DENA POTTER
Associated Press Writer

RICHMOND, Va. — Firefighters and safety advocates say they could triumph over the "last bastion of America's fire problem" — the family home — if officials require sprinklers in every new home.

Country singer and sausage icon, Jimmy Dean, looks over sprinklers that will be installed in his home in Varina, Va., Friday, Aug. 28, 2009. Dean's home built in 1922 was destroyed by fire earlier this year. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

State Fire Marshall Willie Shelton, at podium, testifies in Richmond, Va., Monday, July 27, 2009 during a public hearing before the Virginia Board of Housing and Community Development on a new mandate that requires all new one and two family homes to have sprinkler systems. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

Virginia Fire Marshall, Willie Shelton, center, listens to testimony during a public hearing before the Virginia Board of Housing and Community Development in Richmond, Va. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

However, homebuilders warn it's not that simple and could prove a risky decision during a recession, adding thousands to the cost of homes as the housing market starts to recover.

State and local officials are now wrestling over whether to adopt building codes that would require sprinklers in every new home and townhome starting in 2011 amid intense lobbying from both sides.

The sprinkler debate reached its apex last September when the International Code Council, which sets the minimum safety requirements typically used in 48 states and the District of Columbia, approved the mandate.

The proposal had failed for years, but a pro-sprinkler group paid the way for firefighters and code officials to attend the meeting in Minneapolis, where they voted to adopt the mandate. Homebuilders, who previously paid for anti-sprinkler voting members to attend, cried foul and are trying to reverse the decision.

"We stand on the verge of actually making a significant difference," said Ronny Coleman, a former California fire marshal who pushed through the nation's first sprinkler mandate in San Clemente in the late 1970s and founded the group fighting for the mandate.

He called homes the "last bastion of America's fire problem," where 80 percent of fires occur. Nationwide, about 3,000 people die in home fires each year — but fewer than 2 percent of homes have sprinklers.

There is no uniform method of adopting the residential building codes. In seven states, it's left up to local governments. In others, either the legislature, housing board or state code official makes the call.

The Minnesota-based Residential Fire Safety Institute says 400 localities have passed sprinkler mandates, several going back decades.

Since last September, regulators in Pennsylvania and New Jersey have tentatively approved the mandate. Michigan and Virginia are leaning toward rejecting the codes, but final decisions aren't expected for months.

Meanwhile, homebuilders — traditionally big political donors — have persuaded legislators in more than a dozen states to push bills prohibiting localities from requiring sprinklers. Idaho, North Dakota, Missouri and Texas have approved the bans.

Supporters argue sprinklers save property and lives, including those of firefighters who are at a higher risk in new homes built of lightweight, fast-burning materials. This year, 18 firefighters have died fighting structure fires. Supporters also argue the vast majority of fires are quickly contained by only one sprinkler.

The cost, which can average up to $2.66 per square foot, can be less expensive than cosmetic enhancements like granite countertops or whirlpool tubs. And insurers typically offer discounts between 5 to 15 percent for homes with sprinklers, according to the American Insurance Association.

"Unfortunately, safety doesn't sell," said Steve Muncy, president of the Texas-based American Fire Sprinkler Association.

In Richmond, Va., homebuilders estimate it would cost more than $5,800 to install sprinklers in a 2,000-square-foot home. Many say that would harm lower-income home buyers.

"We don't oppose fire sprinklers, we just want to make sure we aren't leaving folks in those crowded, substandard, really dangerous houses," said John Snook with Habitat for Humanity International, which built or repaired homes for more than 6,100 families last year.

Many say the cost is worth it.

Fire gutted Jimmy Dean's 4,000-square-foot home outside Richmond earlier this year. He doesn't think sprinklers should be required, but he said it's well worth the $14,000 to install sprinklers in his rebuilt home.

"I hope somebody will look into it and try to stave off what we had to do, because if I said it didn't hurt I'd be lying," said Dean, 81, best known for his 1961 country song "Big Bad John" and the sausage brand he sold years ago.

Others argue smoke detectors are less expensive and just as effective in saving lives. A 2008 study published by the National Fire Protection Association says the chances of surviving a fire with working smoke alarms was 99.45 percent.

"When you continue to have these arbitrary requirements that have significant cost increase with no cost benefit, that's essentially making it to where people can't afford the home," said Steve Orlowski with the Washington-based National Association of Home Builders.

Smoke alarms aren't always enough, said Kaaran Mann, whose 18-year-old daughter Lauren Mahon was among seven South Carolina college students who died in a 2007 fire at a beach house in Ocean Isle Beach, N.C.

Six students survived, and several said a smoke alarm woke them with only moments left to escape.

Mann, of Greenville, S.C., has since become an advocate for requiring them in college dorms and homes.

"If people are told these things do not all go off at once, they do not flood your home just because you burn the bacon ... it's an investment I think people would be more than willing to pay," she said.


Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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Maryland has had a law for years that new homes will have sprinklers and alot of them have done their job and saved homeowers their property and insurance cost. Builders just are looking for anyway to cut corners so they don't have to pay for something extra.
With the types of building materials they are using I wouldn't buy any house unless it has sprinklers.
Virginia has already had one firefighter killed because of no sprinklers in a new house.
I'll speak some blasphemy here and offer that residential sprinklers shouldn't be automatic for all new homes, rather use the "carrot" approach: Homes over a certain square footage (let's say 2,000 for an arbitrary number), or those with TJI's of any kind, or those with two-story great rooms or entry ways should have them. However, a "basic" 1400 square foot house with nominal lumber should not.

Why? Because there are other issues that are causing problems.

I do believe all homes should have 1/2" type-x drywall -- this would cost about $500 more for a typical house, and would be a huge benefit for these homes -- which are now REQUIRED to build to a "unusually tight construction" standard, which means there is much less air flowing out of the house. The fire-rated drywall would keep room and contents fires to the room of origin. If we continue to force hard-wired smoke detectors that connect to a central station (which I also believe to be more important, as it will get us there faster), this will allow us to do our job.

The fundamental problem with codes is that the homes that are built to the ICC standard are statistically insignificant. Fires happen in pre-existing homes (statistically speaking), and will for another few decades before we see how the stricter standards will apply.

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