Lack of Maintenance
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Hoarding behavior in itself tends to add to structural instability as the occupants often feel “embarrassed” or “ashamed” about their disorder. This will not allow them to let outsiders such as family or carpenters in to fix issues that occur as a part of normal household maintenance. An example of this would be a busted water pipe that has been leaking for days. Most folks would take the time to pull drywall, find the problem, repair it and return it to service. With hoarding conditions, the inability to access this problem is an huge issue on top of the fact that they will not allow a qualified construction crew into fix the problem.
Over time, the water will begin to rot away at the structural components that support the floors, walls, and/or roof. This can put them in such a weakened state that they be in danger of collapse before the first drop of water is applied. It can also lead to a false sense of security to the first arriving firefighters who may feel some give in the floor area and not suspect collapse could be crawling into a disaster. Once you have made the discovery of heavy contents it should be automatically assume that the structure is in a weakened state.
Load Levels
It has been well documented that people that are afflicted with Compulsive Hoarding Disorder may assign a value to any type of object. From books and magazines to car parts, you may discover many different types of belongings hidden inside a home with hoarding conditions. Making the determination of what is being collected will help an incident commander make a quick analysis of the potential for a life threatening collapse or the potential to NOT GO IN!
A good rule of thumb to keep everyone safe in hoarding conditions it to double the estimated burn time. If you estimate it takes 5 minutes to discover a fire, 2 minutes to call 911, and 8 minutes to get water on the fire you should take this 15 minutes and assume that it has been burning for over 30! This will put everyone in a defensive mindset even if you choose to go interior!
Structural collapse can be the most dangerous effects of a building on fire experienced by today’s firefighters. It’s our job to learn the cues and clues of a structural collapse. It is even more important to identify hoarding conditions to make sure that we are not caught in a situation that was unstable before it caught on fire!
Be safe everyone and thanks for the visit to the Chamber!