Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Fire brigade...

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Currently, all residentia­l societies must conduct a fire-safety audit and send a report to the fire brigade. Under the new circular, buildings across Mumbai have been categorise­d based on their height and divided among officials of the compliance cell — the tallest buildings will be inspected by senior-most officials. The officials will pick buildings at random, and without giving them notice of an inspection.

Penalties for not complying with the fire-safety rule could end in prosecutio­n under the Fire Prevention Act.

The random checks are to ensure buildings continue to stay fire-safe even after the ini- tial inspection­s.

Housing societies across Mumbai welcomed the move, while urban planners pointed out the need, not only for better compliance by housing societies, but also for regulating how permission­s are given in the first place.

Madhu Poplai, a resident of Pali Hill’s Cozihom — an enclave of five buildings, each 10 storeys high, with 162 residents — said housing societies could learn from such inspection­s. “Cozihom is fire compliant and the housing society even conducts the mandatory bi-annual inspection­s of its equipment to make sure they work .”

Hiren Mehta, who lives in Gasper Enclave, a Bandra apartment constructe­d in 1962, said, his building was hardly fire compliant.”but, if inspection­s happen, we will welcome them. The law will then take its course, and if irregulari­ties are pointed out in our building, we will fix them.” Eight families live here.

In Churchgate’s Swastik Enclave, a five-storey structure with 25 residents, there are fire extinguish­ers on every floor, signs and exit plans. Resident Naina Kathpalia was open to the idea of surprise checks. “Our building is fire compliant, and we have fire extinguish­ers with floor plans. We still welcome an inspection by the fire brigade.” Urban planner PK Das pointed out: “We are missing the main point here. What we need is to regulate how permission­s are given to buildings, where fire safety measures like ensuring there is enough open space and access to refuge areas are given little thought.” He added, “The root cause of the problem lies in the beginning, at the time of the constructi­on itself, where builders blatantly flout norms, and the government lets them do so. Follow-up inspection­s is only patch work with little impact.”

A fire brigade official conceded that until 2017, there were several instances where officials gave buildings no-objection certificat­es without necessaril­y inspecting them. “But, after the Kamala Mills incident, the concept of a compliance cell came up and we began mandatory fire inspection­s before giving NOCS. Now, the concept of fire prevention has been added to this list.”

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