Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Home   Tags/Videos   Events   Partners   Contact

Posts Tagged ‘smoke detector’
Did you Make A Difference?
Sunday, October 23rd, 2011

This past Saturday, October 22nd, America celebrated Make A Difference Day - an annual, most encompassing national day of helping others - a celebration of neighbors helping neighbors. Created by USA WEEKEND Magazine, Make A Difference Day is an annual event that takes place on the fourth Saturday of every October.  In honor of this national day of helping others, The City of Dublin and Washington Township Fire Department partnered with the Live Safe Foundation to conduct door-to-door fire safety checks.

Do Something That Makes Another Life Better!

The morning kicked off with a 40-minute training session for Dublin volunteers provided by Fire Marshal Alan Perkins and Jill Marcinick, Founder of the Live Safe Foundation. The training included 16 key messages from “Remembering WhenTM“, a program fall and fire prevention program developed by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) Center for High-Risk Outreach and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Volunteers were taught how to evaluate a client’s home for hazards using a Home Safety Checklist, as well as how to test a smoke alarm and change its batteries. A team of trained volunteers then dispatched from the Washington Township Fire Department Administrative building to meet and greet various homeowners in targeted areas offering tips and tools to prepare them for the winter season. The mission for the “Make A Difference Day” volunteer was to help keep our Dublin community fire safe and to educate on how to prevent fires and potential fall in the home.

A complimentary literature bag of was provided to each homeowner which included: Remembering WhenTM Home Safety Checklists, Brochures and fire/fall prevention reminders, Night Light with battery back-up, Smoke Alarm batteries and other important handouts and safety tools. After each home visit, additional literature bags were dropped off in the areas surrounding homes that delivered important fire safety messages, particularly for the elderly community. The actions of our Dublin volunteers improved the lives and safety for several of the local Seniors. More importantly, the Dublin volunteers found that making a difference for others made a bigger difference in their own lives and personal safety.

The Live Safe Foundation and Washington Township Fire Department are continuing ongoing complimentary Home Fire Safety Surveys. If you would like a home safety consultation or any further assistance and/or questions, please contact the Live Safe Foundation or Washington Township Fire Department (614.652.3920) to ensure your home is fire safe and free of any potential hazards. Let us help you!

Article Credits: 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.

Live Safe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making and fire and life 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. Live Safe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. Live Safe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.


Fire Prevention Week Safety Night in Your Home
Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

Take some of the scare out of home emergencies by planning a Fire Prevention Safety Night in your own home. Your kids will get the information they need, and you can explore safety lessons together in a relaxed environment.

Many fire departments offer free safety information, so in addition to reviewing the ideas below, ask about ways you can keep your family safe. Then set aside a night to have fun and discuss safety.

Smoke detector check: If you don’t have smokd detectors, purchase them. If you do, determine whether the batteries are working. Make sure that everyone knows where the smoke detectors are located and how they sound.

Carbon Monoxide detectors are recommended for homes with gas-burning appliances. Make sure detectors work and your family knows how they sound.

Home escape plan. Draw a diagram of your home. Talk about reasons you would need to leave your house, such as a fire or gas leak. Have children draw all the ways to safely exit the house.

Outside location. Decide on a meeting place that is a safe distance from your house. Then practice exiting the house from different locations and meeting there.

Electrical problems. Take your family on a home tour. Look for overloaded electrical outlets and cords that run under rugs or show signs of wear. Contact a certified electrician if you locate wiring problems.

Combustible storage. Ensure that combustible material is not stored within three feet of any flame-producting appliance.

Inside location. Talk about reasons – such as an approaching tornado – you would need to find a safe place inside your house. Store blankets and bottle water there. Let family members draw routes on the home diagram from each room and practice meeting at this safe place.

Teach your family and Test your knowledge: Consider providing a Residential Home Fire Safety Course to your family. The Flashpoint curriculum will teach you what to do, what to prevent and what to avoid, as well as:

  • Increase families’ fire safety awareness through an effective web-based training program.
  • Teach parents, children, and other occupants of residential dwellings how to prevent fires and fire related injuries, and create a fire safe environment.
  • Enable families and other occupants to effectively create and use a fire plan.
  • Teach individuals to react correctly when a fire occurs.
  • Enable proficiency in inspecting available fire safety equipment.
  • End results: survival.

Go to www.nifast.org to learn more.

Conclude your family safety night by enjoying a treat to celebrate that you are all together and safe.

The article contains information provided by Ted Collas of Thriving Family Magazine (July/August 2010 edition).

Live Safe Foundation is an Ohio based non-profit organization (501c3), and leading grassroots movement, devoted to making and fire and life 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. Live Safe aims to help finance fire safety education where means are otherwise unavailable. Live Safe is developing and sponsoring programs to help groups find the resources needed to advance individual and community fire safety.


Live Safe partners with the U.S. Fire Administration’s Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign
Monday, May 24th, 2010

Dublin, Ohio – The Live Safe Foundation is proud to announce the support and partnership in the U.S. fire administration’s Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign – encouraging residents to install smoke alarms and sprinklers.

More than 3,000 people die in home fires each year in the United States; most of whom are in homes without a working smoke alarm. To prevent these deaths, the U.S. Fire Administration (USFA), a division of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is sponsoring a nationwide Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign designed to raise awareness about how working, properly installed smoke alarms can lower a person’s chances of dying in a fire. The Live Safe Foundation is supporting this critical effort to reduce injuries and the loss of life.

