Deccan Chronicle

No TS unit provides info during disaster

PCB, DRF, fire, factories point fingers at each other

- BALU PULIPAKA I DC

In case of an industrial or a factory fire, there is absolutely no one that people living in the vicinity can turn to for advice on their safety when dangerous gases could be billowing about.

Inquiries revealed that none of the ‘line’ department­s has a system that ensures interdepar­tmental communicat­ion in a crisis that can aid in taking prompt action and issue safety advice or directives. Each department leaves it to the others.

According to sources, the TS Pollution Control Board (PCB), the Disaster Response Force (DRF) and the Fire Services department and the department of factories, for all practical purposes, have no clue of what the other would do during an industrial fire, even when it involves chemicals as in the case of the blaze that gutted the Allen Homoeo and Herbal Products Ltd at Nand igama of Shadnagar in Rangareddy district last Friday.

The PCB, it is learnt, believes that the problem is that of the department of factories, while the latter says it is the factory management that should educate the people. The fire services says the PCB and factories officials should rush to assist it in helping people.

Though the PCB boasts of a ‘task force’ to attend to such events, it takes around two to three hours to get to the accident site, but does not have any equipment to measure or identify gases on a real-time basis, or monitor wind direction so advice can be provided to people who may be the most affected.

“We have been very fortunate so far that something very serious has not happened. But a disaster is just one fire away,” an official said.

Even worse, was an admission that if a situation developed during an ‘non-working day’, then all bets could be off with respect to any immediate, or even delayed response.

Every factory, as per law, must have sign boards outside their premises that can be easily read on what they manufactur­e, what they use, and what needs to be done during an accident. “Practicall­y no factory or a plant using any kind of a chemical has done this,” a government official said.

No official was willing to go on record stating that they just are not capable of providing possible life-saving advice in an emergency

According to sources in the fire services department, the industrial areas in the Rajendrana­garkatedan belt, and between Patancheru and Sangareddy, a major pharma hub, are the worst hit with fires. There is a fire almost every other day in the Katedan area, an official said.

“Just like the fire services, the PCB needs to rush in. We have a 24-hour fire call control room and PCB too should have one and then the two can be linked up,” the fire services official said.

The fire services department is in the process of procuring multi-gas detectors which will provide a basic idea about commonly found gases such as carbon monoxide, or sulphur dioxide and a few others, which will enable firefighte­rs to determine if they need to use face mask with oxygen cylinders. “This is a start,” the official said.

With respect to the department of factories, officials said that it was the responsibi­lity of the respective factory “to educate people living in its vicinity on disaster preparedne­ss and action to be taken. We hold regular mock drills along with fire services.”

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