
HOME
FIRE SAFETY CHECKLIST
(please also visit
our Defensible Space
page)
Change Your Smoke
Detector Batteries
The IAFC and fire experts nationwide encourage people
to change smoke detector batteries at least annually.
An easy way to remember to change your batteries is when
you turn your clock back in the fall. Replace old batteries
with fresh, high quality alkaline batteries, such as energizer
brand batteries, to keep your smoke detector going year-long.
Check Your Smoke Detectors
After inserting a fresh battery in your smoke detector,
check to make sure the smoke detector itself is working
by pushing the safety test button.
Count Your Smoke Detectors
Install at least one smoke detector on every level of
your home, including the basement and family room and,
most importantly, outside all bedrooms.
Vacuum Your Smoke Detectors
Each month, clean your smoke detectors of dust and cobwebs
to ensure their sensitivity.
Change Your Flashlight Batteries
To make sure your emergency flashlights work when you
need them, use high-quality alkaline batteries. Note:
keep a working flashlight near your bed, in the kitchen,
basement and family room and use it to signal for help
in the event of a fire.
Install Fire Extinguishers
Install a fire extinguisher in or near your kitchen and
know how to use it. Should you need to purchase one, the
IAFC recommends a multi-or all-purpose fire extinguisher
that is listed by an accredited testing laboratory such
as Underwriters Laboratory.
Plan and Practice Your Escape
Create at least two different escape routes and practice
them with the entire family. Children are at double the
risk of dying in a home fire because they often become
scared and confused during fires. Make sure your children
understand that a smoke detector signals a home fire and
that they recognize its alarm.
Change Your Clock, Change Your Battery
Energizer brand batteries, the International Association
of Fire Chiefs (IAFC) and Georgetown Fire Department urge
you to adopt a simple, potentially lifesaving habit: change
the batteries in your smoke detector when you change your
clocks back to standard time in the fall.
Consider Putting Carbon
Monoxide Detectors in Your Home
Consider
The Following Statistics:
Each day an average of three kids die in home fires -
1,100 children each year. About 3,600 children are injured
in house fires each year. 90 percent of child fire
deaths occur in homes without working smoke detectors.
Although smoke detectors
are in 92 percent of American homes, nearly one-third
don't work because of old or missing batteries.
A working smoke detector
reduces the risk of dying in a home fire by nearly
half.
HOME FIRE SAFETY
QUESTIONNAIRE
You can eliminate many hazards
in and around your home. 
Go through this list with your whole family.
If you answer "NO" to at least one of these
questions, then the time for action is NOW.
1) Do you have defensible
space? Have you removed all combustible rubbish,
leaves, and debris from your yard? Have you removed
all waste, debris, and litter from your garage?
2)
If you store paint, varnish, etc., in your garage, are
the containers tightly closed?
3)
Is there an approved safety can for the storing of gasoline
for the lawn mowers, snow blowers, and snowmobiles, etc.?
4) Do you keep your basement,
storerooms, and attic free from rubbish, oily rags, old
papers, mattresses, and broken furniture?
5) Is there a sufficient
number of metal cans with lids for rubbish and combustible
debris?
6) Are stoves, broilers,
and other cooking equipment kept clean and free of grease?
7) Are curtains near stoves
arranged to prevent their blowing over the burners or
flames?
8) Are members of the family
forbidden to start fires in stoves or fireplaces with
kerosene or other flammable liquids?
9) Do you always see that
your portable space heater is placed
well away from curtains, drapes, furniture, etc.?
10) Are all of your electrical
appliances including irons, mixers, heaters, lamps, fans,
radios, television sets, and other devices "UL"
listed?
11) Do all rooms have an
adequate number of outlets to take care of electrical
appliances?
12) Have you done away
with all multiple attachment plugs?
13) Are all flexible electrical
extension and lamp cords in your home in the open? (None
placed under rugs, over hooks, through partitions or door
openings)
14) Do you keep matches
in a metal container away from heat and away from children?
