04
Feb 2011

Four Minutes to Save Your Life

One of the greatest challenges fire and life safety educators have is to help more people understand the importance of working smoke alarms in the home. Perhaps we've said it so many times that people simply tune out the message. The fact is -- almost one-fourth of home fire deaths happen where there are NO working smoke alarms. If we know people die from fire in homes where there is no alarm -- or no working alarm -- why do we continue to ignore the message?

Take four minutes to watch the video in this post. Your life -- and the lives of your loved ones -- is worth four minutes of your time, right?
 
(download)

 

The U.S. Fire Administration (USFA) launched the Install. Inspect. Protect. Campaign, encouraging people to install and maintain smoke alarms and sprinklers, practice fire escape plans, and perform a home safety walk-through.

The USFA recommends installing smoke alarms both inside and outside of  sleeping areas and on every level of your home; testing them monthly; changing alkaline batteries at least once a year; and installing ionization and photoelectric smoke alarms or dual sensor smoke alarms. For more information, visit www.usfa.dhs.gov/smokealarms or call the USFA Publications Office at (800) 561-3356.

10
Dec 2010

Lock the Barn Door

I am sharing this email that I sent to fire prevention professionals this past week. I believe that the message needs to be heard loud and clear. It's time for us to wake up. People need to realize that they are responsible for their safety.

By the time fire departments arrive at your home when it is burning you are dead if you've not planned ahead, exited the home or at the very least protected your family with working alarms to warn you of the danger. Of course, people reading this will likely be the choir to whom I am preaching.

People need to stop trying to put out their own fires. Fire service personnel in the U.S. need to realize that we are already responding to a loss every time we go. When a family has a fire -- we are only mitigating a problem that has already happened. Why are we not doing a better job at teaching people how to prevent these problems from happening in the first place?

I have updated a few things from the original message.

 In the State of Ohio we have now realized 137 fire fatalities for the year.

I’m sending this one for your info and consideration. It is a few years old (2007), but I have read this many times and often I still get very frustrated by the content. There are so many ways to prevent fires – and yet we as a service cater our budgets to the need for buying and staffing trucks. Firefighter safety is ABSOLUTELY important, but we also have ways to keep our firefighters safer, while allowing them to also be advocates for prevention. I feel this is a great read if you’ve never explored it.

Barn_door
The report Lock the Barn Door by Azarang (Ozzie) Mirkhah, P.E., EFO, CBO, also goes hand in hand with the FEMA/USFA document “Fire Death Rate Trends” produced by Phil Schaenman and TriData back in the mid-90s. The data is a bit old, but the mentality exists:

“…the United States, while having substantially reduced its fire death rate, is still 30 percent to 50 percent higher than its peer nations…”

 “Other countries place a higher premium on their ability to prevent fires rather than their ability to put them out once they occur.”

I find that fire prevention educators still have a conflicted mindset on this, as well. They are often also suppression firefighters (and we LOVE to fight the fire). But they often miss the point. Prevention means fewer lives lost or injured, fewer properties destroyed or damaged. Saying, “I can’t convince these fire chiefs; their minds are made up; they can only fund staffing issues, not prevention” isn’t good enough. We’ve raised the white flag and are ineffective in our mission when we do this.

“Americans tend to view fires as an inevitable part of life and, unlike citizens in other countries, are more prone to characterize fires as unfortunate ‘accidents’.”

Please read the report when you can. And thanks for spending the time on this lengthy email. If you have arrived at this point of the text, I know you cared enough to receive the message.

Ways to reduce fire losses and deaths are neither unknown nor arcane. The primary way and the goal of any effort in this area must be to prevent fires in the first place. – America Burning Re-commissioned (2000)

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Filed under  //   FEMA   TriData   USFA   fire safety   fire service   preparedness   prevention  
14
Jan 2010

Ohio Task Force One Enroute to Haiti

Local task force heads to Haiti
Members will rescue victims from rubble

Updated: Thursday, 14 Jan 2010, 8:14 AM EST
Published : Thursday, 14 Jan 2010, 8:10 AM EST

Jordan Burgess

KETTERING, Ohio (WDTN) - An local task force prepared early Thursday morning for a trip to Haiti to help earthquake victims.

Ohio Task Force 1 packed bags and loaded trucks with equipment that will be used to rescue those trapped in the rubble.

The task force planned to leave from Kettering and then fly out of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base with an arrival in Haiti scheduled for sometime Thursday evening.

Members will then stay for one to two weeks.

The task force is made up of police officers, firefighters, and others from across the state. It is one of 27 others across the country that normally handle domestic disasters, but in this case the President has called them up to provide help on foreign soil.

Ohio Task Force 1 has dealt with the aftermath of Katrina and 9-11 in the past.

from WDTN, Dayton OH

Filed under  //   rescue   FEMA   Haiti   Ohio Task Force One   WDTN   news   search and rescue