Sun.Star Davao

Make it optional

Davao food players think Fire Suppressio­n System is unnecessar­y, expensive

- By Jennie P. Arado

RESTAURANT and food service establishm­ents in Davao City request that the Automatic Kitchen Hood Fire Suppressio­n System to just be optional for them instead of making it mandatory.

Under Section 10 of the Republic Act 9514 or the Fire Code of the Philippine­s of 2008, it was stated that the “cooking equipment shall be protected by automatic kitchen hood fire suppressio­n.” This is to be in accordance with NFPA 96, Standard for Ventilatio­n Control and Fire Protection of Commercial Cooking Operations.

However the Restaurant Owners Associatio­n of Davao City ( ROADC), the Davao Tourism Associatio­n ( DATA), the Davao Region Tourism Council, the Davao Baker’s Club, Inc., and the Tourism Council of Davao City all formed together to request the Bureau of Fire Protection to review and amend Sec. 10.2.7.1C of the Implementi­ng Rules and Regulation­s of RA 9514. According to their signed statement, they found the suppressio­n system to be “both unnecessar­y and expensive.”

The joint group requests that the automatic kitchen food fire suppressio­n system in restaurant­s and bakeshops that are stand- alone should be made optional rather than mandatory. Stand- alone restaurant­s and bakeshops are not connected to common exhausts ducts such as those restaurant­s and bakeshops located in malls.

Two years ago, in 2016 when the group first requested for the amendment, there was a recorded 535 registered restaurant­s in Davao City. Out of this number, only 70 restaurant­s are standalone and about 13 percent of this had installed fire suppressio­n system in their kitchen.

Now as the number of restaurant­s in the city had ballooned to more than 800, they believe that the fire suppressio­n system should still be made optional.

In a date earlier provided by Bureau of Fire Protection ( BFP) Senior Fire Officer 2, he said the number of fire incidents involving business establishm­ents in the city has only slightly increased to 50 incidents in 2017 from 49 incidents in 2016.

In 2016, there were eight fire incidents that happened in industrial establishm­ents, 17 in mercantile, 16 in business, and eight in storage establishm­ents or warehouses. By 2017, there fire incidents for industrial establishm­ents had gone up to 14 incidents, mercantile with 19 fire incidents and businesses still with 16 incidents, while storage/ warehouse still with eight fire incidents.

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