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LARRY STOKES Underwriting Manager ZURICH MUNICIPAL CHAIRMAN OF SCHOOLS WORKING PARTY - Arson Prevention Bureau
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IFE ROYAL BERKSHIRE GROUP 11 November 2003 National Cost Issues Arsonist Profile School Fires
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The incidence of arson in industrial, agricultural, commercial and public premises
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Housing £ 351m Commercial £ 758m £1,108m Business Interruption£ 269m £1,477m Cost of Fires ABI - 2002
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50% of Commercial £500m Arson - 2002
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INVOLVING ……... Death, and injury to occupants and Fire Fighters Business Interruption Closure of the Company Loss of jobs Loss of facilities or amenities for the community Pollution Loss of industrial heritage
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ARSON FIRE - WHO ? MALE ….. but not always AGED 10 - 16 WORKFORCE VISITORS
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ARSON FIRE - WHEN ALL FIRES - 49% AT NIGHT ARSON-68% AT NIGHT LARGE ARSON-84% AT NIGHT
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The Problem The Issues The Solutions SCHOOL FIRES
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THE PROBLEM
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COSTS OF LOSS/ DAMAGE IN SCHOOLS National Costs - Fire Losses 1993 - 2002
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Government set to spend £5bn on renewing school infrastructure over next 5 years So What ?
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90,000 schoolchildren have education disrupted 80,000 families affected 320,000 people involved PLUS Resources diverted Education disrupted A Different Perspective …..
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FIRE PROTECTION ASSOCIATION FIRES > £250,000 12 MONTHS MAY 2001 - APRIL 2002 Total all occupancies 123,904,807 Schools - 26%
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School Fires by Means of Discovery
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School Fires By Time of Day
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Causes Of Fires In Schools
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SCHOOL FIRES 01.01.92 - 01.03.2003 THE ISSUES
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Target Hardening Intervention THE SOLUTIONS
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Target Hardening THE SOLUTIONS Use construction materials of limited combustibility Secure bin stores Retro-fit void barriers on older schools Effective perimeter security Automatic Fire alarms in all schools Fire Sprinklers in new/refurbished schools
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YOUR SCHOOL?
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Site closed for weeks Community disrupted Children taught in portakabins for 3 years
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Case Study 2 St Mary’s Church of England Primary School
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Lunchtime fire April 2002 Pupil enters stockroom - starts fire Thought to be false alarm, but ….. Water spotted from under the door Water cleaned up, school operates normally for rest of day
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WHAT CAN BE DONE ? Design of new schools to incorporate lessons learnt Upgrade refurbished schools Target ‘the critical few’ of each LEA AND Use curriculum based resource to deflect potential fire setters
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SCHOOL FIRES Who sets them? More than 90% set by those who attend, or who have attended, the school Why do they set them? To resolve angry feelings about the school Often specifically directed to one or more teachers’ areas Can we prevent school fires?Yes Awareness of the fire setter enables preventative intervention How do we identify them? There are fire setters in every school
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Fire safety (arson) education Current space on the curriculum limited to fire safety Nothing specific on arson Main package is "learn not to burn" Opportunity missed? ARSON IN SCHOOLS
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To raise awareness of problem and consequences To educate pupils, teachers, parents and neighbours and communities. To be integrated within the school curriculum To promote “good citizenship” both within and outside the school environment - All with the overriding aim of reducing arson and increasing risk assessment skills. (Changing Behaviour) OBJECTIVES OF PROGRAMME
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THE PROGRAMME Key partner involvement Schools Theatre in Education Workshops Resource Pack Community Interaction Benchmarking / monitoring / evaluation
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Target the increased resource to improve the vulnerability of schools to large disruptive fires Energise/facilitate education programmes aimed at explaining the consequences of malicious fire raising All agencies to work together to reduce the number and cost of fires in schools THE OPPORTUNITY
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