The USFA’s Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign is aimed at encouraging Americans to practice fire safety by installing and maintaining smoke alarms and residential fire sprinklers, which can help save the lives of residents and fire fighters, practicing fire escape plans, and performing a home safety walk-through to remove fire hazards from the home.  The campaign is promoting fire safety through a free Campaign Toolkit disc; educational materials; print, radio and television PSAs; children’s materials, community organization-sponsored events and a consumer-friendly campaign Web site.

“Live Safe is proud to be a partner with the USFA in this very relevant campaign.  Far too many people have died in fires as a result of not having working smoke alarms or sprinklers. One person killed in a home fire is just too many,” said Melissa Falter, Live Safe Foundation spokesperson. “Together, we can educate our communities and help save lives.”

“If a fire breaks out in your home while you’re asleep, how will you know?  Having a working smoke alarm is like having a fire safety official on duty in your home, 24 hours a day.” said Deputy U.S. Fire Administrator Glenn A.Gaines.  “Working smoke alarms will alert you to the fire and we know conclusively, a residential sprinkler system can help put the fire out.” Gaines adds, “Smoke alarms and sprinklers are able to provide residents the time it takes to get everyone out of the house, before firefighters have to come in.”

When both smoke alarms and fire sprinklers are present in a home, the risk of dying in a fire is reduced by 82 percent, when compared to a residence without either.  According to the National Fire Protection Association, between 2003-2006, almost two-thirds of home fire deaths resulted from fires in homes with no smoke alarms or no working smoke alarms.

The USFA offers a few helpful tips on smoke alarms and sprinklers:

  • Place properly installed and maintained smoke alarms both inside and outside of sleeping areas and on every level of your home.
  • Interconnected smoke alarms are best, because if one sounds, they all sound.
  • Get smoke alarms that can sound fast.  The U.S. Fire Administration recommends that every residence and place where people sleep be equipped with both ionization and photoelectric smoke alarms or dual sensor smoke alarms, which contain both ionization and photoelectric smoke sensors.
  • If possible, install residential fire sprinklers in your home.
  1. Inspect and test smoke alarms monthly and change alkaline batteries at least once every year, or as instructed. You can use a date you already know, like your birthday or when you change your clocks as a reminder.
  2. Avoid painting or covering the fire sprinkler, because that will affect the sensitivity to heat.

The Live Safe Foundation is supporting the USFA’s Install. Inspect. Protect Campaign by distributing information.

Double Click on the “black box” below to listen to PSA:

Organizations in partnership with the U.S. Fire Administration’s Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign include the American Fire Sprinkler Association, Burn Institute, Everyone Goes Home, Fire and Emergency Manufacturers and Services Association, Fire Department Safety Officers Association, Home Fire Sprinkler Coalition, Home Safety Council, International Association of Black Professional Firefighters, International Association of Fire Chiefs, International Association of Women in Fire & Emergency Services, NASFM Fire Research and Education Foundation, National Association of Hispanic Firefighters, National Association of State Fire Marshals, National Fallen Firefighters Foundation, National Fire Protection Association, National Fire Sprinkler Association, National Volunteer Fire Council, and SAFE KIDS Worldwide.

For more information on the Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign and other fire prevention information, please visit www.usfa.dhs.gov/smokealarms. To learn more about Live Safe’s local campaign activities, please feel free to contact www.live-safe.org.

Install. Inspect. Protect.

Smoke Alarms Save Lives

Live Safe 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.


NOAA Weather Radio is Important Safety Device
Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Smoke and carbon monoxide alarms are now considered standard safety devices in homes. Another equally valuable yet less common safety device for the home or business is a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Weather Radio. With severe weather seemingly ever present in our daily lives, reports from NOAA can give you the information you need to make important decisions that will affect your life and the lives of your family members. The NOAA Weather Radio broadcast contains information about all types of severe weather including tornado and flood warnings as soon as it is available, not on a scheduled interval or in conjunction with a TV or radio broadcast.

NOAA Weather Radio All Hazards, a component of the nation’s Emergency Alert System, is comprised of a nationwide network of numerous transmitters directly linked with one of 123 local offices of NOAA’s National Weather Service. The closest office is the Wilmington, Ohio location which broadcast weather warnings that cannot be heard on a simple AM/FM receiver. With Ohio Severe Weather Awareness Week (March 21-27) upon us, plan on adding a NOAA Weather Radio to your home with these important features:

  • A special tone that precedes the initial broadcast regarding immediate weather threats to gain the listener’s attention. This feature is especially crucial when severe storms strike at night when most people are sound asleep.
  • The units are small and require little space on a nightstand or table. They are especially convenient for vacations and will use the signal from a nearby transmitter.
  • A battery back-up that ensures the receiver continues service during a loss of electricity as the warning capabilities of television or the internet will be lost.
  • S.A.M.E. (Specific Area Message Encoding) technology that can be programmed to sound only select alerts for specific areas such as Franklin County. This prevents undesired messages and false alarms, especially those outside the local area.
  • Many radios allow for customization for the hearing or visually impaired, such as strobe lights, or bed shakers.
  • Units that receive the NOAA Weather Radio All Hazards signal are available at many electronic retail stores and range in cost from $20 to $100. Look for receivers which carry the Public Alert logo (CEA-2009). Devices carrying the logo meet certain technical standards and come with the features mentioned. The National Weather Service does not manufacture these receivers.

Visit the Township’s website at www.wtwp.com to download your 65-page Emergency Preparedness Guide or stop by our Administration building at 6200 Eiterman Road for your free copy.

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.

Live Safe 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.










    Stop, Drop & Roll Over To Our Partners