Borough of Eatontown,
Fire Department Safety Tips
By Asher M. Plotkin
|
THE EATONTOWN FIRE DEPARTMENT
SAYS:
Be Prepared
in the Event of
FIRE!
|
- GET EVERYONE INVOLVED. Fire is an equal opportunity killer. It treats
no one special in your house due to sex, age, education, or position in
the family. It doesn't do any good if Mom and the kids have practiced a
plan but Dad didn't because he was at work and a fire breaks out while
Dad is watching the kids while Mom is out of the house. Does the Baby-sitter
have a clue, or are you depending upon his or her good judgment? During
a fire is not a really good time to start teaching family members about
the fire safety plan. Seconds count! Everyone must know who, what, when,
and why beforehand and it should be second-nature.
- DRAW A FLOOR PLAN. While this is primarily for determining exit paths,
use this to know your assets. Where are your fire extinguishers? One right
next to the stove may not be a good idea since it may be too close to the
fire should you have a kitchen fire. Each room should have two ways out,
be they a door or window. What if you are on second floor and the stairs
are on fire? Do you need to invest in a life safety ladder (roll-up aluminum
chain link ladder that goes over a window sill in case of fire)? Do you
have detectors? What type are they (smoke, heat, CO)? Are they positioned
properly? Do they work (when was the last time you checked and be honest)?
- PRACTICE A FIRE DRILL. Once you have your exits planned out, let everyone
know where they are for each room in the house. And remember, each room
should have at least two exits. Once everyone is aware of the exits (you
might want to post a piece of paper in each room, near the light switch
with the exit paths to the outside until they become second nature), you
should hold frequent fire drills so that it becomes second nature on where
to go and what to do. Vary the time of day and day of week that you hold
the drills. Do not be afraid to hold some at night. Fire does not strike
only from 9 - 5. When you are confident that everyone has got it, you can
taper off to one drill a month so that it acts a refresher. Vary the scenarios
in your drills to mimic real life. For example, one school (not in Eatontown)
always led the children out to the left during fire drills until the fire
chief stood in the exit route said that this way is blocked. They had always
gone left and were not prepared to deal with the fact that that route might
be blocked. It wasn't in the curriculum. 'Nuff said.
- EVACUATE HOME IMMEDIATELY. Upon hearing the agreed upon notification
signal(s), be it the smoke or heat alarm, the fire alarm, or someone yelling
fire, everyone needs to get out of the house immediately. You don't know
what set off the alarm (i.e., how big or dangerous it might be) and it
is better to play it safe than sorry. Don't waste precious time by playing
Sherlock Holmes. Fire spreads in seconds, not minutes. Everyone inside
goes outside. One parent and the kids don't go outside with the other parent
still inside playing detective. The only place your safety is guaranteed
is outside away from the fire.
- DO NOT OPEN HOT DOORS. When you get to a door, STOP and FEEL IT
FIRST. DO NOT feel it by grabbing the metal doorknob with your palm.
If the knob is hot enough, your hand will automatically contract around
the knob and you will now be stuck to the knob. Feel the door (or any object
with the BACK OF YOUR PALM. In this way, when the heat makes your
hand contract, it will be pulling away from the heat source rather than
toward it. When feeling or attempting to open a door in a fire scenario,
never crawl or stand (more on standing later) to the side of the door that
is going to open. Make sure you are behind the center of the door. While
there are no hard and fast rules as to open or not to open a door, an obviously
hot door which just burnt you hand should probably not be opened. If after
you feel the door and you feel it is safe to open, do it slowly, and again
from behind the door, not the side that opens. In case flames, heavy smoke,
or superheated air enters your room, you will not be the direct line of
fire (pardon the pun). You will be able to put your weight behind the door
and close it and use "Plan B" which should be your second escape
route.
- A WORD ABOUT WINDOWS. If you have to open any windows to facilitate
your exit and they are stuck, use whatever is handy to break them. A chair,
a lamp, a wastepaper basket, that vase that you always hated. Use your
fist only as a last resort. Remember glass cuts and you have arteries in
your arm. If you have to use your fist, wrap it in something first. When
the window is broken, ensure that you have enough glass removed so that
you can fit through safely. Again, use the object, not your fist. Try to
place a towel or blanket in the window frame, so that if you have to exit
that way, you will not cut yourself on any protruding glass. If you have
a window which opens up and down, break the top pane also. This is so that
any smoke, which rises, will exit above you, not out the hole in which
you are sticking your head. While each house is constructed differently
and each fire is different, it is generally better to wait for rescue than
to exit via a window. This will be a personal choice based on factors of
a particular situation. If you have to exit via a window, and you don't
have a life safety ladder, or a concerned neighbor with a ladder, it is
best not to jump but to hang down from the window and then to let go. If
you jump from a second story window, based on the common factor of 10 feet
per floor, you are jumping 15 or more feet. If you hang down, you are only
going to fall 15 feet less your height , (i.e., 15 feet minus 6 feet (your
height) equals a fall of only 9 feet, the distance from your feet to the
ground).
