I recently undertook an FRA of a 3 storey sheltered housing complex of 30 rented flats for independant living, purpose built to Building Regs 2000 standards.
Given the level of compartmentation present I was quite satisfied that the Stay Put evacuation strategy in place there complied with current benchmark standards contained within the "Fire Safety in Purpose-Built Flats" guidance.
However, an inspection by the fire authority (Humberside) has resulted in a "minor deficiency" letter containing the following statement:
"Stay-put policies are not acceptable and have resulted in persons becoming trapped, injured or killed by smoke and fire. Suitable alternatives may include a Progressive Phased Evacuation or a Delayed Evacuation. It is not the responsibility of the Fire & Rescue Service to evacuate persons from the premises, in the event of an emergency."
My initial thoughts are that the inspecting officer concerned is not fully conversant with the concept of "independant living" and/or the purpose-built flats guidance, unless of course there have been changes to benchmark standards that I am unaware of.
Any thoughts anyone?