HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Welcome to an on-line health

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HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Welcome to an on-line health and safety training package intended for staff and students working within UofE buildings on the Edinburgh bioQuarter (EbQ) campus. Information contained within these pages is intended for use by University of Edinburgh staff and students only.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY This on-line training package is not intended as a substitute for attending a formal presentation on fire safety arrangements for the EbQ campus, which is mandatory for all staff who have not previously attended one; dates and venues for these are regularly advertised. CM&VM @ EbQ Please attend formal training as soon as you can. Last updated: February, 2021

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Attention is drawn also to the eLearning course available to University staff and students at https://www.ed.ac.uk/health-safety/ fire-safety/training/fire-safety-onlinetraining CM&VM @ EbQ

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Please take time to view the following material, and direct any urgent questions to your H&S Advisor, Laboratory Manager, or the H&S Manager for UofE buildings on the EbQ campus (the contact details for whom are shown on the last page of this presentation). CM&VM @ EbQ Thank you

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY CM&VM @ EbQ The arrangements summarised in this presentation apply equally to all four UofE buildings on the EbQ campus (the Chancellor’s Building, Queen’s Medical Research Institute, the Centre for Regenerative Medicine and Edinburgh Dementia Prevention), but are broadly applicable also for UofE embedded spaces within the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh and Building Nine, Bioquarter.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Upon hearing a fire alarm NEVER assume that it’s going to turn out to be a false alarm. Yes, ultimately, it may prove to be just that, but it would be extremely unwise to work on that assumption and then discover that there really is a fire heading your way.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Uncontrolled fire is potently destructive. Often it is smoke that kills first, even before flames have reached people. And the movement of smoke through ceiling voids and wall cavities etc may be highly unpredictable.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY FIRE KILLS

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Treat every single fire alarm, therefore, as though you are at real and immediate risk of death, and react accordingly, with all due urgency.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY On discovering fire Automatic sensors (very widely distributed within these buildings) will quickly detect smoke, heat and fire, will make alarms sound, and will serve also to prompt an alert to the Scottish Fire & Rescue Service.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY In fact the detectors are so sensitive that most activations are attributable to dust or sunlight streaming in through windows (or electrical faults) etc But, as has been made clear before, never react as though it’s going to turn out to be a false alarm, however many of these there may have been recently.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Raise the alarm . You may spot a fire even before the sensors are activated. Use fire alarm call-points to activate fire alarms and initiate an evacuation. But also Call Out to people in the vicinity, impressing upon them that they really are at risk.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY No automatic fire alarm seems to work quite as well as people shouting out the word “Fire!” So, even if the alarms are already sounding, call out to colleagues and other people in the area.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Activate a Fire Alarm Call Point Press against the front of any one of the red-coloured Fire Alarm Call Points* (pressing lightly over the black spot between the two black arrows) That will activate the sounders. * Despite often being known as “Break Glass” devices, there is no glass in front of the activation button, and you will not come to harm from pressing your finger directly against these.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY CAR PARK B A Fire Action Notice is located alongside each fire alarm callpoint, summarising actions that should be taken in the event of discovering fire or hearing alarms begin to sound time to become But the familiar with these arrangements is now, and not when fire is licking at the backs of your heels.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY CAR PARK B Take time every so often to read (and regularly reread) one of the Fire Action Notices for your area, so that your reaction to any fire emergency is immediate and correct, and so that your response becomes quite intuitive. The guidance is broadly applicable to any fire emergency affecting any large premises.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Emergency Door Releases Some doors in our buildings are normally kept securely shut, to maintain quarantine barriers for example. If your most direct route to safety is sign-posted as passing through one of those doors, use the green touch-panels on the walls alongside the doors to open them, but most such doors will have automatically released when the fire alarms first began to sound.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Fire Alarm Sounds Be aware of the two different alarm sounds that may be heard: Continuous Sound ( ) Intermittent Sound (- - - - - - ) and the quite different reactions that are expected of you upon hearing each of these

