Fire Service launches inspections to prevent another major city blaze

In the wake of multiple destructive commercial fire incidents over recent years, the Saint Lucia Fire Service has launched a proactive new initiative to strengthen fire prevention across the capital city of Castries, kicking off with systematic inspections of every commercial operation in the area.

On Wednesday, inspection teams from the agency’s Fire Prevention and Investigation Department began their on-site checks, visiting businesses across the city to verify whether each operation meets the mandatory fire safety standards required for legal operation. Department officials emphasized that this initial round of checks is only the opening phase of a long-term campaign to guarantee all commercial properties in Castries are equipped to prevent, respond to, and contain fire emergencies.

Assistant Divisional Officer Owen Cazaubon explained that the fire service is undergoing a key strategic shift: moving beyond its traditional role of responding to emergencies after they break out to prioritizing proactive prevention that stops dangerous incidents from occurring in the first place.

“Starting today, we are working our way through every business in the city, and this effort will continue for weeks after the initial launch,” Cazaubon outlined. “Our core goal is to make sure no commercial operation opens or operates without meeting full national safety standards.”

Under existing Saint Lucian legislation, all commercial businesses are legally required to obtain a valid fire safety clearance certificate before opening to the public. While regulatory rules place the onus on business owners to request official inspections, Cazaubon noted the fire service is now taking a proactive, direct approach by sending teams out to properties across Castries instead of waiting for requests from owners.

Notably, the agency has stressed that immediate penalties are not the goal for businesses found to have safety gaps. Instead, officials say their top priority is collaborating with property and business owners to correct hazards and upgrade safety infrastructure.

“The whole point of this initiative is to work with owners to get their properties up to the required standard, so they can operate without putting staff, customers, and the surrounding community at risk,” Cazaubon explained.

This new city-wide safety push comes in response to several major commercial fires that have highlighted the growing risk in Castries’ dense urban layout. These include a large blaze at the Computer World store earlier this year, and the devastating 2019 fire that destroyed the Adjodha Building. Both incidents exposed how quickly fire can spread across the city’s tightly packed cluster of closely situated buildings.

Cazaubon warned that Castries’ unique urban layout means even a small, contained blaze can escalate into a city-wide disaster if it is not prevented or contained early. “We are working to avoid a catastrophic conflagration, to prevent another large-scale disaster on the scale of the 1948 Great Castries Fire from happening again,” he said, referencing one of the worst fire disasters in the island nation’s modern history.

Beyond commercial property inspections, the Saint Lucia Fire Service has issued a public reminder to motorists across the city: drivers must avoid parking vehicles over fire hydrants, as clear, unobstructed access to these water sources is critical for firefighters to quickly respond to and contain emergencies when they do occur.