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Archive for September, 2009
Fire Prevention Week Begins October 4, 2009
Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

“Stay Fire Smart! Don’t Get Burned” is the theme for Fire Prevention Week 2009. NFPA’s annual week long awareness week focuses on burn awareness and prevention, as well as keeping homes safe from the leading causes of home fires.

Fire Prevention Week was established to commemorate the Great Chicago Fire, the tragic 1871 conflagration that killed more than 250 people, left 100,000 homeless, destroyed more than 17,400 structures, and burned more than 2,000 acres. The fire began on October 8, but continued into and did most of its damage on October 9, 1871.

On the 40th anniversary of the Great Chicago Fire, the Fire Marshals Assn. of North America (today known as the International Fire Marshals Association), decided that the anniversary of the Great Chicago Fire should henceforth be observed not with festivities, but in a way that would keep the public informed about the importance of fire prevention. In 1920, President Woodrow Wilson issued the first National Fire Prevention Day proclamation, and since 1922, Fire Prevention Week has been observed on the Sunday through Saturday period in which October 9 falls.

Fire prevention programs and educational events are available across the country during this campaign. Be sure to visit your local Fire Department during Fire Prevention Week. Fire Departments across the country will be hosting free Open Houses designed to welcome the public and give local citizens the opportunity to meet their local firefighters, ask questions, get a hands on look inside the station, trucks as well as learn more about the various aspects of the fire service.

Please educate yourself on Kitchen, Electrical and Bath Safety – focusing on Burn Prevention! Know the dangers of fire and the importance of sprinklers, smoke alarms and candle/cooking/smoking safety now – practice your escape routes in the event of a fire.  Before winter arrives, check your home for new batteries in your smoke alarms! Don’t forget to practice safety and have fun this fall!

Source: NFPA, The National Fire Protection Association – The authority on fire, electrical and burn safety. (To learn more about fire Prevention Week visit: Eight decades of Fire Prevention.)


Firefighters – Traditional, Adventurous, Inspired
Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Firefighters – Traditional, Adventurous, Inspired

No matter what city, town, or village you live in, you are protected by a firefighter. Firefighters have been around in the United States since the 1700’s. Over the years, firefighting has changed techniques and technology to what is has evolved into today. No matter where you go, there are firefighters on the ready – prepared to respond and help a nameless person out of a small personal crisis or by working on chaotic disasters that helps out many. Regardless of the emergency, firefighters have taken the oath to help people.

Men and women who become firefighters become one for one of many reasons. Family tradition is alive and well in many departments throughout this country. You will walk into any firehouse and find that somewhere in the department there are fathers, son, mothers, brothers, and sisters working at the same department or another one down the street. Similar to farming, this career usually stays within family blood lines.

Adrenaline seekers are another common group of firefighters. These firefighters are the ones that enjoy learning rescue techniques; hanging from a rope, in a fast moving river, in a collapsed building, and in a pond full of ice. Each type of rescue has its own set of threats that creates dangerous situations that these types of firefighters live for.

burninghouse

Another group is the inspired. This group has been in a precarious situation where firefighters responded and save their day. They witnessed firsthand how firefighters work together to get a job done. In doing so, they realized that they enjoyed that type of work and have been inspired to pay that forward to the next person needing firefighter’s assistance.

Through it all, these men and women come together with a vast array of reasons but the common denominator for becoming a firefighter is knowing that at any moment a citizen of their community will need their help and helping people is the bottom line to what firefighters do.

Guest Author: Captain Bill Piwtorak; Liberty Township Fire Department


“Beautiful World” Tribute to Police, Fire and EMS
Monday, September 21st, 2009

Woodbury Public Safety Department in Minnesota produced a great tribute video that recognizes the real world that the Police, Fire and EMS have to work in but also the need to have a positive outlook on things.  The sound track “Beautiful World” was performed (Lyrics and Instruments) by the Public Safety Director Lee Vague and his 11-year old son Grant (who has an amazing voice!), the video was created by Firefighter Paramedic Jason Arney-O’Neil and Paramedic, John Dillon.

For more video selections, please visit FlashoverTV – the first functioning video community website for fire rescue professionals.


College students must remember fire safety on campus!
Thursday, September 17th, 2009

In 2003-2004, U.S. fire departments responded to an estimated annual average of 3, 570 structure fires in dormitories, fraternities, and sororities that resulted in 7 civilian deaths and 54 civilian fire injuries. For many students, college will be their first time living away from home, as they make new fiends and establish new routines. A number of factors include candle use, cooking, smoking and misuse of electrical appliances can heighten the risk of fire in any campus environment.

