Now before this gets blown out of proportion,
I am not upset, outraged or even mildly annoyed. But this is another "curious" question. Its raining here..again. I went to Holyoke Mall which is a three level, long, large, crowded mall. I was in the lower level when the fire alarm activated. Lights were flashing and the noises was quite loud. Shoppers and workers continued to go about their business like there was nothing unusual. Since I have never been in a mall when the fire alarms activated, I decided that I had seen everything that I wanted to see on the lower level and took the stairs up to the main level, although people were still using the elevator. The alarm continued to sound, with all the bells and whistles for a full 15 minutes. I happened to ask a clerk why it was 'business as usual' and what exactly does a fire alarm mean at Holyoke Mall? She said that sometimes the alarm trips and security goes to the location and determines if it is an actual emergency and if it is an actual emergency, then someone comes on the PA and tells everyone to evacuate the mall.
If that is the procedure, why not have a silent alarm at a manned security location, have someone investigate and then sound the general alarm along with voice directions? I used to work in a high rise in Hartford. When the alarm went off, regardless of the reason, ALL employees had to evacuate no matter what. Shouldn't that be the procedure for any building?
I am not upset, outraged or even mildly annoyed. But this is another "curious" question. Its raining here..again. I went to Holyoke Mall which is a three level, long, large, crowded mall. I was in the lower level when the fire alarm activated. Lights were flashing and the noises was quite loud. Shoppers and workers continued to go about their business like there was nothing unusual. Since I have never been in a mall when the fire alarms activated, I decided that I had seen everything that I wanted to see on the lower level and took the stairs up to the main level, although people were still using the elevator. The alarm continued to sound, with all the bells and whistles for a full 15 minutes. I happened to ask a clerk why it was 'business as usual' and what exactly does a fire alarm mean at Holyoke Mall? She said that sometimes the alarm trips and security goes to the location and determines if it is an actual emergency and if it is an actual emergency, then someone comes on the PA and tells everyone to evacuate the mall.
If that is the procedure, why not have a silent alarm at a manned security location, have someone investigate and then sound the general alarm along with voice directions? I used to work in a high rise in Hartford. When the alarm went off, regardless of the reason, ALL employees had to evacuate no matter what. Shouldn't that be the procedure for any building?
I think you should get only so many false alarms before it is on your dime! Maybe then they would update the system to something that makes sense. He was a very nice man and explained the frustration of alarms going off in elderly high rises where the people only do NOT evacuate but they sometimes won't open the door to the fire dept. We had a nice chat, so now I know the answer to my question. 