Quote The Chair Maker="The Chair Maker"reading this weeks League Express and i could not help notice the section about the fire alert at Halifax which delayed the match.
What shocked me most was the comment that the disabled were just left in the disabled section while the rest of the stand was evacuated.
Now this is a disgraceful failure in safety procedures at the ground and hopefully will be investigated fully by the fire authorities.
I would also expect the RFL to ask for a report from Halifax on what went wrong and what they are going to do to ensure that this cannot happen again.
Thankfully it was not a real fire, and apprently caused by someone smoking int he toilets. If it was a genuine alert, and disabled people were left to burn to death, it would be a shocking situation for Halifax and the RFL to find themselves in. The club would face massive law suits.'"
As someone with some limited professional experience in this area, it is common practice for disabled people to be moved to a refuge area within a building in the event of a 'fire' evacuation. In most multi-level buildings, this is usually the fire protected central core / stairwell.
This is also one of the reasons why an effective fire warden system should be in place in building and upon evacuation, these wardens report to the senior person (incident co-ordinator) and highlight the presence of disabled persons and their locations within a building.
The main priority of the fire service is the protection of life, thus as soon as they arrive, the fire service go rescue the disabled persons in the central core area, which should be designed to be fire proofed for an extended period (certainly longer than the travel time for them to get to a building) and to give ample time for the fire brigade to enter the building and rescue those people still inside.
Any commercial premises should have a suitable and sufficent fire, rescue and evacuation plan in place to comply with current fire law and this will be the first thing that the local fire & resuce authority would look at in the event that they would be carrying out an audit / investigation on the back of any incident.
Likewise, the local authority, who have resonsibility for the safety in sports venues should also be ensuring their plans are sufficent and that their licensing proceedures are robust enough to ensure that grounds under their control are truly safe.