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Continuous alarm People hearing a continuously sounding alarm ( ) should Evacuate Immediately!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY So, when the alarms begin to sound continuously . Get up Get out And stay out!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY And that advice applies every bit as much to fire alarms sounding in other places where you might be, such as shopping malls, cinemas, theatres, concert venues, restaurants, pubs and clubs. anywhere in this country or overseas. Whatever others may or may not do when alarms begin to sound continuously, you should react promptly and correctly to the threat of fire.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Intermittent alarm People hearing a pulsed or intermittently sounding alarm (- - - - -) are being alerted to the possibility that there may be a fire in another part of the building. But the area in which they are hearing an intermittent alarm is not at immediate risk, and people there do not need to evacuate immediately.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Intermittent Alarm Note, however, that intermittent alarms (sometimes known as pulsed alarms) are a feature of the fire alarm systems only in the Chancellor’s Building and Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh on the Edinburgh bioQuarter campus, and not in the QMRI, CRM, EDP or Building Nine, where different building design features dictate different strategies.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Why have two different sounds? Why not just evacuate everyone right away? Well, that is a possibility, and certainly everyone may be required to evacuate right away . But usually it will be one part of the building only that could be at risk. There are three good reasons for this two-stage strategy

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY 1. Building design means that large areas of our buildings can be protected from others by physical distances, wall thicknesses, fire doors etc so that a fire simply could not spread quickly from one area to another .

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY There is no need, therefore, to evacuate hundreds of people from a building, when only a few dozen might conceivably be at risk (even if nothing at all was done to fight a fire). Remember, though, that the Fire & Rescue Service will already be responding to an alarm that has been raised.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY 2. The same building design features allow for the possibility of people with mobility impairment “evacuating horizontally” from an affected upper floor area, avoiding stairwells (which might be a problem for them), so that they can head to an adjacent safe area on the same floor, where the lifts will remain usable, and then descend to ground level and a safe exit from the building.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Note that there is no danger of becoming stuck in a lift if the alarm state escalates as, in those circumstances, the lift will descend to ground level, the doors will open, and people may then exit the lift. Only then will the lift cease to be available for further use. But please reserve lifts for use by those who may have special needs (e.g. mobility impairment).

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY 3. People in areas not at immediate threat, where the alarms are sounding only intermittently (or perhaps not yet sounding at all), can use the extra time available to take steps to prepare for the possibility of an escalation and the need to evacuate

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY For example, you can make your laboratory safer by returning flammable substances to safety cabinets, turning off gas supplies, securing pathogens and radioactive sources, closing doors and windows etc, and prepare for the possibility that the alarm state might escalate to a continuous sound ( ), dictating the need for you to immediately evacuate the area.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY You might also prepare for the possibility of an evacuation by gathering your personal possessions, including house and car keys, purses and wallets, coats and jackets, etc. Either way, do not spend time looking for these when the alarm conditions indicates that you need to evacuate immediately.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY It’s worth noting that if nothing is done to resolve the situation making alarms sound continuously in one part of the building within fifteen minutes, alarms in adjacent areas will begin to sound continuously too, as a precaution, dictating that many more people will need to evacuate.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY And in that context it’s worth knowing that on a good day, with roads relatively free of congestion, it may take 15 minutes for the Fire & Rescue Service to reach us, so the need for a precautionary extended evacuation may well be signalled by pulsing alarms beginning to sound continuously more widely.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Our buildings are large, and sometimes sounds echo within them, possibly making it difficult to tell whether you’re hearing a continuously sounding alarm ( ) or an intermittent alarm (- - - - - - - ), or from what direction. If in doubt, though, always treat it as an immediate threat to your safety, and evacuate right away.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY The fire alarm systems for the Centre for Regenerative Medicine (CRM), Edinburgh Dementia Prevention (EDP) and Building Nine are linked to an automated voice broadcast system, and a spoken message will be repeated on loudspeakers throughout these buildings until the emergency is resolved or the alarms are silenced by fire-fighters. The messages will direct building occupiers to evacuate the premises.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY The Fire & Rescue Service’s initial response to an alarm activated by an automatic sensor may be to send a single fire appliance, and crew of no more than half a dozen fire-fighters to investigate, and it may take as long as fifteen minutes (and maybe even longer) for them to get here, even from the closest fire station. But a small fire can become a widespread raging inferno inside fifteen minutes.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Prior to the first fire crew arriving, the Fire & Rescue Service may not respond with greater numbers unless the automated detection is backed-up by human intelligence confirming that there really is a fire (e.g. A telephoned verbal message saying, “I could smell smoke, and then I saw flames” or “I could feel intense heat through the walls of the room next to where I was working”).

