Friday, July 30, 2010
Home   Tags/Videos   Events   Partners   Contact

Archive for March, 2010
Rep. Pascrell and Sen. Lautenberg Introduce Campus Fire Safety Act H.R. 4908
Thursday, March 25th, 2010

U.S. Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr. (D-NJ-8) and U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) announced on Tuesday, March 23 that they have introduced legislation to help provide critical campus fire safety information to college students living in dormitories and off-campus housing. The legislation is part of the lawmakers’ ongoing response to the tragic dormitory fire at Seton Hall University more than 10 years ago.

The Campus Fire Safety Act of 2010 would help provide fire safety education and training to students through a new $25 million competitive grant program to help institutions of higher education improve or start fire safety education programs. Programs that include educational material specifically aimed at students with disabilities will receive priority funding.

We need your help! Please take a look at the legistlation and tell LiveSafe what you think.

You can view the new H.R. 4908: The Campus Fire Safety Education Act of 2010 at http://www.washingtonwatch.com/bills/show/200523360.html

Also, for more information visit WashingtonWatch.com (http://www.washingtonwatch.com) where you will find unique resources for information on government spending, taxation, and regulation.

You can make a difference by sharing this bill will your local representative. Each person you share this with can continue this ripple effect. Together, we can garner a network of Fire Safety champions, making the Campus Fire Safety Act effective and impactful.

LiveSafe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making fire safety education, awareness initiatives and life saving tools available on a broad basis to communities, campuses, and institutions in an effort to reduce national fire fatalities and fire losses. LiveSafe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. LiveSafe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.


If Clothes Catch Fire, Stop, Drop, and Roll
Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

All clothing can burn, although some fabrics burn more easily than others. If your clothing catches fire, STOP, DROP, and ROLL to put out the flames. Don’t run, stand, or shake the part of your clothing that is on fire. This only fuels the fire with more oxygen and worsens the situation.

Instead, stop and drop to the floor or ground. Then roll or rock back and forth to smother the flames. Rolling helps reduce the fire’s oxygen supply. If possible, roll in a rug, blanket or coat to smother the fire faster.

When the fire is out, cool the burn with water and call the fire department. Do not remove the burned clothing if it is stuck to the skin. Keep the victim quiet and warm until help arrives.

Seconds count in any fire so, being able to put the fire out as quickly as possible is vital. Running in response to danger such as a fire is natural in all age groups, but is more common in younger children. Frightened children often run to find their parents or water, believing that it is the only way to put out a fire. By practicing the stop, drop, and roll procedure with your family, you can help increase the likelihood that they will be able to put it into practice when needed instead of running for help or water.

Most clothing fires are the result of careless accidents and can be prevented if you:

  • Practice caution when using or working with heat sources or flames.
  • Keep children away from heat sources such as candles, stoves, cigarettes, outdoor grills, matches, portable heaters etc.
  • Don’t wear loose-fitting clothing or clothes with draping sleeves while cooking or near heat sources.
  • Purchase flame-retardant clothing for children when possible.

Line of Duty” Author: Fire Marshal Alan Perkins, CFPS, is a 32-year veteran of the fire service. A Certified Fire Protection Specialist through the National Fire Protection Association and a member of several similar safety organizations. Perkins is working with the Ohio Fire Officials Association for state law mandating photoelectric or equivalent smoke detection technology in new residential construction. Perkins is the Fire Marshal for the Washington Township Fire Department, Dublin, Ohio. For more information, contact: Leslie Dybiec, Public Information Officer Phone: (614) 652-3928 Fax: (614) 766-2507 or ldybiec@wtwp.com.

LiveSafe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making fire safety education, awareness initiatives and life saving tools available on a broad basis to communities, campuses, and institutions in an effort to reduce national fire fatalities and fire losses. LiveSafe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. LiveSafe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.


Running for a cause – OSU Burn Center’s 1st annual Blaze the Trail
Monday, March 15th, 2010

Welcome to the OSU Burn Center’s first annual family friendly Blaze the Trail 5K Walk/Run. Proceeds from this event will benefit The OSU Burn Center’s Development Fund, which allows the OSU Burn Center to provide people devastated by a burn injury with necessary post-discharge support such as dressing supplies and improved community re-entry. The Development Fund also helps sponsor the central Ohio Annual Family Burn Camp, host ongoing monthly support groups, establish community resources, and send non-physician members of the burn team to contiuning education conferences.

