REPORTING
A FIRE OR EMERGENCY
The following is the 6 step procedure
for reporting a fire or emergency. The public
should report emergencies using this method:
By
Telephone:
• DIAL 911 Emergency number
• Fire
Department 7-digit number
• ‘0’ for
the Operator
• State the nature of the emergency.
•
Give address, with cross streets or landmarks if
possible.
•
State your name and location.
•
Give the telephone number from which you are calling.
•
Stay on the line if requested to do so by the telecommunicator.
FIRE
PREVENTION
3 Home Components
Fire Prevention: Stop problems
before they start by recognizing fire hazards.
Early
Warning: Install a device to give you and
your family time to escape.
Pre-planned
Escape: Know what to do to ensure successful
escape.
General
Tips
• Don’t leave children alone near cooking or heating appliances.
•
Keep matches/lighters out of reach of children.
•
Make sure elderly persons take fire precautions.
•
When smoking, use large ash trays. Do not empty them until ashes and butts are
cold. Check sofa and carpet for smouldering butts or ashes after entertaining
guests. Don’t smoke in bed. It is a major cause of home fires. Don’t
smoke in a workshop/garage.
•
Don’t use a naked light in a garage/workshop.
•
Check portable heaters. Ensure that they cannot be knocked over and are kept
away from furniture & -furnishings.
•
Never block possible fire exits.
Electrical
Hazards
• Don’t overload extension cords or outlets.
•
Don’t patch worn cords or use cracked plugs, replace them.
•
Don’t nail or staple cords. Do not place under rugs & carpeting or
across hooks & nails. Untie knots in cords. Knots damage insulation and pinch
the wires.
•
Replace blown fuses with the correct size.
Cooking
Safety
• To extinguish a grease fire, turn off the heat and try to smother the
fire using the correct fire extinguisher, a pot lid or a wet towel. Never use
water or water-based extinguishers on a grease fire.
•
Do not risk carrying out a burning pot/pan. Closing the oven door and turning
off the heat usually extinguishes an oven fire.
•
Never store food & utensils above the stove where you have to reach across
heat to get to them.
•
When cooking wear short sleeves or tight- fitting long sleeves to reduce the
chance of dragging clothing across a hot element or through hot grease.
•
Do not dry or air clothing over a stove.
•
Never use outdoor barbecues indoors. This is due not only to the fire hazard,
but because deadly carbon monoxide gas will be released.
•
After lighting a barbecue using the appropriate starter, do not add more liquid
starter to hurry it along. Never use gasoline, naptha, kerosene or any flammable
liquid as a starter.
Flammable
Liquids
• Gasoline, propane and other dangerous flammable liquids should not be
stored in the house. Store such liquids in a detached shed or garage in a
safe, well ventilated area. Store flammable liquids only in approved safety containers,
not in a glass jug, discarded bleach bottle or other makeshift containers.
•
Gasoline containers should not be filled more than 3/4 full, to allow for expansion,
when transportation in a vehicle or car trunk cannot be avoided. As a precaution,
the vehicle or trunk lid should be opened periodically to assure there is no
leakage or accumulation of vapors. Containers of propane should never be carried
anywhere within a vehicle where vapors will be confined.
•
Be sure the motor is turned off and you are not smoking before filling gasoline-fuelled
appliances
or mowers.
•
Never repair gasoline-fuelled items in the house or near an ignition source such
as a heater.
•
Never use a flammable liquid to start trash or rubbish fires.
Open
Flames
• Candle fires have been increasing over the past years.
•
Candles and oil-burning lamps should have stable holders and should be used in
open, well-ventilated areas away from combustibles.
•
If you are leaving a room, extinguish all flames.
•
Never leave a child alone with an open flame, even briefly.
•
Keep flashlights and batteries ready in case your electric power goes out. Walking
around with a candle during an emergency
could be dangerous.
FIRE
PREVENTION
Know
Your Home
Check all possible fire exits. Do all windows open easily?
Are any exits blocked with furniture/trash? Do second story
windows require fire ladders? Always sleep with interior doors
closed. This will slow the speed of fire and smoke and increase
your escape time.
Fire
Drills
Regularly practise fire drills with
the entire family. People tend to panic in a fire.
Drills help the correct procedures become habit.
The objective of fire drills should be simple – to
get out.
•
Practise escaping from alternate routes, two from
each room if possible.
•
Know your way to exits well enough that you can find
them while crawling in the dark. Actually practise
this.
•
For children, home represents safety when frightened
or hurt. Teach your children that if your home is
on fire, it no longer is a safe place. As young as
possible, children must learn how to escape on their
own in the event that a parent cannot help them.
They must learn that they cannot hide from fire,
but must escape it and not return for any reason.
Be sure they understand this.
•
As you leave each room close the doors behind you.
In an actual fire this will slow the spread of fire
and smoke, increasing your escape time.
•
Designate a meeting place for your family to gather.
Usually a good place is the front yard a safe distance
from the house.
•
Post the fire and police department number beside
every phone.
• Be sure that your children know their telephone
number & address in the event that they need
to call the fire service or police department for
a fire or emergency. Help him or her to practise
doing so and remind them to speak clearly and loudly
so they will be understood.
•
Encourage young people and adults to look over and
read this section of the Community/Purple Pages carefully. Fire
Procedures
• Quickly get out of bed and feel your closed bedroom door. If the door
is not warm, open it while bracing your body against it. You may have to quickly
close it again.