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY So, after raising an alarm Update the emergency services by dialling ‘2222’ from any extension at a place of safety. You will be prompted by a switchboard operator to provide your name, the address of the building, and the precise location and nature of the emergency (Include the post code).

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY ‘2222’? Not ‘222’? While it’s ‘222’ in some places (and it used to be ‘222’ in Little France), most Hospital switchboards now use ‘2222’ as their emergency number. But you need to know also that dialling ‘2222’ won’t result in a medical emergency ‘crash team’ coming into to one of our buildings. To get urgent medical assistance you must dial (9)999.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY The additional information conveyed by a ‘2222’ call will be passed on to the Fire & Rescue Service, which will upgrade the response, maybe even before the first fire-fighters arrive onsite. Yes, it’s possible that several people will phone ‘2222’ . But better that than everyone assuming that someone else has made the call, and it ending up with no-one doing so!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Basically therefore, if you are in possession of any information that you know the Fire & Rescue Service would wish to know, please do not hesitate to make a ‘2222’ call from a place of safety. Other things that fire-fighters would wish to know, well in advance, is whether there are compressed gas cylinders or particularly hazardous substances within the affected area.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Evacuation Leave by the NEAREST ESCAPE ROUTE (closing doors behind you to help trap fire and smoke). Follow white-on-green exit directional signs and white arrows and proceed to the NEAREST EXIT.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Do not delay your evacuation by collecting personal possessions Things are generally replaceable You aren’t!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY The NEAREST ESCAPE ROUTE may well be along a path that you would not normally use to travel through the building but it is one that has been calculated to be the most sensible route to safety from wherever you happen to be when you first hear the fire alarms begin to sound.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY The escape route may well lead you to a fire exit through which you would not normally enter or leave the building either. Do not assume that the best route to safety is the same route that you usually use to enter and leave the building It may well not be.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Yes, but where is my escape route? Look for white-on-green exit directional signs, which point out the best route to the exit closest to where you are standing at the time (wherever you are in the buildings) when alarms start to sound; Proceed in the direction indicated by the arrow pointing towards the nearest exit.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY If you’re in a basement, the arrow is likely to be encouraging you to ascend a stairwell to reach a ground floor exit. If you’re on an upper floor, the arrow will certainly be pointing downward. And every time you turn a corner, you should quickly spot another sign pointing toward the exit closest to where you are at that moment.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY What if the route is obstructed? Yes, that’s possible and it might even be fire that’s obstructing your safe exit. If so, simply turn around, proceed away from the obstruction, and look for signs pointing to the nearest alternative exit. Proceed in the direction indicated by the white arrows towards the nearest alternative exit.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Where is the nearest Fire Exit? Ultimately, the white-on-green signs are pointing you towards the Fire Exit closest to where you are standing at the time (wherever you are in the building). The Final Exit will be signed like this (see left) which, you will note, has no white arrow.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY And what do I do when I reach it? Simply push the bar (or operate an alternative door release mechanism) and proceed through the open doors to a safe location away from the building. Fire Escape Routes and Fire Exit Doors must be kept free from obstructions, and are surveyed regularly by Fire Wardens.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY What if the Fire Exit is obstructed? As is the case for an obstructed fire escape route, simply turn around, proceed away from the obstruction, and look for signs pointing to the nearest alternative exit. Proceed in the direction indicated by the white arrows towards the nearest alternative exit.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY And then ? Proceed directly to the correct Evacuation Assembly Point for your building. Unexplained absences amongst your colleagues and any visitors to your area must be reported to attending fire-fighters as quickly as possible.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Don’t re-enter the building until you are told by fire-fighters that it’s safe to do so (though, given the size of our buildings, be prepared for that to take some time). Do not interpret silenced alarms as indicating that it’s safe to re-enter; fire-fighters do that shortly after arrival simply so that they can explore the building without being deafened.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Where are the Evacuation Assembly Points? For the Chancellor’s Building (including the Anne Rowling Clinic), it’s alongside the westfacing elevation of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh; For the QMRI (except EIF QMRI), it’s in front of the Chancellor’s Building to the left of the main entrance into the building as you face it; For CRM, it’s on the path in front of the building adjacent to the main road; and For EDP it’s alongside Building Nine opposite EDP and well clear of the car park and attending fire appliances.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY For the Edinburgh Imaging Facility (QMRI), located in the basement of the QMRI, the correct Evacuation Assembly Point for staff and patients is in the QMRI car park* to the west of the building, where there will be easier access for ambulances to collect patients who required special transport to arrive for imaging etc. * The QMRI car park is not big enough to accommodate everyone from that building.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY For Building Nine, the correct Evacuation Assembly Point for staff and visitors is in the car park to the south of the building.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY EAP for QMRI EAP for EIF (QMRI) EAP for CB

