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Survey for those involved in university, school and hospital fire safety!

Take the CS 4-Minute Fire Survey … Campus Safety magazine is conducting its second annual fire survey.  The poll will take about four minutes to complete. All answers, E-mail addresses, participant names and campus identities will remain confidential and will only be used in tabulation with other responses. The results of this poll will appear in the January/February 2009 issue of Campus Safety magazine.  The survey will be open to campus protection professionals until Dec. 10.

To participate, click here.

To forward this survey to a colleague, please send them this link: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=NE1oF6a3ze61GXpOUaMS_2bA_3d_3d.

CCFS supports the USFA Install Inspect Protect Campaign

The Center for Campus Fire Safety supports the USFA’s INSTALL. INSPECT. PROTECT. CAMPAIGN Encouraging residents to install smoke alarms and sprinklers.

Newburyport, MA  … More than 3,000 people die in home fires each year in the United States; most of whom are in homes without a working smoke alarm. To prevent these deaths, the U.S. Fire Administration (USFA), a division of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is sponsoring a nationwide Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign designed to raise awareness about how working, properly installed smoke alarms can lower a person’s chances of dying in a fire. CCFS is supporting this critical effort to reduce injuries and the loss of life.

The USFA’s Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign is aimed at encouraging Americans to practice fire safety by installing and maintaining smoke alarms and residential fire sprinklers, which can help save the lives of residents and fire fighters, practicing fire escape plans, and performing a home safety walk-through to remove fire hazards from the home.  The campaign is promoting fire safety through a free Campaign Toolkit disc; educational materials; print, radio and television PSAs; children’s materials, community organization-sponsored events and a consumer-friendly campaign Web site.

According to Paul D. Martin, President “ CCFS is proud to be a partner with the USFA in this very relevant campaign.  Far too many people have died in fires as a result of not having working smoke alarms or sprinklers. One person killed in a home fire is just too many. Together, we can educate our communities and help save lives.”

“If a fire breaks out in your home while you’re asleep, how will you know?  Having a working smoke alarm is like having a fire safety official on duty in your home, 24 hours a day.” said Deputy U.S. Fire Administrator Glenn A.Gaines.

“Working smoke alarms will alert you to the fire and we know conclusively, a residential sprinkler system can help put the fire out.” Gaines adds, “Smoke alarms and sprinklers are able to provide residents the time it takes to get everyone out of the house, before firefighters have to come in.”

When both smoke alarms and fire sprinklers are present in a home, the risk of dying in a fire is reduced by 82 percent, when compared to a residence without either.  According to the National Fire Protection Association, between 2003-2006, almost two-thirds of home fire deaths resulted from fires in homes with no smoke alarms or no working smoke alarms.
The USFA offers a few helpful tips on smoke alarms and sprinklers:
> Place properly installed and maintained smoke alarms both inside and outside of sleeping areas and on every level of your home.
> Interconnected smoke alarms are best, because if one sounds, they all sound.
> Get smoke alarms that can sound fast.  The U.S. Fire Administration recommends that every residence and place where people sleep be equipped with both ionization and photoelectric smoke alarms or dual sensor smoke alarms, which contain both ionization and photoelectric smoke sensors.
> Inspect and test smoke alarms monthly and change alkaline batteries at least once every year, or as instructed. You can use a date you already know, like your birthday or when you change your clocks as a reminder.
> If possible, install residential fire sprinklers in your home.
> Avoid painting or covering the fire sprinkler, because that will affect the sensitivity to heat.

CCFS is supporting the USFA’s Install. Inspect. Protect Campaign in the November December issue of Campus Firezone, a free newsletter distributed to well over 15K readers.  We will also include the educational video at training sessions throught the year.

Organizations in partnership with the U.S. Fire Administration’s Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign include the American Fire Sprinkler Association, Burn Institute, Everyone Goes Home, Fire and Emergency Manufacturers and Services Association, Fire Department Safety Officers Association, Home Fire Sprinkler Coalition, Home Safety Council, International Association of Black Professional Firefighters, International Association of Fire Chiefs, International Association of Women in Fire & Emergency Services, NASFM Fire Research and Education Foundation, National Association of Hispanic Firefighters, National Association of State Fire Marshals, National Fallen Firefighters Foundation, National Fire Protection Association, National Fire Sprinkler Association, National Volunteer Fire Council, and SAFE KIDS Worldwide.

For more information on the Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign and other fire prevention information, please visit www.usfa.dhs.gov/smokealarms.

Install. Inspect. Protect.
Smoke Alarms Save Lives

Solutions for your Industrial Occupancies from a Fire-Professionals.com Member

According to its website, Chemetron is meeting today’s needs and tomorrow’s changing requirements for integrated fire suppression systems. We combine fire suppression systems and technical expertise, which affords the extra measure of safety and reliability for any facility – anywhere!  Browse the links below to learn about application solutions that help protect your people, property, and the environment. Click here to read more about their industrial applications.

