Calm down dears. it is sad that following the terrible tragedy of 72 deaths in a fire, we have a further tragedy, namely the death of rational thinking and common sense. Fish face may be right that it will never be resurrected. Who knows. In the meantime:
1. The Minister told the house that the PBFG remains current. It is in Hansard. He has not as far as I am aware changed his mind in the current hysteria.
2. The EP guidance all came out of the latest hysteria regarding the failure of a proprietary door to achieve 30 minutes fire resistance in a fire test that does not simulate any real fire. It is not intended to imply you change all old doors.
3. The scope of the guidance states that it is to help people who WANT TO REPLACE THEIR FIRE DOORS. Those with common sense and a store of beta blockers to calm their nerves do not want to replace their fire doors so the note is irrelevant.
4. There is a certain irony that those who bought certain brands of new doors to replace doors that would achieve 15-20 minutes fire resistance ended up with some new doors that achieved 15 minutes FR. That is a trading standards issue but barely impacts on fire safety. Even the EP say the issue is LOW RISK.
5. The notional fr concept was not new. it existed (e.g. in relation to lath and plaster ceilings) donkeys years ago.
6. The adoption of the notional fr concept was agreed by the DCLG, CFOA the Office of the Chief Fire and Rescue Fire Adviser, the Housing sector, a number of individual fire brigades. Were they all wrong? That is because it is well known by anyone with practical experience, as opposed to theoreticians, most of who cannot even explain the relevance of 30 minutes as opposed to 20 minutes, that 5 minutes domestic doors often survive a burn out.
7. Failure of a fire door in an FR test does not mean that there is a big gaping hole where the door used to be. It can mean a little lick of flame on the safe side lasted for 11 seconds and then went out, never to return, or that a cotton pad taken up to the door and held there will begin to smoulder. If residents in a block of flats are wearing a cotton jumper, intend to get on a set of steps (having done their working at height training) lean as close as they can to the top of a door to a flat in which there is a post flashover fire IN THE HALLWAY, they should be afraid, very afraid. Other wise, their loss of sleep should arise from the question as to where the money is going to come from to replace 7312873893817831 doors, rather than find food for the starving.