Title: Alexander%20Archie
1Fire Life Safety
- Alexander Archie
- Compliance Enforcement Supervisor
- Chief Engineer's Office
- 5500 Snyder Avenue
- Office (775) 887-3255
- Cell (775) 722-8703
2Fire Life Safety
- Keith Jaquillard
- Compliance Enforcement Officer
- Chief Engineer's Office
- 3955 West Russell Road
- Office (702) 8791396
- Cell (702) 308-0902
3Fire Life Safety
- Fire Triangle Tetrahedron
- Fire Classification
- Fire Extinguishers
- The P.A.S.S. Method
- Fire Extinguisher Inspection
4Fire Life Safety
AR 440 http//www.doc.nv.gov/
- Purpose
- To establish an institutional fire safety and
- evacuation plan.
5Fire Life Safety
- Notes
- Lightning has 1.5 million volts, 50,000 degrees
at a distance of 8 miles. - In a wilderness fire, the heat temperature ranges
from - 18000 to 20000
- Aluminum will melt at
- 15000
- Brass will melt at
- 15750 to 18000
- Glass will melt at
- 14750 to 15000
- Tin will melt at
- 4250 to 4750
- Your lungs will be effected at
- 4250 to 4750
6Fire Life Safety
Oxygen Source Approximately 16 Required Normal
air contains 21 O2 Some fuel materials contain
sufficient oxygen within their make-up to
support burning
Heat Source To Reach Ignition Temperature Open
Flame The Sun Hot Surfaces Sparks and
Arcs Friction Chemical Action Electrical
Energy Compression of Gasses
Heat
Oxygen
Fuel
Gases Natural gas Propane Butane Hydrogen Acetylen
e Carbon Monoxide Others
Liquids Gasoline Kerosene Turpentine Alcohol Cod
Liver Oil Paint Varnish Lacquer Olive Oil Others
Solids Bulk Dust Finely Divided Coal Plastic Woo
d Sugar Paper Grain Cloth Hay Wax Cork Grease Leat
her Others
7Fire Life Safety
The wet towel thing...
8Fire Life Safety
The process we know as fire is a chemical
reaction which involves rapid oxidation or
burning of a combustible material. In the past,
we learned that three elements, fuel, heat, and
oxygen were necessary for fire to start and
continue burning, hence the fire triangle
concept. In recent years this concept has been
expanded to include a fourth element, that of the
________ ________, thus creating the fire
tetrahedron.
9Fire Life Safety
- How fires start, fire is a chemical reaction
involving rapid oxidation or burning of a fuel.
It needs four elements to occur - Fuel Fuel can be any combustible material
solid, liquid or gas. Most solids and liquids
become a vapor or gas before they will burn. - Oxygen the air we breathe is about 21 oxygen.
Fire only needs an atmosphere with at least 16
oxygen. - Heat Heat is the energy necessary to increase
the temperature of the fuel to a point where
sufficient vapors are given off for ignition to
occur. - Chemical Reaction A chain reaction can occur
when the other three elements are present in the
proper conditions and proportions. Fire occurs
when this rapid oxidation, or burning takes
place. - Take any one of these factors away and the fire
cannot occur or will be extinguished if it was
already burning.
10Fire Life Safety
How Fires are Classified
List the four classes alphabetically
11Fire Life Safety
- How fires are classified
- Class A Ordinary combustibles or fibrous
material such as wood, paper, cloth, rubber, and
some plastics. - Class B Flammable or combustible liquids such
as gasoline, kerosene, paint, paint thinners, and
propane. - Class C Energized electrical equipment such as
appliances, switches, panel boxes and power
tools. - Class D Certain combustible metals such as
magnesium, titanium, potassium and sodium. These
metals burn at high temperatures and give off
sufficient oxygen to support combustion. They
may react violently with water or other
chemicals, and must be handled with care.
12Fire Life Safety
- How to prevent fires from occurring
- Class A Ordinary combustibles
- Keep storage and working areas free of trash
- Eliminate excess/unnecessary storage of
combustible material - Place oily rags in covered containers
- Class B Flammable liquids or gases
- Dont refuel gasoline-powered equipment in
presence of an open flame such as a furnace or
water heater - Dont refuel gasoline-powered equipment while it
is hot - Keep flammable liquids stored in tightly closed,
self-closing , spill-proof containers. Pour from
storage drums only what youll need. - Store flammable liquids away from spark-producing
sources. - Use flammable liquids only in well-ventilated
areas.
