Derby Telegraph

NO SPRINKLERS ...NO NAMES

Despite three recent school fires, council refuses to say which are fitted with the firefighti­ng devices

- By EDDIE BISKNELL Local democracy reporter eddie.bisknell@reachplc.com

COUNCIL officials have refused to name the Derbyshire schools which do not have sprinklers, despite three being destroyed in blazes in the last four months.

The fires have displaced hundreds of pupils and resulted in millions of pounds of rebuild costs.

And there have been more than 30 fires at Derbyshire schools over the past five years.

After the destructio­n of Harrington Junior School in Long Eaton, which did not have sprinklers, in May, the Local Democracy Reporting Service submitted a Freedom of Informatio­n request to Derbyshire County Council, asking it to name the schools without sprinklers.

The council had a legal duty to respond within 20 working days, which it failed to do.

Following the devastatin­g fires at Ravensdale Infant and Nursery School and St Mary’s Catholic Voluntary Academy, it has now said it will not be providing the names.

The authority cited the perceived risk of potential arsonists targeting schools without sprinklers and claims the public interest in naming the schools is outweighed by the public interest in refusing to do so.

Simon Hobbs, Derbyshire County Council’s director of legal services, wrote in response to the request, three months after it was filed: “Disclosure of this informatio­n would be likely to endanger the safety of individual­s as it may lead to specific schools being targeted by those who may contemplat­e attacks on public buildings, therefore, I consider the exemption to be engaged.

“Where sprinklers are installed in schools the primary purpose is to limit fire damage to school property when the building is empty, outside of school hours.

“During the school day fire alarm and evacuation procedures are in place in all schools to ensure pupils and staff evacuate the building quickly and safely.

“However, any person called upon to attend a fire out of school hours or who is in the immediate vicinity could be placed at risk if informatio­n regarding sprinklers is made public and subsequent­ly used to target school buildings outside of school hours.

“As this is a qualified exemption I have also considered the public interest test to determine whether in all the circumstan­ces the public interest in maintainin­g the exemption outweighs the public interest in disclosing the informatio­n.

“There is a public interest in informatio­n relating to safety being released to promote accountabi­lity and transparen­cy.

“However, the disclosure of the informatio­n relating to schools

without sprinklers would potentiall­y be used by individual­s or groups who may target vulnerable buildings, putting individual­s at risk of harm.

“I have balanced nced the arguments in favour vour of disclosing and nd withholdin­g the e i n f o rmat i o n requested, however, the health and safety of individual­s is the primary concern.

“The public lic interest is weighted ed in favour of maintainin­g ining the exemption.”

The Derby Telegraph and the LDRS disagree and have called for an internal review, which means this decision will be reconsider­ed by the council. The council will also look at whether procedure was followed correctly in responding to our Freedom of Informatio­n request.

The LDRS has also filed the same request to Derby City Council.

This week, Gavin Tomlinson, Derbyshire’s chief fire officer, and the National Fire Chiefs Council, called for government to make changes to legislatio­n to make sprinkler systems in schools mandatory, rather than advised. The NFCC said that sprinklers could have “substantia­lly reduced” the damage caused to the two Derby schools, destroyed within 48 hours of each other over the weekend.

The fire at Ravensdale was ruled as arson, while the blaze at Harrington was accidental and caused by county y council staff carrying out r refurbishm­ents. The cau cause of the fire at St M Mary’s has not yet been discl closed. Terry McDermott, Derbyshire’s former fire chief who r retired last year, sa said: “As we kno know, sprinklers are pretty p much 100 per cent c effective when inst installed in the room where a fire starts. “Sprinklers are expected to feature in almost all new schools. They do not. Loopholes and cost

Disclosure of this informatio­n would be likely to endanger the safety of individual­s.

Simon Hobbs

cutting are the reason. The regulation­s are being reviewed at the moment and the answer must be sprinklers in all new schools.

“The rate sprinklers are installed in new schools has dropped from 70 per cent of schools to about eight per cent.

“The cost is not always measured in pounds. It’s time for change.”

Cllr Barry Lewis, leader of the county council, said this week: “Our policy at Derbyshire County Council is that all new-build schools have sprinklers fitted. All significan­t extensions to existing too – and refurbs have them retrofitte­d wherever possible.

“We fully support this approach. The human cost and heartbreak as well as monetary cost make it essential.”

However, a temporary replacemen­t for Harrington Junior School, which the county council built without planning permission in July, was also built without sprinklers.

It had said this was “standard for temporary buildings of this nature”.

Derby City Council, in response to the two fire-hit schools, pointed the finger at national government policies over sprinklers in schools, despite it, along with the county council, having the power to install systems in all authority-run facilities.

Cllr Evonne Williams, the city council’s cabinet member for children and young people, said this week: “It’s totally unacceptab­le that these events happened, when there are fire safety measures that can prevent such devastatio­n.

“There is currently no legal requiremen­t for existing schools to have sprinkler systems.

“Since changes in Government guidance in 2007, retrofitti­ng of sprinkler systems is an option that now must be included in the risk assessment­s when any major refurbishm­ents are being considered, which is absolutely right.

“England is lagging behind Scotland and Wales when it comes to introducin­g legislatio­n to fit sprinklers in schools, and the Government needs to act.

“There is now an expectatio­n that all new build schools should f fit sprinkler systems, and this is the c case at the new Castleward school b being built in Derby.”

In response, a Department for Education spokespers­on said: “The safety of pupils and staff in schools remains our highest priority and all schools are required to have an up-to-date Fire Risk Assessment and to conduct regular fire drills.

“All new school buildings must be signed-off by an inspector to certify that they meet the requiremen­ts of building regulation­s, where sprinklers are considered necessary to protect pupils and staff, they must be installed.

“We are working closely with

Derby City Council and St Ralph Sherwin Catholic Multi-Academy Trust to help support the schools and their pupils.”

It said a consultati­on on changes to fire safety design for new schools is to be launched shortly.

The department also said that “under the fire safety order, the responsibl­e person has to carry out and review regularly a fire risk assessment of the building and put in place adequate and appropriat­e fire precaution­s to reduce the risk to life in the event of a fire to as low as reasonably practicabl­e”.

In the past five years Derbyshire fire service has been called to 32 blazes at schools in the county and city, figures obtained in a Freedom of Informatio­n request from Zurich Municipal show.

The fire service said this week that eight of these have occurred since April 2019.

Mr Tomlinson said this week: “Sprinklers are one of a range of fire safety measures that would not only protect our schools from fire and prevent injuries, but they would also protect against costly rebuilds and of course, protect against the stress and anxiety caused to the children who need their education.”

“I am not sure what more evidence is needed to bring legislatio­n in line with Scotland and Wales where it is mandatory for sprinklers to be fitted and for the Government here in England to take notice and more importantl­y, to take action – we have a responsibi­lity to build safer schools.”

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 ??  ?? The Derby Telegraph reported on Tuesday that the county’s fire chief wanted sprinklers fitted in new or refurbishe­d schools
The Derby Telegraph reported on Tuesday that the county’s fire chief wanted sprinklers fitted in new or refurbishe­d schools
 ?? DERBYSHIRE FIRE AND RESCUE ?? Harrington Junior School, in Long Eaton, did not have sprinklers
Ravensdale Infant and Nursery School
DERBYSHIRE FIRE AND RESCUE Harrington Junior School, in Long Eaton, did not have sprinklers Ravensdale Infant and Nursery School
 ??  ?? Inside Ravensdale
Damage caused at St Mary’s Catholic Voluntary Academy
Inside Ravensdale Damage caused at St Mary’s Catholic Voluntary Academy

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