Commissioner of Insurance Mike Chaney issued the following statement.
Heating Safety Vital During Extreme Cold
Jackson
–With below freezing temperatures forecast for coming days in
Mississippi, State Fire Marshal Mike Chaney reminds Mississippians that
properly using heating sources to stay warm during cold weather and
having working
smoke alarms in your home is literally the difference between life and death.
"Everyone
must use extra precaution when using space heaters. Space heating poses
a much higher risk of fire, death and injury than central heating.
And, it cannot be stressed enough that you should never use a stove or
oven to heat a home," Chaney said.
"Every home should have working smoke alarms. Working smoke alarms can cut the risk of people dying in home fires in half."
The State Fire Marshal's Office offers these heating safety tips:
- Have a three-foot "kid-free zone" around open fires and space heaters.
- Supervise children when a fireplace, fire pit, or other space heater is being used. Use a sturdy, metal screen to prevent contact burns, which are even more common than flame burns.
- All heaters need space. Keep things that can burn, such as paper, bedding or furniture, at least 3 feet away from heating equipment.
- Use heating equipment that has the label of a recognized testing laboratory.
- Never use your oven for heating.
- Install stationary space heating equipment, water heaters or central heating equipment, according to the local codes and manufacturer's instructions.
- Have a qualified professional install the equipment.
- Make sure all fuel-burning vented equipment is vented to the outside to avoid carbon monoxide poisoning. CO is created when fuels burn incompletely. CO poisoning can cause illness and even death. Make sure the venting for exhaust is kept clear and unobstructed.
- Install and maintain carbon monoxide alarms to avoid the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.
Portable electric space heaters
- Turn heaters off when you go to bed or leave the room.
- Use and purchase portable space heaters with an automatic shut off so if they're tipped over they will shut off.
- Place space heater on solid, flat surface.
- Plug power cords directly into outlets and never into an extension cord.
- Inspect for cracked or damaged, broken plugs or loose connections. Replace before using Fuel burning space heaters
- Always use the proper fuel as specified by the manufacturer.
- When refueling, allow the appliance to cool and refuel outside or in a well-ventilated area.
- When using the heater, open a window to ensure proper ventilation.
- In portable kerosene or other liquid-fueled space heaters always use the proper grade of the proper fuel.
- All new unvented gas-fired space heaters have an oxygen depletion sensor that detects a reduced level of oxygen in the area where the heater is operating and shuts off the heater before a hazardous level of carbon monoxide accumulates. If you have an older heater without this feature, replace it.
- If the pilot light of your gas heater goes out, allow 5 minutes or more for the gas to go away before trying again, do not allow gas to accumulate, and light the match before you turn on the gas to the pilot to avoid the risk of flashback.
- If you smell gas in your gas heater, do not attempt to light the appliance. Turn off all the controls and open doors and window. Call a gas service person.
Wood burning stoves
- Install the stove, chimney connectors, and chimneys following manufacturer's instructions or have a professional do the installation.
- Wood stoves should bear the label of a recognized testing laboratory.
- In wood stoves, burn only dry, seasoned wood. In pellet stoves, burn only dry, seasoned wood pellets.
- Start the fire with newspaper or kindling, never with a flammable liquid, such as lighter fluid, kerosene or gasoline.
- Keep the doors of your wood stove closed unless loading or stoking the live fire. • Allow ashes to cool before disposing. Dispose of ashes in a tightly covered metal container and keep the ash container at least 10 feet away from the home and any other nearby buildings. Douse and saturate with water.
-
Should
a fire break out in the home, have an emergency evacuation plan for the
family to follow and have a designated meeting place for all family
members. Once everyone is
outside the burning home, call 911 and
DO NOT RE-ENTER THE HOUSE UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES!!! To create a plan for your family, use this Escape Plan Grid (https://tinyurl.com/yac6q42b) from the National Safety Council.
For
more fire safety information follow the Mississippi Insurance
Department (@MSInsuranceDept) and Mississippi State Fire Marshal's
Office (@msfiresafe)
on Twitter and Facebook.
3 comments:
Queue the "self-serving" comments...
He is not kidding. The heating device I used to stay warm on a cold winter’s night left with half my money and all my dog. Be warned. Those things are dangerous if not properly maintained.
The people who die in home/trailer fires and those who leave their kids unattended while they mosey down to the club never read stuff like the Commissioner's warnings.
Same as with a list of reasons to not drink and drive, not to have unprotected sex and not to do drugs. There's no way to know, but it's doubtful any of that has ever saved a life, ever prevented VD or ever kept anybody from popping a top or snorted a line.
Meanwhile: Drive sober or get pulled over. Or something like that.
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