The Scotsman

Grenfell report finds the ‘stay put’ strategy for burning tower was futile

● Fire service advice should have been abandoned much sooner

- By JACK HARDY

Fire service advice to “stay put” in the Grenfell Tower fire had “effectivel­y failed” within around half an hour of the fire starting, a report for the blaze inquiry has found.

Tenants had been told to stay in their flats in the event of a blaze, guidance which should never have been issued given the block’s structural flaws, an expert found.

Dr Barbara Lane said the cladding system could not adequately resist the spread of flames, meaning a “stay put” strategy for the building was not justifiabl­e.

She wrote in a report for the public inquiry that the plan had “effectivel­y failed” by 1:26am on 14 June, around 32 minutes after the first call to emergency services.

The stairwell – Grenfell Tower’s only escape route – was “smoke-logged from 1:40am onwards”, Dr Lane found.

The first firefighti­ng crew only entered flat 16 – where the fire started – at around 1:08am and applied a jet to the kitchen at approximat­ely 1:14am.

The stay put guidance was eventually abandoned at 2:47am.

It was unclear why there was such a gap between the advice being rendered redundant and the fire service changing tack, the report said.

“I am particular­ly concerned by the delay from 2:06am, when a major incident was

0 Tenants were told to stay where they were despite the cladding being unable to resist the spread of the fire declared, to 2:47am,” Dr Lane continued.

Her views were echoed by another expert commission­ed to deliver findings to the inquiry, Jose Torero.

In his report, the fire is split into four stages – and it is said that the stay put advice was questionab­le from the second stage.

This stage was from 1:05am until 1:30am and covered the time it took for the fire to reach the top of the building from the compartmen­t of origin.

Mr Torero wrote: “A ‘stay put’ strategy is not consistent with the characteri­stics of the second stage. To a large extenttheb­uildingrem­ains tenable and the stairs still retain the characteri­stics required for them to be a safe egress path.”

But even when the advice was dispensed with, it was unclear whether every resident was aware they should have evacuated, Dr Lane’s report said.

Seventy-one people were killed during the tragedy in Kensington, west London, on June 14 last year. Another died in January after a long battle with a pre-existing condition.

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