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SCOTTSDALE'S
15-YEAR HISTORY PROVES HOME FIRE SPRINKLER SYSTEMS SAVE LIVES AND PROPERTY
Quincy, MA
After 15-years of requiring all new homes built in Scottsdale, Ariz.
to have a residential fire sprinkler system, data collected by the
local fire department indicates that 13 lives were saved and more
than $20 million in property loss was prevented.
According to Jim Ford, fire marshal, Scottsdale Rural/Metro Fire Department,
41,408 homes, more than 50 percent of the homes in Scottsdale, are protected
with fire sprinkler systems. During the last three years, the average
fire loss in the homes with sprinklers was $2,166, compared to $45,019
in homes without sprinklers.
Without a doubt, our data proves residential fire sprinklers save
lives and property, Ford said.
While fire sprinklers have protected public buildings for more than 100
years, most deaths caused by fire occur in homes. According to the National
Fire Protection Association (NFPA) more than 80 percent of all fire deaths
occur in homes. Yet, with more than 1.2 million homes built annually nationwide,
less than 1 percent will have fire sprinkler systems installed.
The problem is many people building homes are not aware that fire
sprinklers are an option, said Gary Keith, chair of the Home Fire
Sprinkler Coalition (HFSC). To increase awareness, the non-profit group
launched an advertising campaign on the cable network Home and Garden
TV (HGTV).
Two 30-second ads feature home improvement expert Ron Hazelton in the
kitchen of a new home with a fire sprinkler system. Hazelton informs viewers
that fire sprinklers are the next generation in home fire safety because
they control and usually extinguish the fire before the fire department
arrives on the scene. One spot informs viewers that only the sprinkler
closest to the fire activates.
Our biggest challenge is dispelling the myths that the entire system
activates, Keith said. When you look at the Scottsdale data,
90% of the fires were contained with one sprinkler.
According to the HFSC, nationally on average, the cost to install a fire
sprinkler system is between 1 and 1.5 percent of the total building cost.
In Scottsdale, the cost is about half the national average. Ford said
that because fire sprinklers are required in all new homes, there is more
competition between installers, which drives the cost down.
Slowly, more people are beginning to realize that sprinklers are
an accessible, cost-effective option for their families," Keith said.
As more people become educated about sprinklers, we anticipate
that they will eventually be a commonplace feature in most homes.
With
Scottsdales
15-year history, Ford said residential fire sprinklers are in fact becoming
commonplace. It seems like people either dont notice the sprinklers
or notice when a home doesnt have them. Our community has plenty
of children growing up in homes with fire sprinklers, Ford said.
With the majority of U.S. fire deaths occurring in homes, Keith said that
widespread use of residential fire sprinklers is the key to making society
safer from fire.
For more information about residential sprinklers, call HFSC toll-free
(888) 635-7222 or visit the groups Web site at www.homefiresprinkler.org.
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