Hi William, a couple of other questions. Are the 'nominal FR' doors all self closing, is there a shared kitchen and lounge facility and what is the protection for these? You mention a 'protected corridor' - do all habitable rooms lead off this room and are the bedrooms nearer the exit than any kitchen? Lastly when was the premises built and was it a single family dwelling before you took it over. I am assuming all tenants have the nous to escape on their own and don't need assistance, smoking is not permitted and they have no other issues such as drink/drugs problems?
The doors are not self closing and don’t need to be in my view (you would just trap the service users in their own home) the care provider has a door closing procedure at night similar that that in a domestic house at night time!
The layout is of a normal domestic type bungalow with a kitchen and lounge (shared) and bedrooms off the one corridor. There are 3 ways to exit the premises, via the front door, lounge patio doors or bedroom windows.
No smoking by staff or service users. All cooking is supervised by the carers. FSO states that the service users require assistance to evacuate (I question this) and the FD30s doors are required to give the carer more time. We see no additional benefit to providing the FD30s doors over the current ones?? Early warning is provided by comprehensive AFD coverage/type over and above any guidance document e.g. LACoRS etc.
Staement from the FRA below:
The care that takes place in these private homes often referred to as Care in the Community or ‘Community Care’ came about following the introduction of a government policy of deinstitutionalization. This led to the introduction of treatment and caring for physically and mentally disabled people in their homes rather than in an institution.
The provisions for care within the community needs to provide accommodation for carers within a domestic dwelling environment without implementing measures which would in effect institutionalise an individual’s home but still maintain a safe working environment. It is for this reason that there is no specific guidance for this type of property. It is therefore reasonable to adopt a risk assessment approach incorporating measures which would normally be expected to be found within a single private dwelling if it were built to today’s standards whilst having regard for the mobility of those people who may be subject to the requirements of the Regulatory Reform (Fire) Safety Order.