Featured Post

Alternate Fire Evacuation

When stairs are required for emergency exit, those persons unable to use stairs need to have a special fire emergency plan. The following fire evacuation guidelines are provided for individuals in buildings which do not have designated areas of evacuation assistance. Non-residential In the event that...

Read More

Fire Safety Tips: Smoke Alarms

Posted by Fire Safety | Posted in Fire Safety Tips | Posted on 18-10-2008

Tags: ,

0

Fire injuries and deaths can be prevented. A few easy steps can save your life!

  • Install a smoke alarm on every floor of your home, even the basement.
  • Install a smoke alarm outside every sleeping area. Ideally, install smoke alarms in every sleeping area, too.
  • Test smoke alarms monthly.
  • Change the batteries at least once a year-maybe at Daylight Savings Time or on your birthday.
  • Teach children what your smoke alarm sounds like and what to do if they hear it-get out and crawl low under smoke.
  • Never disable a smoke alarm (like for cooking smoke). Consider alarms with hush buttons.
  • Never remove a smoke alarm battery for some other use, like a radio or video game.
  • Keep smoke alarms clean. Vacuum them often.
  • Replace smoke alarms after 10 years.
  • Choose smoke alarms that come with 10-year batteries.

Important

The United States Fire Administration recommends the installation of both ionization and photoelectric or dual sensor smoke alarms. For extra safety, install smoke alarms both inside and outside sleeping areas.

Smoke Alarm Facts

  • Having a working smoke alarm cuts the risk of dying in a home fire in half.
  • Nine out of 10 homes have smoke alarms, but millions of those alarms do not work.
  • Missing or dead batteries are the main causes of non-working smoke alarms.
  • More than 3 out of 5 home fire deaths occur in homes with no smoke alarms or no working smoke alarms.

Write a comment