•
If the hallway is clear, alert the rest of the family. Quickly and calmly evacuate
the house, closing doors behind you.
•
Don’t take time to dress or retrieve belongings. A seemingly passive fire
can intensify in seconds.
•
If the bedroom door is warm and smoke is coming in through the cracks, you should
not use it as a means of escape. Use the window as an alternate.
•
If there are children with you, never get out first. They may panic and not follow
you. Instead, lower them out before you.
•
If possible, close the window/door behind you. This will cut off a fresh source
of oxygen for the fire.
•
Unless there is a ladder, balcony or another roof to climb to, it is not recommended
that you use anything higher than a second storey window for escape.
•
If necessary, make a rope by knotting sheets or drapes together. Tie one end
to a bed or heavy piece of furniture.
•
If you cannot make a rope, drop cushions/bedding to break your fall.
•
Get through the window feet first, lower yourself to the full extent of your
arms and drop.
•
If you cannot use either the door or window for escape, stay calm. The first
consideration of the Fire Service will be rescue.
•
Seal cracks around the door with rugs, blankets, etc.
•
If possible, wet the door and area. Stay low because heat and smoke rise.
•
If smoke is entering, place a wet cloth over your mouth and nose.
•
Shut off any fans and air conditioners.
•
Signal at the window.
•
Never return to a burning building.
Contact
The Fire Service
In most cases it is advisable to contact the
Fire Service after you have safely escaped. Call
from a neighbour’s house. No matter how
small the fire, they should be notified. When
phoning the fire service, speak calmly
and answer
all questions. Firefighters will be despatched as
you talk. A longer call will not delay them.
Clothing
On Fire
If clothing catches on fire, do not run. Running
will intensify the fire. Instruct your family
to stop, drop and roll. If someone else is
on fire, tackle or knock them down making them
roll. Smother the fire with a blanket or rug.
SMOKE
DETECTORS
Most fatal residential fires strike at night
while people are sleeping. During a fire, smoke
and toxic gases can kill by consuming valuable
oxygen your brain and lungs need to function.
The lack of oxygen will make thinking and co-ordination
difficult. You may be disoriented and your
senses may be numbed. You breathe faster and
with greater difficulty, quickly using the
little oxygen that is left. If the fire is
far enough advanced, eventually breathing becomes
impossible. A smoke detector can sound the
early warning that should awaken you, giving
you that extra time needed for escape. The
very smoke that can kill will activate your
smoke detector and possibly save your life.
Every home should have a smoke detector outside
each bedroom area on each floor level. Additional
detectors should be installed at the head of
each stairway and in each bedroom occupied
by a smoker. When purchasing detectors, look
for a label indicating approval by a recognized
testing laboratory. Install & maintain,
including regular testing and cleaning in accordance
with the manufacturer’s instructions.
Batteries should usually be replaced yearly.
PORTABLE
FIRE EXTINGUISHERS
A portable fire extinguisher is designed for
use only on small fires. In the event of a
fire–Call the Fire Service and report
the nature of the fire. Get everyone safely
out. Only then should you try to extinguish
the fire. Use the appropriate fire extinguisher
in accordance with the instructions on the
label. It is important to use the correct type
of extinguisher, considering the type of fire.
Use of the wrong kind will result in ineffective
extinguishment or can even contribute to fire
spread. When only one fire extinguisher is
installed in your home, it should be an all
purpose dry chemical type (Type C). All fire
extinguishers must be labelled by a recognized
testing laboratory. Consider equipping your
automobile, boat & tent with an approved
type fire extinguisher. After every use, your
extinguisher should be recharged as soon as
possible.
FIRE
SERVICE DISPATCH PROCEDURES
Medical
or Traumatic Emergencies
he Bermuda Fire Service has two Emergency
Medical Dispatchers (EMD) on duty at all times.
The dispatcher’s main duty is to receive
the routed 911 call from the Police and dispatch
either a fire truck or ambulance to an emergency
or, in some cases, both depending on the nature
of the incident. When you speak to the Fire
Service dispatchers the following actions are
being carried out: EMD “A” will
obtain pertinent information from the caller
and give pre-arrival instructions to the caller
if necessary e.g.
•
Exit house in the case of fire
•
CPR, direct pressure on bleeding sites
•
Don’t remove the helmet from a cycle
accident victim
The Bermuda Fire Service and the Association
of Public-Safety Communications Officials
(APCO) created these pre-arrival instructions.
While
EMD “A” is interviewing the caller,
EMD “B” and the original police
officer who routed the 911 call are listening
in. Their job is to gather sufficient and pertinent
information to dispatch a unit or units. EMD “B” will
dispatch the nearest available fire unit and/or
Hospital ambulance to the required location. Read
All Safety Tips In This Section And Practise Fire
Drills Regularly
Post
Fire & Police Numbers
Beside Each Phone: Make sure your children
know their
telephone number and address.
Designate
A Meeting Place Outside The House: In
case of fire, get everyone
out of the
house and
meet at
designated spot.
Install & Maintain
Smoke Detectors: Place one
outside each bed-room, at the
head of each
stairway and in the bedroom
of every smoker.
Keep
Exits Clear: Make sure exits
aren’t
blocked by furniture or trash.
Know
Two Ways Out Of Every Room: Make
sure your family does, too
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