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County Supervisors adopt consolidated Fire Code
By Chris Mac
Kenzie
The Alpine Sun
SAN DIEGO COUNTY — The San Diego County Board
of Supervisors adopted a consolidated Fire Code, which also revised
deck construction requirements.
“The consolidated Fire Code will allow for a more
uniform code,” said Supervisor Dianne Jacob, adding that a uniform
code will allow for consistent enforcement as well as expedited plan
checks. “It’s every effort such as this that makes the region safer.”
A fire protection district can adopt an ordinance more
stringent than the state Building Standards Code, although the local
legislative body (which is the Board of Supervisors for unincorporated
areas) must ratify that ordinance in order for it to be effective. In
October 2001 the supervisors adopted an ordinance ratifying the first
edition of the consolidated Fire Code, and since then each of the 17
fire protection districts in the county has adopted new ordinances
which required ratification.
The consolidated Fire Code gives the county’s
Department of Land Use (DPLU) a single document rather than 17
separate documents. The adoption of the consolidated Fire Code also
incorporated that code into the county’s Building Code.
“We’re happy,” said DPLU fire services coordinator
Ralph Steinhoff. “The fire services people that were there were
pleased and were appreciative of the comments by the board.”
Other than the consolidation of documents and the
inclusion of the new Fire Code into the Building Code, the supervisors
also revised the deck construction requirements. In June 2004 the
supervisors amended the building and fire codes to add various
fire-resistant construction standards. The adoption of the 2004
amendments also led to meetings between DPLU and the decking industry.
“As a result of that the decking requirements have been
revised and our codes have been brought up to better standards,” Jacob
said. “Builders will have a wider variety of choices.”
The new code stipulates testing standards that must be
met for decking.
“The Department of Planning and Land Use has provided
an invaluable service in updating the fire codes,” Jacob said. “I
think all of us learned a valuable lesson in 2003.”
Although the October 2003 wildfires destroyed more than
2,000 homes, most of the houses within the fires’ footprints that had
been built since the adoption of the county’s most recent building
standards survived the fires.
The county had updated building standards on several
occasions between the 1996 Harmony Grove Fire and the 2004 response to
the previous year’s fires.
Steinhoff noted that the consolidated Fire Code is
expected to streamline building permit applications and other plan
checks. “It will assist us here at DPLU in providing fire plan
checks,” he said. “It will give us consistent enforcement of fire
codes throughout the region.”
The 2001 consolidated Fire Code was based on the 1997
Uniform Fire Code, and the 2007 amendments will be the last before
work begins on incorporating the International Fire Code into the
county’s Fire Code.
“This kind of culminates a couple of years’ worth of
work on this one,” Steinhoff said.
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