Fire-Professionals.com Member Offers Compliance Assistance

According to BuildingReports.com, “as a building owner or property manager, it’s ultimately your responsibility to ensure that the fire and life safety systems installed at your location are working and in compliance with regulatory standards. When you contract with a service company for inspection, testing, and maintenance of your systems, how can you be sure they are performing the job properly and that your systems meet local codes and standards?”

BuildingReports understands your concerns and have created a range of products and services that help ensure your inspections are done right. Click here to watch their latest informational video.

Fire-Professionals.com Member Explores Tunnel Protection

Marioff cautions that the threat of fire should never be underestimated. “This is doubly true of the threat of fire in tunnels. Our HI-FOG® Water Mist Fire Protection System takes tunnel safety to a much higher level. Fire is always a serious threat to tunnel users, the infrastructure and transportation continuity. Even though tunnel safety has improved in many ways, there is still plenty of room for further development.”
A fixed fire protection system is of paramount importance when enhancing tunnel fire safety. A high-pressure water mist fire protection system is an excellent solution to prevent direct and consequential damage to people, tunnels and traffic. For more information, click here.

Special Designation for Fire-Professionals.com Member

SimplexGrinnell has earned special certification for our security, fire and life-safety integration services under the SAFETY Act (Support Anti-Terrorism by Fostering Effective Technologies). This certification and designation from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security extends important benefits to SimplexGrinnell customers, including legal liability protection in the event of a terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland. For more information, click here.

Fire-Professionals.com Member Offers Free Spec Software

Kidde Fire Systems is offering a free CD outlining its product specifications. To download the material, which includes information on all its systems, click here. is a global leader in fire protection, including fire detection, fire suppression and fire control products. Our products set the benchmark for fire safety detection, prevention and protection.  We are devoted to protecting people, property and processes from everyday hazards and danger.  People trust us to do that because we are experts in our field. 

Fire-Professionals.com Member holds half-day seminar in conjunction with SUPDET 2010

Fire Protection Research Foundation’s SUPDET 2010, is coming to Orlando Feb 16-19.   This will be the 14th annual Suppression, Detection and Signaling Research and Applications Symposium.

Some program features include:  An engineering workshop on innovative fire protection design concepts for high challenge warehouses (and featured suppression and detection sessions on this topic),  A special session on U.S. Navy developments in clean agent extinguishant research, New smoke alarm studies from U.S. and international research organizations, and more. 

Also being offered in conjunction with SUPDET is a half day NFPA seminar Applying NFPA 13 Requirements for Protection of Storage. The seminar will illustrate the concepts and requirements for automatic sprinkler systems in the 2010 edition of NFPA 13 and how they apply to storage occupancies.

 

Visit the  SUPDET 2010 website  for more info!

New View from Fire-Professionals.com Member

NOTIFIER by Honeywell has enhanced its ONYX FirstVision interactive touch screen display to provide first responders more conclusive, real-time information on emergency events. A new “campus view” feature can display critical information from multiple fire alarm systems throughout a facility, campus and across the globe. When integrated with Honeywell’s Rapid Eye™ DVR (Digital Video Recording) system, ONYX FirstVision provides live video of various building areas.

ONYX FirstVision is an emergency scene assessment tool used by first responders to determine the origi n and migration of a fire, location of emergency alerts, potential hazards or areas of refuge within the affected areas. Interactive floor-by-floor building layouts depicting activated fire alarm system components, water supplies, fire barriers, emergency shut-off valves and other site-specific details enable emergency officials to make fast, effective response plans. Ideal for large universities, industrial facilities and healthcare complexes, ONYX FirstVision is typically placed in a security office, local dispatch center or other centralized location for easy access.

Evolving beyond its original single-building monitoring capabilities, ONYX FirstVision can now survey multiple buildings and fire alarm networks. This technology ties into NOTIFIER fire alarm systems over new or existing TCP/IP networks to provide a campus view of all system events.

The ability to view areas in and around a scene can be critical to making intelligent decisions in the midst of an emergency. To make this possible, today’s version of ONYX FirstVision works alongside Honeywell’s Rapid Eye DVR system to display real-time video feeds from any number of CCTV cameras. By simply tapping a camera icon on ONYX FirstVision’s interactive display, users can view areas covered by those cameras to assess fire conditions, occupants, entry ways, exits and more.

The ONYX FirstVision system was developed by NOTIFIER utilizing one-on-one feedback from firefighters, security personnel, EMTs (Emergency Medical Technician), facility owners and managers, and NOTIFIER Distributors. At the request of these users, this latest version features new icons to indicate fire alarm pull stations, waterflow valves, hazardous material storage and areas of refuge. All interactive display areas are also designed to accommodate the heavy gloves typically worn by firefighters.

             
 

Fire-Professionals.com Member Offers Standards Advice

According to Ansul Fire Protection’s web site, NFPA standards are vital to the fire suppression market. To assist its customers, Ansul has established a training guide. “Understanding those standards and their impact is crucial to providing the best fire protection available. Recent changes to NFPA 10 have far-reaching implications. Ansul is pleased to introduce our newest tool for educating distributors and customers. ”
“Ready for Change” is a guide to understanding the 2007 edition of NFPA 10. For more information, visit Ansul Fire Protection.