13Fire Life Safety
- How to prevent fires from occurring (cont)
- Class C Electrical equipment
- Look for old wiring, worn insulation and broken
electrical fittings. Report any hazardous
conditions to your supervisor. - Prevent motors from overheating by keeping them
clean and in good working order. A spark from a
rough-running motor can ignite the oil and dust
in the unit. - Utility lights should always have some type of
wire guard over them. Heat from an uncovered
light bulb can easily ignite ordinary
combustibles. - Dont misuse fuses, never install a fuse rated
higher than specified for the circuit. - Investigate any appliance or electrical equipment
that smells strange. Unusual odors can be the
first sign of fire. - Dont overload wall outlets. Two outlets should
have no more than two plugs.
14Fire Life Safety
- When not to fight a fire
- If the fire is spreading beyond the spot where it
started - If you cant fight the fire with your back to an
escape exit - If the fire can block your only escape
- If you dont have adequate fire fighting
equipment - When it is past the incipient stage
15Fire Life Safety
PRESSURE GAUGE (not found on CO2 extinguishers)
DISCHARGE LEVER
CARRYING HANDLE
DISCHARGE LOCKING PIN AND SEAL
DISCHARGE HOSE
DATA PLATE
DISCHARGE NOZZLE
BODY
DISCHARGE ORIFICE
16Fire Life Safety
Pressurized Water
A Paper, Wood, Trash
- For class A fires
- Extinguishes by cooling the burning material
B - Flammable Liquids, Grease
C - Energized Electrical Equipment
17Fire Life Safety
Carbon Dioxide (CO2)
A Paper, Wood, Trash
- For class B or C fires
- Extinguishes by cooling the burning material
- Approximately 8-30 seconds discharge time
B - Flammable Liquids, Grease
C - Energized Electrical Equipment
18Fire Life Safety
Multipurpose Dry Chemical
A Paper, Wood, Trash
- For class A B or C fires
- Extinguishes by smothering burning material
- Approximately 8-25 seconds discharge time
- Contains (ammonium phosphate)
B - Flammable Liquids, Grease
C - Energized Electrical Equipment
19Fire Life Safety
Halon
A Paper, Wood, Trash
- For class B or C fires
- Extinguishes by removing oxygen
- Approximately 8-18 seconds discharge time
B - Flammable Liquids, Grease
C - Energized Electrical Equipment
20Fire Life Safety
Combustible Metal
- For class D fires
- Extinguishes by smothering burning material
COMBUSTIBLE
D
METALS
21Fire Life Safety
Pull the pin This will allow you to squeeze the
handle in order to discharge the extinguisher
Aim at the base of the fire Aiming at the middle
will do no good. The agent will pass through the
flames.
Squeeze the handle This will release the
pressurized extinguishing agent
Sweep side to side Cover the entire area that is
on fire. Continue until fire is extinguished.
Keep an eye on the area for re-lighting.
22Fire Life Safety
- Leave the area immediately
- Should your path of escape be threatened
- Should the extinguisher run out of agent
- Should the extinguisher prove to be ineffective
- Should you no longer be able to safely fight the
fire - If ever in doubt, GET OUT!
23Fire Life Safety
- How to inspect your fire extinguishers
- Know the locations of your fire extinguishers.
- Make sure the class of extinguisher is safe to
use on fires likely to occur in the immediate
area. - Check the seal. Has the extinguisher been
tampered with or used before? - Look at the gauge and feel the weight. Is the
extinguisher full? Does it need to be recharged? - Make sure the pin. Nozzle and nameplate are
intact. - Report any missing empty or damaged fire
extinguisher to the appropriate person at your
facility whenever you notice any discrepancies.
24Fire Life Safety
- Evacuation Plans
- Staff and inmates must be aware of the plan.
