(1) For buildings constructed to the
Residential Board and Care or One and Two Family Dwelling Chapters of the Life
Safety Code (NFPA 101), the following shall be required:
a. The administration of every residential
board and care facility shall have, in effect and available to all supervisory
personnel, written copies of a plan for protecting all persons in the event of
fire, for keeping persons in place, for evacuating persons to areas of refuge,
and for evacuating persons from the building when necessary;
b. Clients shall be trained to assist each
other in case of fire or emergency to the extent that their physical and mental
abilities permit them to do so, without additional personal risk;
c. All SUD-RTF Tier 1, 2, and 3 facilities
shall conduct fire drills not less than 6 times per year on a bimonthly basis,
with not less than 2 drills conducted during the night when clients are
sleeping. Actual exiting from windows shall not be required, however opening
the window and signaling for help shall be an acceptable alternative;
d. The drills shall involve the actual
evacuation of all clients to an assembly point, as specified in the emergency
plan, and approved by the department and the local fire authority based on
construction of the building and shall provide clients with experience in
egressing through all exits and means of escape;
e. Facilities shall complete a written record
of fire drills that includes the following:
1.
The date and time including AM/PM the drill was conducted and if the actual
fire alarm system was used;
2. The
location of exits used;
3. The
number of people, including clients, personnel, and visitors, participating at
the time of the drill;
4. The
amount of time taken to completely evacuate the facility;
5. The name and title of the person
conducting the drill;
6. A list of
problems and issues encountered during the drill;
7. A list of improvements and resolution to
the issues encountered during the fire drill; and
8. The names of all staff members
participating in the drill;
f. At no time shall a staff member who has
not participated in a fire drill be the only staff member on duty within the
facility;
g. At admission, the
facility shall conduct a client Fire Safety Evacuation Scoring System (FSES) as
listed in NFPA 101A, Alternatives to Life Safety, to determine the clients'
needs during a fire drill including mobility, assistance to evacuate, staff
needed, risk of resistance, clients ability to evacuate on his or her own, and
choose an alternate exit; and
h.
The fire drills for facilities built to the Residential Board and Care chapter
of the Life Safety Code (NFPA 101), shall be permitted to be announced, in
advance, to the clients just prior to the drill;
(2) For SUDS-RTF's originally constructed to
the Health Care Occupancy chapter of the life safety code and to the rules and
regulations adopted and enforced by the state fire marshal's office and/or the
municipality, or which have been physically evaluated, rehabilitated, and
approved by a New Hampshire licensed fire protection engineer, the state fire
marshal's office, and the department to meet the Health Care Occupancy chapter,
the following shall be required:
a. The
facility shall develop a fire safety plan, which provides for the following:
1. Use of alarms;
2. Transmission of alarms to fire
department;
3. Emergency phone call
to fire department;
4. Response to
alarms;
5. Isolation of
fire;
6. Evacuation of immediate
area;
7. Evacuation of smoke
compartment;
8. Preparation of
floors and building for evacuation;
9. Extinguishment of fire; and
10. Written emergency telephone numbers for
key staff, fire and police departments, poison control center, 911, and
ambulance service(s);
b.
Fire drills shall be conducted quarterly on each shift to familiarize facility
personnel such as medical personnel, maintenance engineers, and administrative
staff, with the signals and emergency action required under varied
conditions;
c. Fire drills shall
include the transmission of a fire alarm signal and simulation of emergency
fire conditions;
d. Buildings that
have a shelter in place, also known as defend in place, shall have this plan
approved by the department and their local fire chief and shall be constructed
to meet the Health Care Occupancy Chapter of the Life Safety Code;
e. When drills are conducted between 9:00
p.m. and 6:00 a.m., a coded announcement shall be permitted to be used instead
of audible alarms;
f. If the
facility has an approved defend or shelter in place plan, then all personnel,
clients, and visitors shall evacuate to that appropriate location or to the
outside of the building to a selected assembly point and drills shall be
designed to ensure that clients shall be given the experience of evacuating to
the appropriate location or exiting through all exists;
g. Facilities shall complete a written record
of fire drills and include the following:
1.
The date and time including AM/PM the drill was conducted and if the actual
fire alarm system was used;
2. The
location of exits used;
3. The
number of people, including clients, personnel, and visitors, participating at
the time of the drill;
4. The
amount of time taken to completely evacuate the facility or to an approved area
of refuge or through a horizontal exit;
5. The name and title of the person
conducting the drill;
6. A list of
problems and issues encountered during the drill;
7. A list of improvements and resolution to
the issues encountered during the fire drill; and
8. The names of all staff members
participating in the drill; and
h. At no time shall a staff member who has
not participated in a fire drill be the only staff member on duty within the
facility; and
(3) The
facility shall conduct a fire drill in the presence of a representative of the
department, state fire marshal's office, or the local fire department upon
request.