15) Do you extinguish all
matches, cigarettes, and cigar butts carefully before
disposing of them?
16) Do you see to it that
there are plenty of noncombustible ash trays in all rooms
throughout the house?
17) Are all members of
the family instructed not to smoke in bed?
18) Do you have a home
escape plan in case of a fire?
19) Do you hold home fire
drills at least once a month?
20) When you employ babysitters,
do you instruct them what to do in case of a fire?
21) Did your entire family
take part in completing this checklist?
22) Do you at least have
a smoke detector
on every level of your home, and within 15 feet of your
bedrooms?
Check
out our Fire Facts
page for valuable info and more tips.
Space Heater
Safety Tips
While space heaters are legal and
widely used as an alternative heat source, they CAN
pose certain hazards. If you have a space heater,
or are considering the purchase of a space heater, the
following information is vital to your safety.
Always make sure
that your smoke
and carbon monoxide
detectors are working. 
Never use fuel burning
appliances without proper ventilation. Burning fuel (kerosene,
coal, or propane, for example) produces deadly fumes.
Be sure your space heater
is in good working condition. All space heaters need frequent
checkups and cleaning. A dirty or neglected heater is
a critical fire hazard.
Use only the proper fuel
for each heater. Never introduce a fuel into a heating
unit not designed for that unit.
Never quicken a fire with
kerosene or gasoline.
Store kerosene, gasoline
or other flammable liquids outside the home at all times.
Use an approved safety
can for the storing of flammable liquids.
Maintain adequate clearance
in all directions around space heaters: 3 feet is the
minimum - from walls and combustibles, such as clothes,
curtains, beds or other furniture.
Never leave children unsupervised
in a room with a space heater.
Keep young children away
from space heaters, particularly when they are wearing
nightgowns which can be drawn into the heater by a draft
and ignited.
If you use an electric
heater, be sure your house wiring is adequate. Avoid overloading
the circuit. Avoid using extension cords. Use an approved
power strip with a built-in circuit breaker.
Never cover a heater's
cord with carpeting or furniture. This could cause the
cord to overheat and start a fire.
Avoid using electric space
heaters in the bathroom. Never touch an electric heater
when you are wet.
When refueling an oil unit,
don't overfill it. If cold fuel is used, it will expand
as it warms up inside your home and may cause burner-flooding;
this could cause flare-ups. Don't fill your heater while
it is burning.
Turn off your heater or
turn it on low before going to bed.
When using a fuel burning
heater in the bedroom, open the window. Ventilation prevents
suffocation that can be caused by a heater consuming oxygen.
Use ONLY safety listed
equipment. If you choose an oil heater, look for the UL
label; a gas appliance, the AGA or UL label; or an electric
heater, the UL label.
PROPANE FUELED SPACE HEATERS
ARE EXTREMELY DANGEROUS.
Fireplaces
When temperatures outside
are low, a crackling fire in the fireplace is a cozy and
cheery way to keep warm. But these fires, if not carefully
tended, could cause tragedy. To use them safely, follow
these guidelines:
Do not use flammable liquids to start the fire.
Keep a metal screen in
front of your fireplace to prevent flying embers from
starting a fire.
Don't use excessive amounts
of paper to build roaring fires in fireplaces. It is possible
to ignite soot in the chimney by overbuilding the fire.
Never burn charcoal in
your fireplace, in a charcoal broiler or in a hibachi
unit inside your home. Burning charcoal gives off deadly
amounts of carbon
monoxide.
Be sure no flammable materials
hang down from or decorate your mantel. A spark from your
fireplace fire could ignite these materials.
When you go to bed, be
sure your fireplace fire is out. Never close your damper
with hot ashes in the fireplace. A closed damper can help
hot ashes build up heat to the point where a fire could
flare up and ignite the room while you are asleep.
If your fireplace hasn't
been used for some time, have it and the chimney checked
before using.