College students living away from home should take a few minutes to make sure they are living in a fire-safe environment by following these safety tips:

  • Look for housing equipped with an automatic fire sprinkler system when choosing a dorm or off-campus housing.
  • Make sure your dormitory or apartment has smoke alarms inside each bedroom, outside every sleeping area and on each level. For the best protection, all smoke alarms should be interconnected so that when one sounds they all sound.
  • Test all smoke alarms at least monthly.
  • Never remove batteries or disable the alarm.
  • Learn the building’s evacuation plan and practice all drills as if they were the real thing.
  • If living off campus, have a fire escape plan with two ways out of every room.
  • During a power outage, use a flashlight not candles.
  • Burn candles only if the school permits their use. A candle is an open flame and should be placed away from anything that can burn. NEVER leave a candle unattended. Blow it out when leaving the room or going to sleep. (Consider this candle solution: Glade® Wisp Flameless Candle)
  • Cook only where it is permitted.
  • Stay in the kitchen when cooking. Up to 75 percent of all structure fires involve cooking equipment.
  • Cook only when you are alert, not sleepy or drowsy from medicine or alcohol.
  • If you smoke, smoke outside and only where it’s permitted. Don’t smoke in bed or when you’ve been driving or are drowsy.
  • Check the school’s rules before using any electrical appliances.
  • Use a surge protector for the computer and plug the protector directly into an outlet.

Guest Columnist, Fire Marshal Alan Perkins of the Washington Township Fire Department.

News Update:  Today, September 17, 2009, “marks the fifth anniversary of National Campus Fire Safety Month with the goal of having more schools, communities, students and parents aware of the dangers of fire and engaged in learning what they can do to make sure tragedy does not strike.” (source: Ed Comeau, Publisher, Campus Firewatch www.campus-firewatch.com.) For more information on National Campus Fire Safety Month can also be found at www.CampusFireSafetyMonth.org.


The Fireman “Sing the Changes”
Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Stumbling through key words online leads me to find some fun and inspiring works of art – just by simply googling “FIRE“. Here’s a beautiful song to cheer you up mid-week! “Sing the Changes” is the new video from The Fireman Music produced by Paul McCartney & Youth from their new album, Electric Arguments.

Enjoy the rest of the week – “Feel the choir, feel the thunder/Every ladder leads to heaven/Sing the praises as you’re sleeping/Feel the sense of childlike wonder.”

Live Safe!


There’s No such thing as a False Alarm: Practice Fire Drill Tips
Monday, September 14th, 2009

Did you know there are more than 6,000 false alarms go off in the United States everyday?

This past summer my kids set off the fire alarm in our home due to too much smoke in the shower.  The local fire department was dispatched.  Thankfully, everyone was safe.  The kids were confused that smoke in the shower could impact the detector. It turned out to be a great teaching moment for my children to take alarms seriously. Please help your family and those you know live safe by teaching them to apply good judgement and treat alarms seriously. Also, please share with them the importance of practicing home Fire Drills.

WATCH THIS VIDEO PSA on the importance of False Alarms!

Fire Drills—How, When  Tips

Do you routinely practice home fire drills? Here’s a quick and easy guide to get you started:

1) Where: Answer–everywhere. Each month, on a set day of the month, pick a new location to practice evacuating from until you’ve covered the entire house, then start over.

2) How: From the room you are practicing from, consider the following: Rescue: Who/what should you rescue from this room if it is the one you must get out of? Which doorway? Which window? What if one or the other is blocked? Use a red towel to symbolize the fire line, and then have your family figure out a safe escape. Alert: Where in this room can they find a way to alert the rest of the family? The fire department? Contain: What can they use in this room to try to contain the fire? Where is the closest extinguisher? Are there sprinklers? Smoke alarms? What do they sound like from that room? Extinguish: Is it possible?

3) When: Monthly…from at least one room in the house. Also, try it in the middle of the night at least twice a year…who does the smoke alarm wake up? Who sleeps through? Whose job is it to be whose buddy?

4) Have a meeting place outside the home, safely away from the building. Where is it? What do you do if someone is not there? Remind the family that no one goes back in…the fire department is trained to do this and will as soon as they arrive…so stay together.

These are the basics. For more info, read the book!

Guest Author: Candace A. Quinn, “I Survived a House Fire…I wish my stuff had!”



