Reports of evacuation is due to people getting overly sensitive whenever something explosive is found. The only sensitivity comes from huge amounts of metal picrate accumulation. Picrates are poor initiators of secondary explosives, and picric acid is resistant to initiation, so small picrate impurities will not set off picric acid. Sublimation is usually only a problem industrially on massive scales. Furthermore, iron picrate exists as an octahydrate when formed under ambient conditions and is not sensitive. Only if it were dehydrated (requiring a fire) would the sensitive anhydrous salt be formed. Touching a metal cabinet covered in iron picrate would not set it off. Only certain picrates are anhydrous and as such sensitive, and these are not common contaminants or structural metals. ie lead, silver.
Some 2kg drop hammer heights for picric acid, picrates, and other explosives.
Mercury Fulminate 2"
Tetryl 8"
TNT 14"
Picric Acid 14"
Copper Picrate 12"
Zinc Picrate 12"
Ferrous Picrate 14"