Protect Your Home From Fire--Fire Safety Tips
Unlike hurricanes or earthquakes, fire is one threat that homeowners
can significantly reduce through routine maintenance and good
safety habits. There are several steps you can take inside and
outside your home to reduce the chance of fire.
Many of the safety precautions inside the home are common sense,
such as not leaving space heaters unattended and not overloading
extension cords. In addition, remember to throw out worn extension
cords and keep a fire extinguisher in the kitchen in case your
culinary masterpiece suddenly becomes an unexpected flambe'.
As you might expect, smoking in bed is a mistake. So is leaving
newspapers and other flammables near the fireplace, stove or space
heater. Of course, one of the best tips is to keep and maintain
smoke detectors on every level of your home. Check the batteries
often and replace them as needed; remember, a smoke detector with
a dead battery won't do any good.
There are also many things you can do outside your home to reduce
the chance of fire. Cap chimneys and stovepipes with spark-arresting
screens. Keep dry grass cut short, and stack firewood as far away
as possible from heated exterior walls. Clear vegetation and other
flammable materials from beneath decks. Apply a fire retardant
material to your roof, or consider replacing it with a nonflammable
roof. And just in case the worst happens, make sure your address
is clearly visible. The last thing you want if your bedroom or
kitchen is on fire would be a fire truck speeding by, lost because
he can't find your address.
One final important piece of advice-develop a plan in
case of a fire does happen, and make sure all family members know
how to escape the house and have a designated meeting place. You
can always buy a new home or TV, but you can't replace a life.
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