Kitchener-Waterloo

Is your building safe? Fire safety considerations for high rise residents

Many people who live in apartment buildings were left wondering if their building is safe after seeing what was left of Grenfell Tower in London, England last week. It's important that residents in high rise buildings to speak with their property manager to find out what the safety procedures are in case of a fire.

Complaints are the main reason fire prevention teams check on buildings

Water spraying on a building
Water continues to be sprayed onto the tower block that was destroyed in a fire disaster, in north Kensington, West London, Britain June 15, 2017. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls - RTS1774I (Peter Nicholls/Reuters)

Many people living in apartment buildings were left wondering if their buildings are safe after seeing the fire that consumed Grenfell Tower in London, England last week.

"It wasn't something that anybody expected to see," Tom Ruggle, Chief Fire Prevention Officer for the City of Kitchener told CBC's Craig Norris, host of The Morning Edition, on Monday about his reaction to the fatal fire.

"From a professional side, we really expect buildings to perform better than that."

However, Ruggle said what happened in Grenfell Tower is not something that would likely happen in Ontario due to building design and the province having set fire codes that look at compartmentalization and confiding problems to an area of the building.

The codes also include retrofitting older buildings to make them safer.

Safety protocol

It's important that residents living in high rise buildings speak with their property manager to find out what the safety procedures are in case of a fire, said Ruggle.

"Every building of this kind has to have a fire safety plan," he said.

The plan takes into account how the building was built, looks at safety systems that are in place, the number of stairwells and whether or not there are sprinklers to give occupants standardized procedures to follow in case of a fire.

He adds it's critical that residents take time to read the fire safety plan in their building

"As soon as the problem occurs, the decisions that the occupants make are the ones that are going to be most critical and the most important," he said.

Residents should also keep an eye on their buildings to make sure building owners are keeping the building safe.

Ruggle said that complaints from residents are the main reason that fire prevention teams go into a building to check things out.

"We don't have enough resources to get out into every building in the frequency that I'd like but if we get a complaint from a resident that they are seeing issues with maintenance or they don't feel safe, that gets my guys out in the building to do a complete walk through," he said.