- It shall be the responsibility of the
Warden/designee to provide a system of fire
prevention and control to ensure the safety of
employees, inmates, and visitors. - Institutions/facilities with major fire fighting
equipment shall be responsible for training the
employees assigned to operate the equipment. - During an emergency, the Warden or highest
ranking officer on duty shall have absolute and
total authority concerning decisions made
affecting the institution/facility.
25Fire Life Safety
- Control Center when notified of a fire, will
be alert and observant concerning the fire alarm
panel and, as directed - Call the fire department
- Notify affected areas
- Advise all radio units of the emergency
- Begin notification of personnel on the emergency
notification roster - Alert medical staff
- Maintain accurate records of notifications times
26Fire Life Safety
- All employees should assist in fire prevention.
This shall include, but is not limited to - Proper storage of combustible materials,
- Preventing hazardous electrical situations,
- Training inmates in fire safety procedures,
- Conducting fire drills,
- Reporting fire hazards to the designated officer,
- Checking fire control equipment regularly.
27SNCC Fire
On 12 April 2007 at about 455PM the following
incident occurred at Southern Nevada Correctional
Center. Correctional Officer Wazoo was
supervising an inmate working in the SNCC
maintenance area. Inmate Waxbean was utilizing a
hand held grinder which caused metallic sparks to
fly across the maintenance building and ignite a
fire in the upstairs open storage area.
28SNCC Fire
29(No Transcript)
30JCC Fire
On November 23 2007 at approximately 900PM the
following incident occurred at Jean Conservation
Camp. After drying several loads of laundry,
the inmate removed the dried clothing from the
dryer. The inmate then placed washed culinary
rags and clothing into the hot dryer. The dryer
was not turned on and the laundry room was left
unattended. Later that evening a fire alarm
alerted staff to a fire in the laundry room.
31JCC Fire
32JCC Fire
33Fire Life Safety
Quiz Time
- What is the primary concern in terms of fire
safety? - Prevention
- If a fire breaks out, what is the next ultimate
concern? - Life Safety
- What should I look for when checking
extinguishers? - Make sure an extinguisher is present
- Make sure the arrow is positioned in the green
for charged - Check the tag make sure the tag has not been
removed - What is an A type fire?
- Ordinary combustibles, paper, wood, clothing
34Fire Life Safety
Quiz Time
- What is a D type fire?
- Certain combustible metals, magnesium, titanium,
potassium and sodium. - What is a B type fire?
- Flammable or combustible liquids gas, paint,
kerosene, grease, tar, etc. - What is a C type fire?
- Energized electrical equipment, electric
appliances, computers - What is known as a common extinguisher?
- A-B-C
- What is the first thing I should do to operate a
fire extinguisher? - Pull the pin
35Fire Life Safety
Quiz Time
- What is the second thing I should do to operate a
fire extinguisher? - Aim the nozzle at the base of the fire
- What is the third thing I should do to operate a
fire extinguisher? - Squeeze the handle on the extinguisher
- What is the fourth thing I need to do?
- Sweep from side to side at the base of the fire
- What type of fires do we use Halon on?
- Metal or equipment fires Halon does not damage
electronic components! Computers, radios, etc.
36Fire Life Safety
Quiz Time
- How often should I inspect fire extinguishers in
my area? - Every time I walk by, daily, weekly, etc.
- How often should fire extinguishers be services?
- Annually
- What elements are necessary for a fire to start?
- Fuel
- Oxygen
- Heat
- What are the (3) types of fuel?
- Gases
- Liquids
- Solids
37Fire Life Safety
Quiz Time
- Why do people die from inhaling smoke?
- Suffocation Carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide,
which are a poison - Why is good housekeeping important?
- Disposes of possible fuel for the fire
- Prevents blocking of evacuation routes
- Prevents interference with fire control equipment
- Avoids obstructing fire fighter responding team
- What kind of materials must be disposed of in a
tightly covered metal container? - Rags soaked in oil, paint, or any other
combustible liquid - Material which explode if combined with other
materials - Greasy materials
38Fire Life Safety
Quiz Time
- Bonus Point Question
- How would you fight a large fire thats spreading
rapidly with an extinguisher? - Throw the extinguisher in the fire and Haul ?
the extinguisher will explode and put the fire
out, you are home free.