Seems Charlotte Fire Department and the Mecklenburg County Fire Marshal have lost their collective minds over garden gnomes.
Obviously, everyone should be aware of fire safety. Overcrowded restaurants and bars, movie theaters with blocked exits or sprinkler systems that are uninspected, and fire extinguishers that have not been serviced. Homeless camps with open fires and space heaters in homes.
All should be priority concerns
Then there are apartments with charcoal grills on balconies or generators in garages which are clearly critical issues affecting fire safety.
But CFD and the Mecklenburg Fire Marshal have taken these concerns to a new level - garden gnomes.
Bill Parsons lost his wife last year; she loved garden gnomes. The only trouble is when they moved into a retirement community in Matthews they gave up their garden, trading their Providence Plantation home on a well-manicured 1 acre lot for a two bedroom condo in an upscale retirement community.
The move into the Matthews retirement community was a hard choice but as 87-year-old Bill says it was time.
Well, apparently Charlotte Fire noticed that old people like to "fancy up" the area outside of their apartment home doors with just a little something extra. In most cases it's a personal memento or potted plant. Some have Christmas decorations, wreaths, a tiny Santa, or glitter reindeer.
Some have sundials, or small benches, others have small tables with flowers. A quick survey of one building determined that every one of 18 doors in the 3-story building had some small momento, a personal touch added to the entrance of each senior's home.
But these small items are apparently enough to cause a VIOLATION and the Mecklenburg County Fire Marshal is threatening fines and jail time for seniors who violate the rules.
(Wait until they find out people in retirement communities feed squirrels.)
Section 1031 of the Code also prohibits storage of contents within the means of egress because this creates obstructions or impediments to the building’s designed egress, in case of fire or other emergency. If these furnishings, fixtures, or other contents were not originally approved as part of the design package for these buildings, then these items must be removed from the common areas, therefore I would greatly appreciate if you can advise the residents of the complex that placing or keeping furniture, fixtures, and/or other contents within the common areas of these buildings violates the fire code.