A Northland advocate is behind a campaign to get deaf-friendly fire alarms installed in public buildings, after a deaf university student was left behind during a drill.
Whangarei's Kim Robinson, chairman of Deaf Action New Zealand, is driving the petition to make visual fire alarms - similar to what many deaf people have in their homes - mandatory in public buildings.
The idea was sparked when University of Auckland student and Deaf Action member Dean Buckley was left behind during a fire drill on campus on August 1. Mr Buckley, 21, did not know there was an evacuation going on until a fire warden approached him, after everyone else had exited the building.
"Dean's experience was scary for him. Sadly, it is not unusual," Mr Robinson said.
Visual fire and smoke alarms emitted a strobe-light style flash. Home versions often had a vibration feature that could shake a mattress and wake a sleeping person.