Excerpts from BusinessInsurance.com:
A potential new standard for emergency responders from the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration could force many small emergency services organizations to shut down and, in a controversial move, ban installation of fire poles at new fire stations if adopted, according to stakeholders.
OSHA has asked the National Advisory Committee for Occupational Safety and Health for recommendations for a proposed emergency responder preparedness program standard, and the committee’s Emergency Response and Preparedness Subcommittee has been tasked with drafting the standard.
The draft proposal outlines several requirements designed to identify and address workplace health and safety hazards for these organizations and their employees.
For example, it would require baseline and annual medical evaluations for firefighters and other
first responderspersonnel, including a medical history, a physical exam and laboratory tests required to detect physical or medical conditions that could adversely affect their ability to safely perform essential job functions. In 2014, a total of 64 firefighters died while on duty in the United States, with sudden cardiac death accounting for 56% of those deaths, according to the National Fire Protection Association.However, the current proposal does not address the key question of who must pay for these medical evaluations, and the cost of compliance would significantly strain the resources of state and organizations.
Phil Stittleburg, chief of the LaFarge Fire Department in Wisconsin, a volunteer department that services a rural community with an annual budget of about $65,000, said a requirement to conduct annual physicals would force him into making difficult decisions about paying for these physicals versus replacing critical safety equipment such as helmets at the recommended time intervals.
The draft standard would also require new
emergency service organization facilitiesfire stations to utilize stairs or slides to provide rapid access to a lower level, barring the building of new poles at these facilities two years after a final rule is published — a controversial provision aimed at addressing a source of serious injuries and even fatalities for firefighters. In April 2012, for example, an Alameda County, California firefighter fractured his leg when he landed at the base of the fire pole, allegedly with his legs in the wrong position, according to OSHA.“OSHA recognizes that there are a lot of injuries from people sliding down poles and hitting the bottom too hard, and one way of reducing those injuries is to eliminate the installation of new poles and instead provide stairs or slides,” said Bill Hamilton, a fire protection engineer in the OSHA Directorate of Standards and Guidance’s Office of Safety Systems in Washington.
However, the poles are a cherished part of firehouse tradition, which could trigger a backlash against the entire proposal, according to some stakeholders.
“This is very clear regulatory language prohibiting something that is ingrained in the tradition of the fire service,” said Kenneth Willette, division manager with the National Fire Protection Association’s Public Fire Protection Division in Quincy, Massachusetts. “While there’s some regulatory benefit to including it, it could be a potential lightning rod that might create an obstacle for the intent of this work.”
The subcommittee opted to seek out specific information about the number of injuries and fatalities sustained by
emergency respondersfirefighters using poles compared with stairs and slides before making a final recommendation.
#1 by Crabby Milton on March 22, 2016 - 11:37 AM
In the Milwaukee County suburb of Wauwatosa, the new station 1 opened in 2010 and it has 2 floors but if memory serves since I was there for the grand opening and toured it after that, the second floor is mostly storage, administration, oddball and overflow offices, training/recreation areas. I didn’t have a digital camera back then so no pics of the event
The PD uses part of it for a substation and it’s quite a big building. But the bunks and main areas are all on one floor.
http://www.wauwatosa.net/index.aspx?NID=785
http://www.stonecastproducts.com/projects/wauwatosa-fire-station/
#2 by Keith Grzadziel on March 22, 2016 - 11:37 AM
At Bridgeview Station #1 we utilize both poles daily without incident. As long as the floor pads are in place and proper technique is used there shouldn’t be any problems. There’s a greater risk of injury running down 3 stories of stairs!
#3 by Mike Mc on March 22, 2016 - 8:48 AM
Does anyone build new firehouses that are two stories anymore?
Maybe I visited the wrong firehouses over the years, but it was mighty rare to see someone actually use the pole in Chicago. I admit, other cities still use them.
I wouldn’t worry about injuries from running down the stairs. A fast turn out has gone the way of the leather helmet.
#4 by Crabby Milton on March 22, 2016 - 5:51 AM
So now all of the sudden they are being injured by going down the pole the wrong way? I guess there are no chances of injury running down the stairs too fast now is there?
The slide seems to be a good idea however but I’m sure the safety nannies will find fault with them too. Just make all of the stations that have more than one story install an elevator. Gee, that will improve response time.