Francis Vineyard
REGISTERED
http://preventionconnection.com/2015/05/15/residential-fire-sprinklers/
The process to remove the requirements for residential fire sprinklers from the International Building Code will continue from opponents to the technology. If you are an eligible voter in the ICC Code process on-line voting is going on now.
BACKGROUND:
The proposals of concern relate to permissible use of the IRC, rather than the IBC, for housing of individuals who are not related, including lodging houses, group homes and custodial/medical care facilities. IBC currently permits some of these uses to be constructed under the IRC. In most cases, there is a specific statement in one of the codes that only allows the IRC to be used when sprinklers are provided. Those statements are being attacked as being contrary to fair housing laws. Proponents argue that the IRC requires sprinklers in all new homes, so there’s no reason for the IBC to specifically restate this requirement as a basis of allowing the IRC to be used. However, without these statements, the only remaining sprinkler requirement would be IRC Section 313, and adoption of that section has been legislatively blocked 16 states and delayed in many more. The result…in these 16 states and other jurisdictions that have not yet adopted IRC Section 313, small lodging houses, group homes, and custodial/medical care facilities would be allowed without fire sprinklers.
The process to remove the requirements for residential fire sprinklers from the International Building Code will continue from opponents to the technology. If you are an eligible voter in the ICC Code process on-line voting is going on now.
BACKGROUND:
The proposals of concern relate to permissible use of the IRC, rather than the IBC, for housing of individuals who are not related, including lodging houses, group homes and custodial/medical care facilities. IBC currently permits some of these uses to be constructed under the IRC. In most cases, there is a specific statement in one of the codes that only allows the IRC to be used when sprinklers are provided. Those statements are being attacked as being contrary to fair housing laws. Proponents argue that the IRC requires sprinklers in all new homes, so there’s no reason for the IBC to specifically restate this requirement as a basis of allowing the IRC to be used. However, without these statements, the only remaining sprinkler requirement would be IRC Section 313, and adoption of that section has been legislatively blocked 16 states and delayed in many more. The result…in these 16 states and other jurisdictions that have not yet adopted IRC Section 313, small lodging houses, group homes, and custodial/medical care facilities would be allowed without fire sprinklers.