Rep. Noor, Sen. Dziedzic Call for Sprinklers in High-Rise Buildings
St. Paul, Minnesota — Today, State Representative Mohamud Noor (DFL – Minneapolis), Senator Kari Dziedzic (DFL – Minneapolis), Housing Finance and Policy Chair Alice Hausman (DFL – St. Paul), family member of fire victims Hassanen Mohamed, and former State Fire Marshall Tom Brace presented legislation to require automatic sprinkler systems in nearly all existing high-rise buildings in response to a fatal fire in the Cedar High Apartments last November.
“I am proud to be a co-author of the 2020 Sprinkler Bill. It will protect the lives and safety of people living in public housing across the state,” Sen. Dziedzic said. “These critical life safety maintenance repairs and upgrades will prevent future fire tragedies so no one else dies.”
The upper floors of the 25-story Cedar High Apartments where the fire occurred on November 25th did not have sprinkler systems installed. Five people lost their lives in the fire.
The legislation applies to all buildings 75 feet or higher and would require fully-operational sprinklers by August 1, 2032.
In addition to a Capital Investment request, Rep. Noor and Sen. Dziedzic have been working with partners at the local and federal level to provide funding to install the sprinklers. On December 18, 2019, U.S. Senators Tina Smith and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) introduced legislation—the Public Housing Fire Safety Act—creating a program to provide support to public housing authorities who wish to retrofit older high-rise apartment buildings with sprinkler systems. U.S. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar has requested the Department of Housing and Urban Development determine how many facilities are currently exempted from requirements, and how much it would cost to install them.
The 1979 Uniform Building Code requires all new government-owned buildings to comply with similar standards. However, up to 40 Minnesota buildings built before 1979 still do not have sprinkler systems.
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