|
Step 1. Make
a home fire escape plan.
|
|
|
- First, working together as a
family, draw a floor plan of your home. On your
plan, find two ways out of every room, especially
the bedrooms.
|
|
|
- Mark where all the doors are
in your home. Mark where all the windows are.
- Draw the location of all your
smoke alarms.
- Mark the place outside where
everyone will meet.
|
|
|
- Next, post emergency numbers
next to every phone. Help your children memorize 2
things:
- 9-1-1 or the emergency
number for your fire department.
- The street name and number
for your home.
|
|
Step 2. Test your smoke
alarms.
|
|
|
- Go through your home and test
all the smoke alarms. If a fire happens at night,
the alarms will wake you up in time to get to
safety.
- Be sure you have at least one
alarm on every level of your home and inside every
bedroom.
- There are different types of
alarms. It’s best to have both ionization AND
photoelectric alarms in your home.
|
|
|
- Smoke
alarms don’t last forever. If yours are 10 years old
or older…or if you’re not sure how old they are,
replace them with new alarms.
|
|
|
- The Home Safety Council
recommends having interconnected smoke alarms. These
alarms are linked together so that if one alarm
operates, they all go off at once.
- Why is this important? If a
fire starts far from where you’re sleeping, the
alarm nearest you will sound at the same time the
one nearest the fire goes off. This gives you
precious extra time to get your family members and
help them to safety.
- Make sure to put fresh
batteries in your alarms at least once a year, or
when the alarm “chirps,” signaling the power is low.
Keep extra batteries on hand at all times so your
alarms are always working. Choose a brand you can
trust.
|
|
Step 3: Clear the way
|
|
|
- If there is a fire, you may
have as little as 2 to 3 minutes to get your family
to safety. You have to snap into action and get out
fast! Keep your exit routes clear at all times.
|
|
|
- Move everything off the stairs
and out of the way. Make sure all doors and windows
open easily.
|
|
Step 4: Walk through the
plan with every member of your family.
|
|
|
- Show your children exactly
what to do when the smoke alarm goes off.
- Roll out of bed and crawl over
to the door. Using the back of the hand, feel the
doorknob and the cracks around the door for heat.
- Tell your children if it feels
cool, it’s safe to open the door a little and peek
out. If you don’t see any smoke, go out the door to
your meeting place outside.
|
|
|
- If the space around the door
feels warm it may mean fire is near the door. You’ll
need to use your second way out…most likely a
window.
- To exit from an upper story
window it helps to have an escape ladder. Choose a
model that fits your window. But don’t practice
actually going out from an upper floor as the risk
of falling is great. Use your ladder only in a real
emergency.
|
|
|
- Remember, smoke rises. Teach
your kids to “get low and go” if they see smoke.
Bend down or crawl on your hands and knees to the
nearest exit. The air will be clearer and easier to
breathe near the floor.
|
|
|
- Because children and older
adults often sleep through the sound of the smoke
alarm, they’ll need help getting to safety in a real
fire emergency. Assign an adult to help every member
of the family who needs it. Make this part of your
plan.
|
|
Step 5. Do the drill.
|
|
|
- Push the button on your smoke
alarm so everyone knows the sound it makes if there
is a fire. This will start your fire drill.
- Take your cell phone or
portable phone with you.
|
|
|
- Have the assigned grownups go
to each child’s room. Watch them roll out of bed and
crawl over to the door. Make sure they feel around
the door before opening. Tell them it’s cool.
|
|
|
- Watch them open the door a
crack and peek out. Follow them as they crouch or
crawl quickly using their primary escape route out
the door to the meeting place.
|
|
|
- Close all the doors behind
you.
|
|
|
- Once you get to the meeting
place, pretend to call the fire department. Ask the
kids if they know what the number is. Ask them to
tell you the address of your home.
- Stress how important it is to
get out and STAY OUT. Once you escape, no one should
ever go back inside for any reason. The fire
department has the training and equipment to go
inside a burning building.
|
|
Step 6. Talk about the drill.
|
|
|
- Tell your kids what a great
job they did. Reassure them that in a real fire, you
will be there to help them get to safety. But it’s
always good for everyone in the family to know the
plan.
|
|
|
- If possible, run the drill
again. This time, pretend the door feels warm or
they see smoke in the hallway when they peek through
the crack.
|
|
|
- This means you’ll use your
second way out. Tell your kids to keep it closed.
Turn on the light in the bedroom. Grab a white tee
shirt of towel and kneel by the window. Wave the
shirt so people can see you from outside.
- Tell your children you will
come to the room to help them out. (If you have a
fire escape ladder, explain how you will use it.)
|
|
|
- Keep practicing until you can
be sure that everyone in your home can get to the
meeting place fast – try to get there within 3
minutes.
|
|
|
- Put your escape plan on the
refrigerator where everyone can see it. When guests
come to visit overnight, ask your kids to talk them
through the plan. Practice a home fire drill at
least twice a year.
|