There are so many reasons, and they go beyond loss of life and property, although those two are of course top of mind when you think about a fire. It’s about your family, the home you’ve built, your peace of mind and more. We are privileged to live in a time where fires are much less common. But to keep it that way, we have to keep in mind the simple actions we can take to make our homes, families, businesses, and colleagues safer.
We’ve broken down the top five things that fire prevention and safety planning help you protect, along with simple actions you can take to reduce your risk.
Above all else, fire and life safety measures matter because it’s all about protecting your people – your family, friends and coworkers. Simple measures can cut the risk of loss of life in a fire in half, such as having working smoke detectors in a home, properly installed throughout the house.
What are some other measures you can take to protect your people? Check out the list below:
For many, the idea of losing their home in a fire is unimaginable. It’s not just losing where you live – it’s losing all of the memories inside of it, such as home videos, photographs, heirloom jewelry or furniture and other possessions. It’s losing all of the things that you’ve carried with you throughout your life.
In a study from the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), 27% of reported fires occurred in homes – and four out of every five fire deaths and three-quarters of all fire-related injuries were caused by home fires. On average, fire departments respond to about 354,400 home fires every year, most caused by cooking or heating.
Don’t become a part of the statistics. Protect your home with fire alarms, and always practice safety when cooking in particular.
Some easy best practices to follow while cooking are:
When it comes to heating, it’s also simple. Keep anything that can burn at least 3 feet away from any heating equipment, have a kid-free zone of 3 feet around open fires and space heaters, and maintain heating equipment and chimneys by having them cleaned and inspected by a professional at least once a year.
Home fires may be more common, but business and office fires happen too, impacting workers and costing business owners time and money.
According to NFPA, United States fire departments respond to an average of about 3,340 office fires each year – resulting in about $112 million in direct property damage. More than one in four office fires was caused by cooking fires – but these fires accounted for just 6% of the direct property damage. Electrical distribution and lighting equipment are the second leading cause of fires, causing 15% of the property damage.
All of that’s pretty scary. But, when present, wet pipe sprinklers operated 90% of the time in fires large enough to active the equipment – and they were effective in 88% of those fires. Deaths were also 62% lower when offices had sprinklers, compared to properties with no automatic extinguishing equipment.
Of course, all businesses want to be compliant when it comes to fire code and regulations, but we want you to think beyond compliance. We want you to think about protecting your people and property in the most effective way possible.
What precautions and preventative measures should a business take? It’s depends on your business and particular needs, but at CertaSite, we recommend these life safety systems:
When you experience a house fire everything changes in an instant, and your life and routine is thrown into a freefall.
The fire restoration process is a long one, and includes assessment, damage control, cleaning, repairs, replacing damaged items, and sometimes rebuilding a home or office altogether. The process can take weeks to months, depending on the scale of the fire.
Fire prevention may seem time-intensive – between the planning, practicing, and acquiring equipment – but it’s nothing compared to the time of recovering from a fire. A few simple steps now can save you months of time later.
Last but certainly not least, fire and life safety is important to protect your peace of mind – your sanity.
No one wants to think about a fire, but they happen more often than you’d think, and so many are preventable. Simple measures like smoke detectors, cooking precautions, fire extinguishers, and sprinklers in offices can go a long way in stopping fires if they happen and preventing them in the first place.
With confidence that you’re prepared should a fire happen, you’ll be ready if it does. That peace of mind is priceless.