Live Burn Show’s Fire’s Fury
Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

College students across the United States are being welcomed into their new residence halls. In recognition of National Campus Fire Safety month, Fire Safety and Emergency Management Administrators are preparing their students on how to keep themselves safe while living in the residence halls.  Just released, here is a visual of an “in-your-face” demonstration for more than 2,500 first-year students from the University of Western Ontario creating awareness for its incoming group of students, the school’s second annual live burn. The London Fire Services used two mock bedrooms, complete with wall posters, beds, desk, backpacks and other items normally found in a residence, were set ablaze to prove a perilous point.

Article: featured in Western News, written by Paul Mayne.


National Campus Fire Safety Month!
Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Honoring National Campus Fire Safety Month – September, 2009

Memories bring to light the importance of Campus Fire Safety Month.  My Junior Year of College was my first experience living in off-campus housing. The preceding spring, with anticipation and dreams of living independently, three of my college friends and I entered the university off-campus lottery system excited about living in our very own house away from the dorm life.  I remember filling out the paper work and doing a quick tour of the property all with careless motivation. As I reflect on this experience and my first steps to adulthood, I realize that the importance for fire safety in this housing selection was never a consideration.  Furthermore, my parents had no involvement in the selection for my independent living on campus – it was just four girls excited to get out of the dorm life so we could privately burn candles, drink some beers and smoke cigarettes. After spending my semester abroad, I anxiously returned to my new diggs on campus to find out that my new room turned out to be a mattress on the floor of the upstairs hallway/loft with my clothes hanging from the bar on the emergency exit door of this tiny hole-in-the-wall house.  Sadly, I didn’t care – “it was cool!”  Fortunately, despite our ignorance for fire safety, we all survived these living conditions without the tragedy of a fire.

Unfortunately, surviving under these conditions is sadly not always the case.  Featured this week in The Hook, journalist Courteney Stuart shares heartfelt stories and facts from parents who have lost loved ones and survivors about the hidden fire dangers for students.

Julie Turnbull died in a housefire on April 10, 2005, exactly one month before her 22nd birthday and her graduation from Ohio University. The house in which she and two other students died was equipped with a stunning 17 smoke detectors– many, if not all, of them functioning.

The tragedy, and what Turnbull has learned since then, could prevent other parents from ever suffering the way he has. Repeated tests show that ionization smoke detectors– the type found in most American homes and college housing– don’t actually detect the type of fire most likely to kill.

Courteney writes a thoughtful and thorough article about the “war” between smoke detectors – ionization vs. Photoelectric.

According to the Texas A&M study, the rate of fire deaths actually increased by 8.8 percent from 1991 to 1992, and the rise continued over the following several years, even as the prevalence of smoke detectors in American homes (more than 90 percent of them ionization) hit an estimated 92 percent in 1994. The number of fires decreased– thanks in part to improved construction and a decrease in smoking– but the fatality rate has remained constant at eight deaths per 1,000 fires.

Perhaps the most shocking result from the study: that even in a flaming fire scenario– in which ionizations should perform marginally better– photoelectric detectors offer a far better chance of survival. Individuals with an ionization detector, the study found, have a 19.8 percent chance of dying in a fire, but with a photoelectric, only a 3.8 percent chance of dying. The reason for that disparity in the flaming scenario is that so many ionization detectors have been disabled, rendering them useless. In a smoldering fire scenario, the study found, those with ionization detectors have a 55.8 percent chance of dying while those with photoelectric detectors have only a 4 percent chance of dying.

Today as a parent, I lie awake at night thinking of what could have happened years ago while living together under these uneducated and misinformed conditions.  Did we have working smoke detectors? Did we know that for an extra $2 a photoelectric detector may increase our response time in getting out? Did I have Renter’s Insurance and was the house licensed? Was there a fire escape ladder available? Was the kitchen equipped with a usable fire extinguisher? Was the furnace inspected? Did the house have a CO detector? Did we know that toaster ovens, incense, halogen lamps and overloaded outlets were dangerous fire hazards?

As the Founder for the Live Safe Foundation, I attended the Firewise Campus Fire Training class back in March, 2009.  It was situations like mine in college that were part of this class curriculum – the don’t do scenarios!  In our training, we reviewed countless interviews and videos of ignorant choices like mine that have unfortunately resulted in tragedy.  All of which I have come to learn could have been avoided by only taking a few extra measures resulting in SAVED LIVES – SAVED PROPERTY.