Where & When & How

  • Date: Sunday  April 11,  2010
  • Location: Recreation & Physical Activity Center – OSU
  • Directions: CLICK HERE
  • Time: 9:00am start time; registration begins at 7:00am
  • Entry Fee: $25 through April 4th; $30 april 5th through race day
  • Awards:
    • The top 3 male and female finishers will be rewarded
  • Course Map: CLICK HERE
  • How to Register
    • Online: www.premierraces.com
    • During packet pickup at Front Runner
    • Mail Registration form with check payable to: Premier Races, 401 Charmel Place Columbus, Ohio 43235
    • Race Day starting at 7:00am in the RPAC Lobby.
  • Race Packets
    • All participants will receive a t-shirt and post race refreshments
  • Packet Pick Up
    • April 5-9th, 10am-8pm; April 10th, 10am-6pm
      Front Runner, 1344 W Lane Ave, Columbus, OH
      Phone: 614-486-0301

Special Race Day Features:

  • Family Friendly event
  • Meet local fire fighters and explore an antique fire truck
  • Cotton t-shirts for all participants
  • Timing available for all participants
  • Music, Food, Awards

For more information about the OSU Burn Center or Sponsor information, please contact Jennifer Parks via:

  • Email: jennifer.parks@osumc.edu
  • Fax: 614-293-8785
  • Mail: 410 West 10th Avenue, Room 539 Doan Hall, Columbus, Ohio 43201
  • Or visit www.premierraces.com

Run for a great cause!

LiveSafe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making fire safety education, awareness initiatives and life saving tools available on a broad basis to communities, campuses, and institutions in an effort to reduce national fire fatalities and fire losses. LiveSafe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. LiveSafe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.


Which smoke alarm can save your life?
Monday, March 15th, 2010

The kind of smoke alarm you have in your home may not provide adequate warning during a fire. That’s right, if you have the kind of detection that most U.S. homes have, an ionization-type, you are at risk of dying in your own home without the alarm ever sounding.

This doesn’t seem possible, does it? After all, if there is a fresh battery in your detector and you have tested it to ensure that it is in working order, you and your family members should be safe, right? Maybe not! There is compelling research-based evidence that demonstrates that ionization-type detectors are ineffective in smoldering type fires, the most common cause of fatalities in home fires. In fact, tests have shown that ionization type smoke alarms don’t sound, even after the level of carbon monoxide and smoke reaches deadly concentrations. An alarming amount of documented residential fire deaths have occurred with only the installed ionization type detectors. Had there been a properly installed photoelectric detector in these situations, an alarm would have sounded to warn occupants of the life-threatening situation.

A 1994 study at Texas A&M concluded that the probability of a photoelectric detector failing to detect a smoldering fire is four percent, while the ionization detector provided close to 56% probability of failure in the same fire condition.

One of the reasons for the differences in the performance of these two detector types is in the way they are activated. Ionization smoke alarms contain a small amount of radioactive material and establish a small electric current between two metal plates. When the current is disrupted by smoke, the alarm sounds. This older type of technology is typically more responsive to a flaming fire, such as a kitchen pan fire, but it’s also more susceptible to nuisance alarms from bathroom humidity or cooking vapors when placed within 20 feet of a kitchen.

Photoelectric smoke alarms contain a light source and a light-sensitive electric cell. Smoke entering the detector deflects light onto the light-sensitive electric cell, triggering the alarm. These alarms are more sensitive to large particles given off during smoldering fires, such as an electrical fire-the kind of fires that usually occur at night when people are asleep.

For many years, authorities have urged homeowners to install smoke alarms without consideration to the type of potential fire ignition or the quality of smoke detection. This was based on the urgency to equip all homes with smoke detection with what was readily available on the market.

It is no surprise, then, that more than 90% of homes in the United States have only the ionization detection technology, leaving those occupants vulnerable to the most common and deadly type of fire.

To ensure your family gets the early warning they need to survive the toxic gases of a smoldering fire, install photoelectric smoke alarms immediately in and outside sleeping areas. They cost a bit more than the ionization type, but are now readily available at local hardware and home improvement stores. Use this past weekend’s time change to Daylight Savings Time, as your goal for making these important changes in your home.

Along with properly installing and maintaining new and existing smoke alarms, develop and practice an escape plan that includes two ways out of every room, so that everyone in the home knows what to do if the smoke alarms sounds. Home occupants who practice an escape plan reduce their time to escape in every type of fire.

If you have questions concerning the installation of photoelectric smoke alarms, contact the Washington Township Fire Department at (614) 652-3920.

If you would like more information about this important issue, watch the Stop the Children Burning series on youtube.com. A very informative news report from Indiana’s Channel 13 called UL-approved smoke alarms may give false sense of security is also on youtube.com. It details the studies done at Texas A&M. Take a few minutes to review these videos. Then get photoelectric smoke alarms for your home!

Fire Marshal Alan Perkins, CFPS, is a 32-year veteran of the fire service. A Certified Fire Protection Specialist through the National Fire Protection Association and a member of several similar safety organizations. Perkins is working with the Ohio Fire Officials Association for state law mandating photoelectric or equivalent smoke detection technology in new residential construction. Perkins is the Fire Marshal for the Washington Township Fire Department, Dublin, Ohio. For more information, contact: Leslie Dybiec, Public Information Officer Phone: (614) 652-3928 Fax: (614) 766-2507 or ldybiec@wtwp.com.

LiveSafe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making fire safety education, awareness initiatives and life saving tools available on a broad basis to communities, campuses, and institutions in an effort to reduce national fire fatalities and fire losses. LiveSafe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. LiveSafe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.


