Fire Prevention and Precautions
The fire safety issue is extremely important. Every year, more than 9,500 domestic
fires are reported in Ireland and more than 50 people die in these fires. One
in ten of these fire victims are children. However, safety is not an issue that
comes to our minds very often, as we go about our daily routine. Yet, in our homes,
there may be dangers that can take lives and destroy our properties.
This web site wants to highlight the dangers of fire and smoke.
Understand the dangers
Most residential fire deaths occur because of inhalation of toxic gas, rather
than contact with flames. The tragedy is that many of these deaths could be prevented
by taking a few precautions.
General Fire Prevention Tips
- Do not plug too many appliances into an electrical outlet.
- Make sure that combustibles are not too close to heaters, stoves and fireplaces.
- Never smoke in bed or soft furniture.
- Do not use damaged or frayed electrical cords or extension cords.
- Keep matches and lighters out of the reach of children.
- Teach your children about the dangers of playing with fire.
- Never use extension cords with heating or air conditioning equipment.
- Purchase smoke alarms and fire extinguishers for each floor of your home.
- Have an Emergency Escape Plan and practice it frequently.
The most obvious way out may be blocked by fire or smoke. Remember that the smoke
of a home fire is extremely dense and toxic, taking any vision, so, if a downstairs
room is on fire, a window will usually be the only way out of a room upstairs.

- Make sure that screens or storm windows can be easily removed.
- Ensure that you have tools available if windows must be broken.
- If you live in a two-story home, you should have an escape ladder for each occupied
bedroom. Escape ladders are available for purchase, and they can easily be stored under a bed or in
a closet.
Please note, that your anticipated escape route, for example over a bay window
or similar, might well be blocked if the fire rages in the room below.

The photo shows a house, where the fire had come through a little roof, which
otherwise could have acted as an escape route. Here, an alternative exit would
have been required.
If you are exiting with young children, the parent to which the children are
most attached to, should lead the way, as children will be more likely to follow.
Establish a meeting place outside your home to be sure everyone has escaped.
Every family member should participate in practice escape drills.
- In the event of fire, do not stop to get dressed or gather valuables. Seconds
count - do not search for the family pet.
- Teach your family that in a fire they must stay low to the floor to avoid smoke.
- Passageways may be completely filled with dense smoke, so everyone should practice
exiting on their hands and knees while blindfolded.
- Train family members to feel any closed door on the exit route before opening.
If the door is warm, open it slowly, and close it quickly if heat or smoke rushes
in.
- Establish a rule that once you're out, you never re-enter under any circumstances.
As soon as two people have reached the meeting place, one should call 999 from
a neighbour's house.
The earlier a fire is detected, the less risk there is to your life. Fire alarms
and smoke detectors play a very important role in this
Recommendations
Smoke Alarms
- Purchase a smoke alarm for every floor of your home, and read the instructions on how to use it and
where to position it.
- Smoke alarms should be placed near bedrooms, either on the ceiling or six to
twelve inches below the ceiling on the wall. Do not place it within 6" of where
the wall and ceiling meet on either surface.
- Locate smoke alarms away from air vents.
- Test your alarms regularly to ensure that they still work.
- If you have a battery-powered alarm, change the battery every six months when
you change your clocks.
- For maximum protection, install BOTH ionisation and photoelectric smoke alarms
in the home for the optimum detection of fast flaming fires and slow smoldering
fires.
Fire Extinguishers
To guard against small fires or to keep a small fire from developing into a big
one, every home should be equipped with fire extinguishers. Because almost all
fires are small at first, they might be contained if a fire extinguisher is handy
and used properly. You should take care, however, to select the right kind of
fire extinguisher, because there are different ones for different kinds of fires.
Install fire extinguishers on every level of the home and include the kitchen,
ground floor and garage.
Selecting a Fire Extinguisher
Extinguishers are classified according to the class of fire for which they are
suitable. The four classes of fires are A, B, C, D: Class A fires involve common combustibles such as wood, paper, cloth, rubber, trash
and most plastics. They are common in typical commercial and home settings.
Class B fires involving flammable liquids, solvents, oil, petrol, paints, lacquers,
other oil-based products and liquifying plastics. Class B fires often spread rapidly.
Unless they are properly suppressed, they can re-flash after the flames have been
extinguished.
Class C fires caused by combustion of gases e.g. methane, propane, hydrogen, acetylene,
natural gas and city gas.
Class D fires involve combustable metals as magnesium and aluminium swarf.
Class F fires are the classical pan fire. Chip pan fires can only be controlled with
fire blankets or special wet chemical fire extinguishers, which lay a cooling
and oxygen-blocking foam carpet on top of the boiling oil. The wet chemical fire
extinguishers usually come with an application lance.
A typical home or office fire extinguisher should have an ABC rating, while your
fire extinguisher in the kitchen ought to be suitable for pan fires as well.
|
 |