NFPA 232 standard update.

PositionNational Fire Protection Association

The hotly contested debate about continuing to include records center compartmentation in the upcoming revision of the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) NFPA 232 Standard for the Protection of Records 2000 Edition took two surprising twists late last month.

As explained in the recent Information Management Journal article "Records Under Fire" (November/ December 2002), NFPA 232 defines compartmentation as "the subdivision of a building into relatively small areas so that fire or smoke can be confined to the room or section in which it originates." It requires that firewalls separate storage compartments and that in records centers, the maximum storage volume of records should not exceed 250,000 cubic feet in a single compartment.

The NFPA technical committee (TC) working on the revision of the 2000 standard had at one point entertained a motion to remove compartmentation from the standard. In the end, however, the TC decided by an 11-7 vote during its fall meeting to keep compartmentation. The first surprising turn occurred when the vote was sent out for ratification by a letter ballot, as required by NFPA. The letter ballot for the standard did not pass, as the vote was evenly split, 12-12, which meant that compartmentation would not be included in the revised standard.

The second surprise occurred during the subsequent NFPA meeting in Atlanta on November 20, when the NFPA accepted a new motion to reinstate compartmentation. During the discussion about the new motion, Diane Carlisle, CRM, ARMA International's director of professional resources and TC representative, addressed meeting attendees, stating that ARMA supports compartmentation in the standard.

All is not settled, however. NFPA rules require that even though...

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