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY 1E Car Park

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY EAP for CRM

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY EDP Building 9 EAP for EDP EAP for Nine

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Why there? It’s to avoid people clustering around the door of the building from which they’ve just evacuated, which makes it difficult: For those still trying to evacuate to get through them to safety; and For fire-fighters to get through them and into the building; but also because Standing too close may expose you to flying glass exploding outwards from a building that’s on fire.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Is that likely? Remember your high school physics If the building really is on fire, temperatures will be increasing, and so will air pressure, and some of our windows are not intended to be opened So glass may eventually explode outwards, and possibly over quite some distance. You’ll definitely want to avoid wearing glass!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY So, whatever else others may be doing, you should always use the designated Evacuation Assembly Point for your building. You’ll be far safer there than people who have been unwise enough to ignore this advice and remain close to the building from which they have been evacuated.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY If you’re required to evacuate on a cold, rainy or snowy day, no-one is expecting you to have to remain at the Evacuation Assembly Point in discomfort for a prolonged period of time. Once your colleagues know that you have safety evacuated, by all means proceed to shelter in one of the other buildings.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY But please do so discretely, as occupiers of that building will be trying to carry on with business as usual, which may be difficult with up to several hundred people all having conversations at the same time.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Mobility Impairment, etc. It is extremely important that people with any form of mobility impairment, whether temporary or permanent, including people who may not be able to hear fire alarms, should report these facts immediately to their senior laboratory manager so that special arrangements can be made for their protection in the event of a building emergency.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Not all mobility impairments are immediately apparent to a casual observer (e.g. angina or emphysema), and problems may also be associated with hearing or visual impairments. Equally, a mobility impairment may be quite temporary (e.g. a broken leg following a sporting injury, but which has been managed by plastering the broken limb, which would make it difficult for that person to negotiate stairs in the event of the need to evacuate the building).

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Special arrangements for people with mobility impairments, etc. A Personal Emergency Assistance Plan may be required, tailored to the special needs of a person with (e.g.) mobility impairment; Fire Stewards may have special extra responsibilities in such cases; Special communications may be provided; Temporary Waiting Areas (Refuges) certainly exist; but Consider also the possibility of visual and hearing disabilities.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Fire Action Notices for Disabled People are displayed around the buildings; these are essentially mostly for the benefit of short-term visitors, and should be pointed out to them for information shortly after their arrival. For longer-term visitors, and staff and students with special needs, a Personal Emergency Assistance Plan must be prepared. Further information may be obtained from the Health & Safety Manager (contact details for whom are shown towards the end of this presentation).

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY A separate e-training module is available at: http://docstore.mvm.ed.ac.uk/ HealthAndSafety/presentations/ MobilityImpairment.ppt in which special arrangements for people with mobility impairments are described in greater detail.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Fire-fighting There are fire extinguishers all around the building Should I grab one and try putting out the fire?

