasonably practicable either.
3) Brian, arm waving has been rife since the legislation changed.
4) Messey, why dont you pick up the phone and ask the head of fire safety policy. You do have phones in your new super duper HQ dont you? Also, could you advise us as to whether all fire resisting doorsets in the building have intumescent strips and smoke seals?