Smoke Rises – Crawl Low
Monday, March 15th, 2010

Approximately eight out of ten fire deaths are caused by smoke inhalation, not from burns.  In fact, some victims never even see flames before they are overcome by the smoke.  Although you can’t see them, it is the toxic gases and superheated air in smoke that makes it so dangerous.  Plastics, in particular, give off a very poisonous gas when burned. Since most homes and offices have a significant number of furnishings and machines, such as furniture and computers with high plastic content, fires in these places often generate a tremendous amount of noxious smoke.

Smoke also contains another poisonous gas called carbon monoxide. This tasteless, odorless gas causes confusion, reduced mental capacity and eventually death.  If impaired by carbon monoxide poisoning, victims will likely be challenged to find an escape route or make a sound decision about their safety. Knowing how to avoid smoke is one of the most important factors in surviving a fire.

Smoke is lighter than air so it rises above air. During a fire, the superheated air and smoke fill the room from the top down. Some poisonous smoke may settle near the floor, but in between is a safety zone of breathable air about one to two feet above the floor.

To prevent smoke inhalation, crawl on your hands and knees to your exit, keeping your head in the safety zone. Firefighters use this same method when navigating a building where smoke is present.

Getting an early warning to the presence of smoke can give you the few vital minutes you need to get out safely. Smoke alarms are designed to do just that.  They give you the precious time you need to implement your escape plan and crawl under the smoke to safety.

Line of Duty” Author: Fire Marshal Alan Perkins, CFPS, is a 32-year veteran of the fire service. A Certified Fire Protection Specialist through the National Fire Protection Association and a member of several similar safety organizations. Perkins is the Fire Marshal for the Washington Township Fire Department, Dublin, Ohio. For more information, contact: Leslie Dybiec, Public Information Officer Phone: (614) 652-3928 Fax: (614) 766-2507 or ldybiec@wtwp.com.

LiveSafe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making fire safety education, awareness initiatives and life saving tools available on a broad basis to communities, campuses, and institutions in an effort to reduce national fire fatalities and fire losses. LiveSafe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. LiveSafe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.


Electricity…Friend or Foe?
Monday, March 8th, 2010

Most of us would agree that life would be more difficult without the use of electricity to heat, cool and light our homes and businesses, and operate our appliances and tools. Although they provide everyday conveniences, electrical equipment has become the third leading cause of home fires and the second in fire deaths.  Short circuits and faulty wiring kill hundreds of people and injure thousands more annually. With the danger of electrical fires ever present, taking precautions is fundamental to using electricity wisely.

  • Plug in only as many appliances as an outlet can support directly. Do not use un-fused, multi-plug adapters or power strips as the electrical circuit may not be able to support the demand for that amount of current.
  • Use extension cords only for temporary portable equipment, not in place of your home’s permanent wiring. Equipment supplied with electricity by an extension cord must have a lower amperage rating than that of the extension cord. Using an extension cord for a portable heater, which requires a lot of amperage, could cause the extension cord to overheat at the cord end and outlet and start a fire.
  • Replace or have repaired by an electrician any frayed, split, cracked or otherwise damaged cords. Damaged cords can cause a short in the circuit, heat up, and start a fire. Wrapping electrical tape around a damaged cord may not repair it.
  • When removing an electrical cord from an outlet, grasp on the plug portion instead of the cord.
  • Do not lay cords under rugs, over nails or hooks, or through doorways or windows where they may get smashed, cut or split and cause a fire or shock hazard.
  • If you have small children in your home, cover unused electrical outlets with plastic safety caps.
  • Use bulbs that match the recommended wattage for that appliance or light fixture. Bulbs with wattages in excess of what is recommended may give off enough heat to start a fire.
  • If outlets or switch boxes are cracked or discolored, turn the circuit off and have them checked by an electrician. They may need to be replaced.
  • Keep heat-generating appliances and light bulbs away from anything flammable. Allow sufficient space around stereos, televisions and computers to prevent over-heating.
  • Purchase appliances and cords with the UL (Underwriters Laboratories) or FM (Factory Mutual) label indicating they have been tested for safety.
  • Consider having additional circuits and outlets added to your home by an electrician, especially if you are using extension cords and power strips. The price tag will not be near what an electrical fire would cost in money and lives.

Line of Duty” Author: Fire Marshal Alan Perkins, CFPS, is a 32-year veteran of the fire service. A Certified Fire Protection Specialist through the National Fire Protection Association and a member of several similar safety organizations. Perkins is working with the Ohio Fire Officials Association for state law mandating photoelectric or equivalent smoke detection technology in new residential construction. Perkins is the Fire Marshal for the Washington Township Fire Department, Dublin, Ohio. For more information, contact: Leslie Dybiec, Public Information Officer Phone: (614) 652-3928 Fax: (614) 766-2507 or ldybiec@wtwp.com.

LiveSafe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making fire safety education, awareness initiatives and life saving tools available on a broad basis to communities, campuses, and institutions in an effort to reduce national fire fatalities and fire losses. LiveSafe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. LiveSafe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.