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Let's Get Animated About Winter Fire Safety!



FYI – The US Fire Administration email chain below has tips, social media images, and animations for winter fire safety that you may want to include as part of your site’s Home Safety program. Some items are equally applicable to space heaters in the workplace (** highlighted added):

If you are using a portable heater:

**Make sure the heater has an automatic shut-off so if it tips over, it shuts off.

Keep anything that can burn such bedding, clothing and curtains at least 3 feet from the heater.

**Plug portable heaters directly into wall outlets. Never use an extension cord or power strip.

Turn heaters off when you go to bed or leave the room.

Social media tools

The weather is getting colder. Each year, more people die in home fires during the winter months than any other time of the year.

To help you to spread the word about fire safety, USFA has created new animated social media assets.

You can find these assets for Twitter and Facebook at https://www.usfa.fema.gov/prevention/outreach/media/social.html

Winter fire safety tips

We've also pulled together some tips you can share in your emails, tweets, posts, and on your websites and blogs. Please use the information below to teach your public about heating their homes safely.

More fires happen in the winter months than any other time of the year. During the cold months, we spend more time indoors and use different methods to heat our homes.

It is important to keep fire safety in mind when you are heating your home.

If you are using a portable heater:

Make sure the heater has an automatic shut-off so if it tips over, it shuts off.

Keep anything that can burn such bedding, clothing and curtains at least 3 feet from the heater.

Plug portable heaters directly into wall outlets. Never use an extension cord or power strip.

Turn heaters off when you go to bed or leave the room.

If you are using a fireplace:

Keep a glass or metal screen in front of the fireplace to prevent embers or sparks from jumping out and starting a fire.

Do not burn paper in your fireplace.

Before you go to sleep or leave your home put the fire out completely.

Put ashes in a metal container with a lid. Store the container outside at least 3 feet from your home.

If you are using a wood stove:

Have your chimney inspected and cleaned each year by a professional.

Keep anything that can burn at least 3 feet from the stove.

Do not burn paper in your wood stove.

Before you go to sleep or leave your home, put the fire out completely.

When heating your home, you need to be aware of carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide, also known as CO, is called the “invisible killer” because it’s a colorless, odorless, and poisonous gas. More than 150 people in the U.S. die each year due to accidental CO poisoning from generators or fuel-burning appliances such as furnaces, stoves, water heaters and fire places. Breathing CO at high levels can kill you.

Put CO alarms inside your home to provide an early warning of increasing CO levels. These alarms should be placed in a central location outside each sleeping area and on every level of your home.

As always, make sure you have a smoke alarm on every level of your home, inside bedrooms and outside sleeping areas. Test your alarms every month. Have a home fire escape plan and practice your plan at least twice a year. Make sure everyone knows how to escape your home if there is a fire.

For more information on heating fire safety, go to the U.S. Fire Administration. (https://www.usfa.fema.gov/prevention/outreach/heating.html)

Join the Fight!

Have you joined Fire is Everyone's Fight?

Fire is Everyone's Fight (https://www.usfa.fema.gov/prevention/outreach/fief/) is a national initiative to unite the fire service, life safety organizations and professionals in an effort to reduce home fire injuries, deaths and property loss. The goal is to change how people think about fire and fire prevention.

Join the Fight (https://apps.usfa.fema.gov/contact/fief/) and use the materials to educate your communities about the importance of fire prevention.

If you have any questions, please email Teresa Neal (teresa.neal@fema.dhs.gov).

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