FIRE SAFETY TIPS
Fire Safety
Fire spreads quickly. If fire breaks out in your home, there is no time to gather valuables or make a phone call. In just two minutes, a fire can become life threatening. In five minutes, your home can be up in flames. Be prepared for a fire before it starts
Prepare for a fire
- Buy and install smoke alarms that use 10-year, sealed lithium-ion batteries.
- Place smoke alarms on every level of your home (including the basement), outside bedrooms, at the top of open stairways, and at the bottom of stairways that are closed in between two walls.
- Test smoke alarms once a month and replace the alarms every 10 years.
- Plan and review your home escape routes with your family. Practice getting out of each room.
- Check that windows are not nailed or painted shut. If you have security gratings or burglar bars on windows, make sure they have a fire safety opening feature and can be easily opened from the inside.
- Think about getting escape ladders if your home has more than one level.
- Teach your family to stay low to the floor (where the air is safer) when getting away from a fire.
- Put A-B-C-type fire extinguishers in your home and teach family members how to use them.
- Put heaters at least three feet away from anything that could catch fire. Be very careful when using temporary heating sources like space heaters.
- Close your bedroom door at night. It lessens the effects of toxic smoke and heat, and helps stop the spread of flames.
- Make sure your home is insured. If you rent, consider buying renter’s insurance.
Survive a fire
Heat and smoke from fire can be more dangerous than the flames. Fire produces poisonous gases that make you confused and sleepy. These steps can help you survive an active fire:
- If a smoke detector goes off or if you notice a fire, stay calm. Get out as quickly as possible and stay out.
- Don’t try to fight a major fire.
- If your clothes catch on fire, stop where you are, drop to the ground, and roll over and back to smother the flames.
- Review your high-rise evacuation plan if you work in a high-rise office building. If there’s a fire, don’t use the elevator. If there’s smoke in the hallway, go back to your apartment or office and call 911 for instructions.
- Before opening a door, feel it with the back of your hand. If it’s hot, find another way out.
- Find another way out if you see smoke under the door,
- Stay as close to the floor as possible. Smoke and heat rise and the air is clearer and cooler near the floor.
- Close all doors behind you.
- Don’t stop to get anything.
- Don’t use elevators.
- Call 911 from a safe place such as a neighbor’s house.
- Stay near a window and close to the floor if you cannot get out of a room. Close the door and stuff the bottom with a towel to keep out smoke.
- Signal for help by waving a cloth or sheet outside the window, if you can.