Home Safety
Fires don't just happen. There are a lot of measures you can take
to help ensure that a fire doesn’t start. Here are a few important
things you can do:
- Install a smoke detector on every level of your home and in
the garage. Check it monthly and replace the batteries when necessary.
- Have an electrician look at the wiring in your house. Make sure
circuits are not overloaded.
- Have all alternative heating units, such as wood stoves and
space heaters, checked by an expert.
- Be sure to maintain at least 3' of clearance from any alternative
heating units and all flammable materials such as cardboard boxes,
curtains, or furniture.
- Keep matches and lighters out of reach and away from children.
- Never smoke in bed.
- Be aware of the dangers from smoking in overstuffed furniture.
- No house can be 100 percent fire proof. Fire officials emphasize
there are some basic things you should do to prepare for a fire.
Determine at least two ways to escape from every room in
your home.
- Never lock any door from the inside such that finding a key
is required to open it in an emergency.
- Purchase an approved chain ladder to use to climb out of rooms
above the first floor, and practice using it.
- Select a location where everyone could meet after escaping the
house.
- Discuss what you would do about family pets in the event of
a fire. Never go back into a fire to rescue a pet.
- Know how to call for emergency assistance. First get everyone
out, then call from a neighbor's or your cell phone! Call 911
and stay on the line to give complete directions. While you are
talking to one dispatcher, another will be dispatching us. We
need as much information as we can get from you, so do not hang
up until you are told to do so.
When fire strikes:
- Crawl low under smoke to escape. This should be practiced beforehand
to prepare you for an actual fire.
- Close the door when you exit a room, and feel closed doors before
you enter a room. A hot door or doorknob usually means the room
is on fire.
- If your clothes are on fire, drop to the floor and roll to smother
and put out the flames.
- Get everyone out quickly, and then call for emergency assistance.
- Know how to give accurate directions to your house when you
call for assistance.
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