Are you prepared for a fire emergency?
It takes only a few seconds for a fire to ignite and quickly spread. Is your workplace prepared to handle a fire emergency? When a fire occurs, workers need to react immediately. The completeness of your workplace fire protection procedures and training will determine how smoothly the next steps occur.
Modernizing the Fire Brigade standard
OSHA has been working on updating its own 1910.156 Fire Brigades standard. The Agency published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in February 2024 to modernize its Fire Brigades standard, which was introduced in 1980.
The current protections for a specific group of industrial and private firefighters are deemed outdated, prompting the need for an update. Here are a couple of other highlights:
- The proposed Emergency Response standard aims to align safety and health protections with nationally recognized standards.
- It will cover a wider range of workers exposed to hazards during and after emergencies.
OSHA has asked for comments by June 2024.
Evaluate internal and external resources
Many external resources could be needed in a fire emergency. In some cases, formal agreements may help define an employer’s relationship with the fire department, hospitals, police, or other organizations. Resources and capabilities that could be needed in a fire emergency include:
- Personnel — Fire brigade, hazmat response team, emergency medical services, security, evacuation team, and public information officer.
- Equipment — Fire protection and suppression equipment, communications equipment, first aid supplies, warning systems, emergency power equipment, and decontamination equipment.
- Facilities — Emergency operating center, media briefing area, shelter areas, first-aid stations, and sanitation facilities.
- Organizational capabilities — Training, evacuation plan, and employee support system.
- Backup systems — Arrangements with other facilities to provide for payroll, communications, production, customer services, shipping and receiving, emergency power, and/or recovery support.
Assess your workplace’s fire protection resources and ability to respond. Identify employee skills (such as medical, engineering, communications, and foreign language skills) that might be needed in an emergency. Consider each potential emergency and each resource needed to respond. For each emergency, ask yourself:
- Do we have the needed resources and capabilities to respond?
- Will external resources be able to respond as quickly as we need them, or will they have other priority areas to serve?
When assessing resources, remember that community emergency workers — police, paramedics, and firefighters — will focus their response on the greatest need. If they are focused elsewhere, response to your facility may be delayed. Steps to correct deficiencies might include:
- Developing additional emergency procedures,
- Conducting additional training,
- Acquiring additional equipment,
- Establishing mutual aid agreements, and/or
- Establishing agreements with specialized contractors.
Keeping the right focus will reduce problems and ensure workers' risk of exposure to injuries from a fire event is minimized.
Fire protection checklist
Use this checklist below as a quick audit of your fire protection procedures:
Outside factors
- Is your local fire department familiar with your facility, location, and specific hazards?
- If you have outside private fire hydrants, are they flushed at least once a year and on a routine preventive maintenance schedule?
System maintenance
- Are fire alarm systems tested at least annually?
- Are interior standpipes and valves inspected regularly?
- Are automatic sprinkler system water control valves, air, and water pressure checked weekly/periodically as required? Are fire doors and shutters in good operating condition?
- Are fire extinguishers recharged regularly and noted in the inspection tag?
Equipment design/location
- If you have a fire alarm system, is it certified as required?
- Are sprinkler heads protected by metal guards when exposed to physical damage
- Is proper clearance of 18 inches maintained below sprinkler heads?
- Are portable fire extinguishers provided in adequate number and type?
- Are fire extinguishers mounted in readily accessible locations?
Personnel
- Are employees periodically instructed in using fire extinguishers and fire protection procedures?
- Are employees trained/re-trained on fire safety procedures and their responsibilities (e.g., brigade members)?
- Do employees know what to do if they spot a fire or if there are signs of a fire?
- Do you perform fire evacuation drills?
- Is the maintenance of automatic sprinkler systems assigned to responsible persons or a sprinkler contractor?
Fire protection is everyone's responsibility. If everyone knows what to do when the fire alarm sounds, lives — and your company — can be saved.
Key to Remember
Ensure your workplace is prepared to handle a fire emergency. Assess your internal and external resources and address any gaps immediately.