Fire Wardens
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Winky151

Original Poster:

1,275 posts

164 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
Hi all

Any fire wardens on here to help with some advice?

Company of 70 people in an office & finally getting round to doing things 'properly' as far as fire wardens, H&S etc is concerned - how do you track who's in & out of the office on a daily basis? How do you track coming & going throughout the day i.e. going out for lunch, going to a meeting, etc? We have a swipe entry so we can see when everyone enters the office at whatever time (the toilets are communal so they then have to swipe in again) but press button to get out & if more than one person comes in together only the first person has swiped in.

TIA

xx99xx

2,710 posts

96 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
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There are around 300 people in my office, over 2 floors (fairly small space) and we have several wardens who have their 'zones'.

The warden will sweep their zone and make sure everyone gets out in the event of an evacuation. They also sweep the toilets on their way out. We don't have a register to check who's supposed to be there to check against who is actually outside at the gather point. The assumption is that if the office is empty, that's good enough. Visitors are signed in when they arrive but we don't do a headcount for them either.

We're more concerned with people carrying drinks down the stairs and people not using their nearest exit (and using the overcrowded main stairwell instead), than keeping track of who's in the office.

I think as long as you can show you're taking h&s seriously, you're doing ok.

Scrump

23,752 posts

181 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
My office is the same as xx99xx said. We gave up with a register of who is in and out as it was too difficult to get accurate and so in the event of a fire could not be relied upon.
We now have our wardens sweep their area of the building and then report that it is clear.

Winky151

Original Poster:

1,275 posts

164 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
Cheers guys

At a previous company we tried the in/out board & it proved to be pretty much a waste of time (with fewer staff) so had no thoughts that it would succeed here but good to get some other feedback.

meehaja

607 posts

131 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
There’s a move away from in/out registers as they provide false assurance that people are out. As discussed above, a warden jisnrequired to clear zones and check every room. It also works to “zone” your assembly point (by department or team for example) as colleagues are more likely to be able to identify who is missing and where they are likely to be quicker than a person with a log book.

Nickbrapp

5,277 posts

153 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
You can get access control systems that will print data of who’s swiped in in the event of a fire

Fit a swipe to both the entry and exit side of the door

colin79666

2,145 posts

136 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
Nickbrapp said:
You can get access control systems that will print data of who’s swiped in in the event of a fire

Fit a swipe to both the entry and exit side of the door
  • fire alarm ringing*
If everyone could please just queue up and swipe as they leave the office...

As said above in a few posts we have wardens to sweep the server room and toilets then gather outside. Visitors have a chaperone to ensure they are accounted for.

Nickbrapp

5,277 posts

153 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
colin79666 said:
  • fire alarm ringing*
If everyone could please just queue up and swipe as they leave the office...

As said above in a few posts we have wardens to sweep the server room and toilets then gather outside. Visitors have a chaperone to ensure they are accounted for.
Well no, they swipe to get in and out of the building which is recorded by the access control, the fire alarm goes off, it will print a list of who is in the building because you can’t leave without swiping. In the event of a fire the mag lock is dropped off by the fire alarm and you get the print out and check the muster points.



Antony Moxey

10,316 posts

242 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
I work in a school. Everyone signs in and out via their ID cards which they swipe, so there’s a quick and easy electronic record of who’s in and out. Visitors do the same manually on a keyboard to get their ID badges. No-one is ever in the building unaccounted for.

In an evacuation form tutors do roll calls of students at the muster points and then report via year heads and walkie-talkies to the fire wardens wether everyone’s present and correct. If there is anyone missing predetermined wardens search for them and report.

Our muster point is a four minute walk from the furthest point of the building and all roll calls are completed within six minutes. We have half a dozen staff members with defined roles and carry out drills at least once every half term - I think we’re pretty good and follow it up with a full report that goes in the fire log.

However, as mentioned that’s for a school. I’d imagine it’s a completely different operation for a company or shared office building.

55palfers

6,265 posts

187 months

Wednesday 30th January 2019
quotequote all
Sweepers / wardens reporting to single point of contact for Fire and Rescue to confirm building clear.

Visitors need a buddy as they may not be familiar with alarms and exit routes,etc

Most important to run regular drills. Record outcomes and debrief.

Has your building got a fire risk assessment?

Have all staff been trained?

Keep records of all activities.

romeogolf

2,112 posts

142 months

Thursday 31st January 2019
quotequote all
Fire wardens are expected to do a 'sweep' of their floor/area to confirm empty and be the last to leave behind the rest of the staff. If they pass a toilet en route to the exit, they're also meant to shout in/check that it's clear. No need for a register, just a visual check of the areas.

In a multi-let building, such as the one I work in, each individual tenant has a warden or two who then reports to the warden for the building to confirm their floor/office is clear. Having 20 people report that their office is clear is much easier than 500 each saying "I'm out!"

Jambo85

3,523 posts

111 months

Thursday 31st January 2019
quotequote all
Nickbrapp said:
colin79666 said:
  • fire alarm ringing*
If everyone could please just queue up and swipe as they leave the office...

As said above in a few posts we have wardens to sweep the server room and toilets then gather outside. Visitors have a chaperone to ensure they are accounted for.
Well no, they swipe to get in and out of the building which is recorded by the access control, the fire alarm goes off, it will print a list of who is in the building because you can’t leave without swiping. In the event of a fire the mag lock is dropped off by the fire alarm and you get the print out and check the muster points.
You’d need to have a turnstile on the way in and out though to ensure the log of who’s in is accurate, OP stated he has an issue of people tailing each other through doors.

I think I have heard of muster points where you swipe.

Old Man Fred

821 posts

112 months

Wednesday 6th February 2019
quotequote all
We have a list (just something created in excel) of all employees who work in the office. This is by the fire exit so department manager takes the list on the way out and starts to do a roll call. If people are at lunch/ill etc their dept colleagues will tell you

At the same time, Fire Warden does sweep of the office and takes the visitors book where people have to sign in and checks any visitors are accounted for

SlimRick

2,277 posts

188 months

Wednesday 6th February 2019
quotequote all
We have an iPad on the reception desk with a choice of two buttons to press. "In" or "Out". followed by a click on your name.
For a fire drill, the receptionists picks up the iPad and has a list of all of those who are clocked in.



Edited by SlimRick on Wednesday 6th February 16:34

Truckosaurus

12,927 posts

307 months

Friday 8th February 2019
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I'm a Fire Warden for our office, our duties are to sweep the office to confirm that everyone is out and then reporting that to the building manager (we don't log who is in or out of the building).

If there are no fire wardens in a certain area at the time of the alarm then the building manager will tell the fire brigade that those areas haven't been checked.

The wardens should be aware of colleagues with special needs (in the past I've worked with a deaf person (who had a pager linked to the alarm) and someone with reduced mobility) and what you need to do with them (eg. just get them through the fire doors rather than outside).

sc0tt

18,241 posts

224 months

Friday 8th February 2019
quotequote all
Fire warden here.

160 people on the 29th floor of a high rise in London. Always dread the alarm going off.

8 other wardens, each given a zone to clear with a map on the card. One stays at reception and when everyone returns with their card the floor is clear.

We do have another person at our meeting point with an employee list but as we work in the city everyone tends to go to the nearest coffe shop or pub.

Royce44

395 posts

136 months

Saturday 9th February 2019
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Ask your access control contractor is "anti passback" can be implemented.

That way if someone forgets to swipe out for toilet then they can't get back into the office.
Once everyone's used to it then it's pretty foolproof. Let the access control system do the job.

The hardest part will be getting the people to leave in a fire in the first instance!!