Making the fire safety plan useful after the first draft
In Fort McMurray, fire safety plan work is usually most valuable when the building has changed faster than the document has. That is a common problem across remote operations support offices, workforce accommodations, healthcare buildings, municipal facilities, and logistics sites, where rotating staff, contracted services, and long gaps between visits can pull procedures out of sync with reality.
That support is especially helpful when tenant turnover, staffing changes, contractor activity, or building modifications have outpaced the written procedures.
The practical gains a better plan should create
- A document structure that is easier to review and update when conditions change again
- Fewer gaps around who owns critical actions before, during, and after an incident
- More confidence that the plan will still make sense under pressure
- Clearer alarm response roles for supervisors, staff, tenants, contractors, or public-facing teams
If the written plan no longer matches the way your Fort McMurray site operates, contact Liberty Fire to review what needs to be tightened.