FIRE PREVENTION - Exit Drills
Plan and practice your home fire drill so everyone gets out safely!
More than 4,000 Americans die each year in fires, and approximately 20,000 are injured. Deaths resulting from failed emergency escapes are particularly avoidable. The United States Fire Administration (USFA) believes that having a sound escape plan will greatly reduce fire deaths and protect you and your family's safety if a fire occurs. The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) and the Endwell Fire Department urge everyone to plan and PRACTICE your home escape plan.
Fast
facts you should know about home escape planning and practice:
- According to a 2004
NFPA survey,
only one in four Americans has devised and practiced a plan to escape
from the home during a fire.
- While 66% of Americans have an escape
plan, only 35% of those with a plan have
practiced it.
- Three-quarters of
Americans believe they have 10 minutes or less until a
fire turns deadly, the time available is often less.
- Only 8% of people said their first
thought on hearing a smoke alarm would be to get out!
- Eighteen to 24-year-olds are the
least likely to have even developed an escape plan.
EXIT DRILLS IN THE HOME
People can survive even major fires in their homes if they are alerted to the fire
and get out quickly and stay out.
HOW TO SURVIVE
Install smoke detectors and keep them in working order. Make an escape
plan and "practice" it. Consider installing an automatic
fire-sprinkler system.
PLAN YOUR ESCAPE
Once a fire has started, there is no time to plan how to get out. 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 of every
room - especially sleeping areas. Discuss the escape routes with every
member of your household. Dowload a grid to help you plan
your drill. Agree on a Meeting Place, where every member of the household
will gather outside your home 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 burning building. Practice your escape plan at least twice a year. Have a fire
drill in your home. Appoint someone to be the monitor, and have everyone
participate. A fire drill is not a race. Get out quickly, but carefully.
MAKE YOUR EXIT DRILL REALISTIC
Pretend that some exits are blocked by fire, and practice alternative
escape routes, Pretend that the lights are out and that some escape
routes are filling with smoke. Make sure everyone in the household can unlock all doors and windows
quickly, even in the dark. Windows or doors with security bars need to
be equipped with quick-release devices, and everyone in the household
should know how to use them. If you live in an apartment building, use stairways to escape.
NEVER use an elevator during a fire. It may stop between floors or take
you to a floor where the fire is burning. Some high-rise buildings may
have evacuation plans that require you to stay where you are and wait
for the fire department. If you live in a multi-story house and you must escape from an
upper story window, be sure there is a safe way to reach the ground,
such as a fire-resistant fire escape ladder. Make special arrangements
for children, older adults and people with disabilities. People who have
difficulty moving should have a phone in their sleeping area and , if
possible, should sleep on the ground floor.
TEST DOORS BEFORE OPENING THEM.
While kneeling or crouching at the door, reach up as high as you can and
with the back of your hand touch the door, the knob, and the crack
between the door and its frame. If you feel any warmth at all, use
another escape route. If the door feels cool, open it with caution. Put
your shoulder against the door and open it slowly. Be prepared to slam
it shut if there is smoke or flames on the other side. If you are trapped, 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 flashlight or by waving a light colored
cloth. If there is a phone in the room, call the fire department and
report exactly where you are.
GET OUT FAST
In case of a fire, don't stop for anything. Do not try to rescue
possessions or pets. Go directly to your meeting place, and then call
the fire department from a neighbor's phone, a portable phone, or an
alarm box. Every member of your household should know how to call the
fire department. Crawl low under smoke.
Smoke contains deadly gases, and heat rises. During a fire, cleaner air
will be near the floor. If you encounter smoke when using your primary
exit, use an alternative escape route. If you must exit through smoke,
crawl on your hands and knees, keeping your head 12 to 24 inches (30 -
60 centimeters) above the floor.
. . . AND STAY OUT!
Once you are out of your home, don't go back for any reason. If people
are trapped, the firefighters have the best chance of rescuing them. The
heat and smoke of a fire are overpowering. Firefighters have the
training, experience, and protective equipment needed to enter burning
buildings.
PLAY IT SAFE
Smoke Detectors. More than half of all fatal home fires happen at
night while people are asleep. Smoke detectors sound an alarm when a
fire starts, waking people before they are trapped or overcome by smoke.
With smoke detectors, your risk of dying in a home fire is cut nearly in
half. Install smoke detectors outside every sleeping area and on every
level of your home, including the basement. Follow installation
instructions carefully, and test smoke detectors monthly. Change all
smoke detector batteries at least once a year. If your detector is more
than 10 years old, replace it with a new one. Automatic fire-sprinkler systems.
These systems attack a fire in its early stages by spraying water only
on the area where the fire has begun. Consider including sprinkler
systems in plans for new construction and installing them in existing
homes.
NOW, use what you've learned, SET UP YOUR PLAN, including two ways out, a meeting place and
CONDUCT A PRACTICE DRILL to determine if anything has been overlooked.
EVERYONE in the household NEEDS TO PARTICIPATE for it to be successful.
It may SAVE YOUR LIFE.
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