Follow the directions
on the package if you use human-made logs. Never break
a human-made log apart to quicken the fire.
Furnace Heating
It's important that
you have your furnace checked out and cleaned regularly,
and that it be in good working condition. Furnace fire
safety tips need to be observed year around.
Be sure all furnace automatic controls and emergency shutoffs
are in good condition.
Leave furnace work to experts.
Don't attempt repairs unless you are qualified.
Have the repair person
check the wall and ceiling near the furnace and flue.
If they are hot, additional insulation or clearance may
be needed.
Check the flue pipes. Are
they well supported? Free of holes and clean?
Is the chimney solid? No
cracks or loose bricks? All unused flue openings should
be sealed with solid masonry.
Keep trash and combustible
storage away from the heating system.
Don't store hot ashes
in the home; take them outside immediately.
Frozen Pipes
Don't try to thaw
them with a blowtorch or other open flames. Use hot water
or a UL labeled device for thawing; otherwise a fire could
be the result.
Is There a Fire Hydrant
Outside of Your Home?
If there should
be a fire, firefighters need to be able to hook their
hose up to that hydrant. Shovel the snow away from the
hydrant. It may save your home or that of your neighbors.
Creating An
Escape Plan
Nobody expects a fire.
But it's very important to have an Escape Plan, just in
case there is one. Fire can happen anywhere: in the home,
apartment or place of business. Escape Plans will
differ for each type of building so it's up to you to
plan the proper escape from your particular building
There's no time for planning
during a Fire Emergency. Sit down with your family today
and make a step-by-step plan for escaping a fire.
Draw a floor-plan of your
home, marking two ways out (including windows) of every
room - especially sleeping areas. Discuss the escape routes
with every member of your household. If you encounter
smoke when using your primary exit, use an alternate escape
route. If you must exit through smoke, crawl low
under smoke, keeping your head 12 to 24 inches above the
floor.
Agree on a meeting place
outside your home where every member of the household
will gather after escaping a fire to wait for the fire
department. This allows you to count heads and inform
the fire department if anyone is missing or trapped inside
the building.
Practice your plan with
your family once a month.
1. Make sure everyone in
your family knows two routes to escape from bedrooms.
2. Buy a collapsible ladder
for escape from upper story windows.
3. Keep the fire department's
number by the phone.
4. Have a flashlight by
your bed to help you see and a whistle to alert your family.
5. Practice feeling your
way out of the house with your eyes closed.
6. Never open doors that
are hot to the touch.
7. Teach your family to
stop, drop to the ground and roll if their clothes catch
fire.
8. Designate a meeting
place outside and take attendance.
9. Remember to escape first,
then notify the fire department.
10. Install a smoke alarm
on every level of your home. Test the batteries every
month and change them at least once a year.
In Case of
Fire
Leave the building immediately.
If you encounter smoke when using your primary
exit, use an alternate escape route. If you must exit
through smoke, crawl low under smoke, keeping your head
12 to 24 inches above the floor. Doors need to be
tested before opening. Reach up as high as you can and
touch the door, the knob, and the crack between the door
with the back of your hand. If the door is warm find another
escape route. If the door is cool, open it with caution.
Go directly to your meeting
place, and take a head count.
Call 911 from a neighbors
phone, a portable phone, or an alarm box. (Every member
of your household should know how to call 911.
If you become trapped in
the building, close all doors between you and the fire.
Stuff the cracks around the doors to keep out smoke.
wait at a window and signal for help with a light colored
cloth (sheet), or flashlight. If there is a phone in the
room, use it to call 911 and tell them exactly where you
are. Open a window about 8 inches at the top to let out
the heat and smoke. Open the window about 8 inches at
the bottom to breathe. Do not break out the window, as
you may need to close it.
Contact Georgetown Fire
Department at 333-4111 if you have any questions or require
assistance in planning your home or work Escape Plan.
Check
out our Fire Facts
page for valuable info and more tips.
Also,
please visit our Defensible
Space page.