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GRT and RA Fire and Safety Awareness. Craig Bryer, Officer, EHS Office. Topics to Cover. Review of fire safety Roles/Responsibilities of GRT’s Tips: cooking, electrical, egress Emergency Preparedness. To request EHS Services. DSL EHS Program Manager…
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GRT and RA Fire and Safety Awareness Craig Bryer, Officer, EHS Office
Topics to Cover • Review of fire safety • Roles/Responsibilities of GRT’s • Tips: cooking, electrical, egress • Emergency Preparedness
To request EHS Services • DSL EHS Program Manager… • Your Lead Contact in the EHS Office is Craig Bryer @ x2-3477 • You can contact several Safety Program employees @ safe-project@mit.edu • For any EHS issue: environment@mit.edu You can contact any of us anonymously
Fire Quiz! 1. The average size fire that can be put out with an extinguisher… -Average discharge time for type “ABC”: 8-30 seconds
Fire Quiz! 2. When are you or your students expected to fight a trash can fire? MIT Policy: In the event of a fire, Institute policy is to evacuate immediately and activate the nearest fire alarm pull-station on your way out. Do not fight the fire. Fires are to be handled by trained responders only.
Fire Quiz! 3. The two LEADING causes of dormitory fires are… #1 Arson: approx. 33% #2 Cooking: approx. 21% According to: NFIRS
Past Dormitory Fires/Events • Examples at MIT (not limited to this list) • Senior House fire 1984 • MacGregor cooking fire 1997 • EC GRT set fire to the carpet 1998 • EC 4th floor kitchen fire 2006 • Building 66 sprinklers 2008 • Next House sprinkler 2008 • Trash Bin Fire 1995, 2009 • Ashdown Kitchen Fire 2013
General Issues and Consequences • Yourself, Friends, and Community • Injuries or death • Loss of Housing privileges • Expulsion from MIT • Damaged Possessions (MIT does not cover) • Disruptive building repairs / renovations • Occupants removed from dorms (late, or periods of time) • Animosity from peers • Legal and financial ramifications • MIT • Tuition / Housing costs rise • Insurance rates increase • Employee time
GRT/RA Roles and Responsibilities • Early September: facilitate a meeting with your students: • Walk floor for exit routes/maps • No tampering with sprinklers/detectors/exit sign • Cooking rules/tips • No smoking • No open flames • Electrical distribution • Clear egress routes • Exit signs lit • Propping egress/stairwell doors?
GRT/RA Role in Emergencies • Most important: get yourself out safely • Activate pull-stations • Sweep area as you exit • Be a leader- instruct and communicate • Communicate with emergency responders
GRT/RA Role in Shelter in Place • Entire building will be notified via fire alarm system, PA, bull horn, MIT Alert, etc. • GRTs may be asked to convey information to students (Dean On Call will contact you) • Facilities will turn off ventilation if necessary • Housing will provide water, flashlights, and other necessities for a short-term situation
If All Exits Are Blocked • Stay low to floor where the air is cooler & cleaner • Go to a smoke free room with a window • Try to minimize smoke infiltration • Identify your location on window • Dial 100 or 617-253-1212
Cooking without Burning • Keep paper/ plastic (bags, boxes, packaging, etc.) away from the stove top burners, toaster ovens, coffee makers & other cooking appliances • Do not wear loosing fitting clothing, like nightgowns and bathrobes, because your sleeve could easily catch on fire • Every year there are more than 90K cooking fires. This is the #1 cause of home fires • The majority of these fires were caused by leaving food cooking unattended! • Microwaves, hot plates, coffee makers, and other cooking appliances are only allowed in kitchen areas, NOT in bedrooms
Electrical • Electrical hazards are the cause of numerous fires every year • Examples: • Overloading circuits • Use of unapproved electrical devices • Damaged or worn wiring • Extension cords • Daisy chains
Other… • Sprinklers and smoke detectors that are tampered with WILL set off main fire alarms • A covered smoke detector WILL NOT function correctly! • Horseplay in the halls can also set off sprinklers (ex.-a ball hitting the sprinkler head) • A fire alarm should NEVER be ignored! • Make sure you, and your students, are familiar with how to evacuate or assist with anyone with mobility concerns
Resources • ehs.mit.edu • Fire Safety Training Tools for GRTs • Igot2kno.org • specific for college students: features info on staying safe, the correct way to evacuate, and stories from fire survivors • campus-firewatch.com • PLEASE share websites with your students
From our side… • The Campus Right to Know Fire Regulations state that MIT shall post information about fires and submit a report to the Dept of Higher Education • Applies to dorms AND FSILGs
MIT Alert… • …is the name for the notification system that sends out information in a campus wide emergency • To sign up, visit http://web.mit.edu/mit-emergency/mitalert/ And follow the directions given
Important Contacts MIT Police 617-253-1212 or dial 100 from campus phone Security & Emergency Management Office (617) 258-7366 or 8-7366 Environment, Health & Safety Office (617) 452-3477 or 2-3477 Craig Bryer: 2-3270
Thank You • Questions/comments/concerns?