- FRESHEST AIR IS CLOSEST TO THE FLOOR. In a fire, the freshest and coolest
air is near the floor. This is because smoke and heat rise. If you have
to exit a smoky environment, the best way to do so is crawling on your
hands and knees NOT standing up. Not only will you be getting the freshest
and coolest air possible, you will not literally be running into the unknown.
In a fire, smoke is BLACK and THICK. If you are standing up, chances
are your head will be in the smoke and you won't see that hole where the
floor used to be until you step right through it. If you are crawling,
your hands become sensors. They feel out in front of you. If your normally
hard floor feels soft or spongy , it might not support your weight. If
they don't find a floor, you are going to (hopefully) stop and assess the
situation. Is it a small hole, which you can crawl over or do you have
to find another way out. When going down stairs, just the opposite is true.
Go down backwards. This is so that if down below you the stairs are burnt
away, your hands will be above you and you will be able to grab on to something
to stop your fall.
- DECIDE ON A MEETING PLACE OUTSIDE. This is important for accountability
purposes. The meeting place should be the same for all members of the family
and should be far enough away from the burning structure to ensure your
safety. It could be the far edge of the front lawn, the neighbor's front
lawn, the mailbox, or whatever. The key is that everyone knows where it
is and is trained to go there in the event of an emergency. Again, it should
be far enough away from the burning structure to ensure your safety. All
family members, in some order (usually age) should be trained to take a
head-count and let officials know if all people are accounted for or if
anyone is missing.
- CALL THE FIRE DEPARTMENT FROM NEIGHBORS OR OTHER LOCATION. Do not stay
inside a smoky or otherwise dangerous environment to call the fire department.
Ensure human life safety and get out first. You can either call 9-1-1,
which goes to the Monmouth County Radio Room and then to Eatontown or 542-0100
which goes directly to Eatontown. Most children are taught to dial 9-1-1
in school and this should be reinforced at home. While 542-0100 is slightly
quicker, 9-1-1 is generally easier for everyone to remember .
- DO NOT REENTER A BURNING BUILDING. While we all have possessions that
we consider irreplaceable, they only non-replaceable items are you and
your family. Clothes, jewelry, photos, and the like can all be replaced
with new. You can't. You may think it is safe to go back in because when
you came out there was only "a little" smoke. Things could have
changed drastically since you came out. The floor or stairs that you were
just on could be burned away now. The room with the photo album in it could
be fully engulfed in flames. If you are out of the burning structure, you
are out and safe. Stay that way!
- HAVE FIRE EXTINGUISHERS HANDY . There may be times that you may be
able to take care of the immediate situation yourself. If you have a grease
fire in a pan on the stove, you can generally put it out by putting a lid
on the pot and turning of the flame underneath (you are smothering it and
getting rid of the heat source). If you are faced with a small fire or
a wastepaper basket fire, you can (if you feel confident enough, remembering
that small is a relative term) try to put it out with an extinguisher.
Ensure you are using the right extinguisher for the type of burning material.
You should have reviewed extinguisher correctness for task and placement
during your floor plan and practiced use (don't pull safety pins or actually
discharge them) during your fire drills. Again, during a fire is not a
good time to read the operating instructions for the first time.
- If the fire does not go completely out and stay out by the time
the extinguisher is used up, get out and call the fire department. Do not
waste time by trying another extinguisher.
- If the fire does go completely out and stay out by the time
the extinguisher is used up, quickly pat yourself on the back and call
the fire department. The fire department needs to check for what we call
"hidden extension". This is for your protection. For example,
this is when the fire might have been near a wall and it heated the interior
contents of the wall up and they are now burning and spreading the fire
unbeknownst to you. Do not be embarrassed to call the fire department.
We would much rather get all dressed up (in our fancy duds) to tell you
that everything is okay, then to have to pour water on what is now the
smoldering embers of what used to be your house.
In conclusion, the author has tried to give you a both a plan
of action and food for thought. Hopefully, there are a couple of humorous
points. Remember, however, in all seriousness, fire is not funny. You,
hopefully, plan. Your fire department trains and plans. Fire on the otherhand,
is lazy and does neither. It has no desire or time to read plans or training
manuals. It just burns. It doesn't exempt you from death or injury because
you are an untrained civilian, just as it does not exempt the firefighter
because he has training. Become knowledgeable about your home and surroundings.
Know what to do, who to call, and where to go should fire strike. Do not
become a statistic, become a survivor.
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Last updated: 10/25/96