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY The correct first action is not to reach for a fire extinguisher It is to raise the alarm! Otherwise time spent tackling a fire, and quite possibly failing to bring it under control, will be time that has been wasted in failing to evacuate people to safety.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY It’s also vital that you know and understand that no property or premises is worth even a single human life (not even an injury), and that preservation of life (most certainly including your own) takes primacy, each and every time.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY After raising the alarm and ensuring that the evacuation has begun, and only if you’ve received some training in the correct use of these, and you really, really know what you are doing, maybe you can begin to think about fire-fighting, but

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY ALWAYS: Confirm first that the alarm has been raised, and ensure that people are beginning to evacuate. Ensure that you know the proper use and limitations of use of each type of extinguisher. It’s possible to make a bad situation a whole lot worse by using the wrong type of extinguisher.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY NEVER: Take personal risks or attempt or continue to fight a fire: Desist immediately if your escape route might be cut off by fire or smoke; Stop immediately and evacuate if the fire continues to grow in spite of your efforts; and Don’t even start if there are gas cylinders or flammable or explosive substances nearby.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY If you’re not entirely confident on any of these points DO NOT (never, ever) attempt to tackle the fire. To repeat Your life and safety, and that of others, is infinitely more important than any building or property!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY All the information that you need to know about each type of fire extinguisher is written onto the extinguisher itself (and sometimes also displayed on the wall where it is mounted). But the time to learn about this stuff for the first time is not when a fire has broken out. If you don’t already know, don’t take a risk Get Up, Get Out, and Stay Out!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY And it is critically important to understand that fire extinguishers are NOT provided for you (or anyone else) to use them as door stops NEVER EVER!

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY While it is not unreasonable to wedge open a fire door – temporarily – while you move materials into or out of a room, for example – always remove the wedge as soon as you have finished moving the materials.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Signage and Information Green signs draw attention to safety guidance, including signs related to fire safety.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Red signs draw attention to a prohibition and/or relate to fire safety.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Yellow signs draw attention to warning, which may include specific fire risks.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Monitoring Fire Safety Arrangements for University buildings on the Edinburgh bioQuarter campus are monitored by appointed Fire Wardens who conduct weekly checks, and also through programmes of inspections led by the University’s Fire Safety Unit. An annual fire drill is held for each building.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Fire Alarm Tests Alarms are tested as follows: QMRI – Every Wednesday at 11:00 Chancellor’s Building – Every Friday at 10:00 CRM – Every Friday at 10:00 NINE – Every Friday at 10:00 EDP – Every Wednesday at 09:15 Be alert to sudden noise and automatically closing doors.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Fire Drills Emergency arrangements, including actual evacuation of buildings, is practised annually within the University’s larger estate, with buildings on the Edinburgh bioQuarter campus typically being subject to drills in the autumn of each year.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Make it your most urgent priority now to: Familiarise yourself with the location of Fire Alarm Call Points, particularly in the areas where you will be working most often; Read a Fire Action Notice; Know the location of Fire Escape Routes and Fire Exits from the areas where you work.

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Further Information Section 5 - Fire Procedures Section 6 – Mobility impairment and buildings emergencies http://www.ed.ac.uk/schools-departments/ medicine-vet-medicine/staff-students/staff/ health-and-safety/manual

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Further Information UofE’s Fire Safety Unit, 2nd Floor, Charles Stewart House, 9-16 Chambers Street, Edinburgh EH1 1HT Tel: 650 8189 Email: [email protected]

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY Lindsay Murray Health & Safety Manager, The University of Edinburgh, College of Medicine & Veterinary Medicine (Edinburgh bioQuarter Campus) Room SU225, Chancellor’s Building Ext: 26390 [email protected] CM&VM @ EbQ

HEALTH & SAFETY @ EbQ FIRE SAFETY You have now completed this online training package summarising key aspects of fire safety arrangements for UofE buildings on the EbQ campus. Please attend a formal presentation as soon as you can. Dates and venues will be advertised. CM&VM @ EbQ Thank you

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