Thanks to funding by a grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, that groups like The Center for Campus Fire Safety and UL University have developed a training class called the Firewise Campus to provide fire safety education in an accessible and effective manner. Through this class, they provide tools and utilize a variety of methods and platforms for influencing all audiences (Administration, Resident Advisors, Parents, Landlords and Students) on key basic fire knowledge and equip you with the skills to develop a fire safety program from the ground up at your school.

This program will help college students who like myself (back in the 90’s) didn’t know simple methods for survival, such as:

  • Knowing two ways out
  • Get out fast!
  • Activate alarm
  • Close door on way out
  • Call 911
  • Get low
  • Go to evacuation point

Yes, simple and basic messaging – unfortunately not a part of our training, nor vocabulary years ago. As more people take the Center for Campus Fire Safety Firewise Campus course, as well as begin to verify their knowledge with the NIFAST online test and join the Live Safe movement to get educated on the importance for making fire safety a priority in their world, this concern will slowly begin to fade.  The vision is to make sure all audiences have fire safety information to make good decisions and correct choices about fire safety.  Our shared goal is to reduce the number of fires and the overall risk of death, injury and property loss from fire to the student population, not only while attending college, but also throughout their lives.

Please celebrate and honor the importance of Campus Fire Safety Month this upcoming September 17, 2009.  The campaign kicks off on Capital Hill in Washington, DC. To find out more on the National Campus Fire Safety Month initiative, please visit www.campusfiresafetymonth.org.

Get Safe. Stay Safe. Live Safe!

Jill Marcinick is the Founder of the Live Safe Foundation.



Household Inventory Important for Fire Insurance Claims
Friday, September 4th, 2009


Household Inventory Important for Fire Insurance Claims

Are you adequately insured? If the unthinkable happens and you have a damaging fire, some or all of your household contents will need to be replaced. Without a detailed household inventory, processing and collecting an insurance claim at the full value of your losses can be difficult to impossible.

Start your household inventory now and set a deadline for its completion. Begin by taking a camera or video recorder from room to room including the garage and around the outside of the house to document your structures and all their contents. Keep in mind that having a family member in the picture will help you establish your ownership of the items should you need to file an insurance claim. Each item should also be documented on a list with details of its name, description, size, age, model number, brand name, and any other information that helps determine its value.

Remember to list everything including items you can’t readily see because they’re in closets or dresser drawers. Keep receipts (or copies of them) with your inventory for big ticket items like stereo equipment, computers, large tools and equipment, artwork, silver, crystal, and jewelry. Check with your insurance agent to be sure that these items are adequately covered for replacement. Most agents can also provide you with a home inventory form to help guide you in collecting the information you need.

Put your videotape or photos and written descriptions with receipts in your safe-deposit box so you’ll have access to it if your home is destroyed.

Also, check the value of these items periodically to adjust your coverage as necessary.

When a disaster strikes home and everyone survives, the one item most home owners wish they had is a household inventory. If you don’t already have one, the time to make one is now.

Guest Author: Fire Marshal Alan Perkins, Washington Township Fire Department, Dublin, Ohio

For more information, contact:

Leslie Dybiec, Public Information Officer

Phone: (614) 652-3928

Fax: (614) 766-2507

ldybiec@wtwp.com


Don’t text, tweet & drive!
Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Please, don’t tweet, text & drive! Driving while texting (DWT) can be deadly – it puts your life at risk, as well as the people in your car and innocent pedestrians.  I am personally ashamed that I text while driving – it’s a terrible, compulsive habit that puts me and my family at risk.  The reality is that most, if not all, of the communication I make isn’t important and can wait until I reach my next stop.  After watching this video with my kids, I had my “wake up call” to quit.  Thanks to a friend on Facebook who sent me this link a week ago and brought this gruesome issue to my attention.  The images are graphic, but it is worth your 5 minutes of viewing – it might save your life!

According to a recent blog post from Michael Hyatt he shares that U.K. researchers found that it is more dangerous than driving under the influence of alcohol or marijuana: 

Research carried out on young drivers (aged 17-24) using a simulator found that reaction time slowed by 35% when they were writing or reading text messages while driving. In comparison, reaction time deteriorated by 21% for those under the influence of cannabis, and by 12% at the legal alcohol limit.”

So, please DON’T text, tweet and drive on the road wherever you are! Look around, Live Safe!

Question: Did the video make an impact on you? How you feel about DWT after watching the video?