Fire safety is not just a fire department issue. It is a household issue, a workplace issue,
a neighborhood issue, and a leadership issue. This hub brings together practical prevention
guidance, training links, checklists, and plain language tips for reducing risk before things go sideways.
Important: This page is public safety education, not professional firefighting instruction.
Do not enter a burning structure, attempt rescue beyond your capability, or fight a fire that is spreading,
producing heavy smoke, blocking your exit, or involving unknown materials. Call 911.
When the alarm sounds
Treat alarms seriously. Move low under smoke, use your planned exit, close doors behind you
if you can do so safely, and meet at your outside rally point. Every second you waste
debating the plan is a second the fire is not wasting.
1. Alert: Yell fire, activate alarms, and wake others.
2. Escape: Use the safest exit. Stay low if there is smoke.
3. Isolate: Close doors behind you to slow smoke and fire spread.
4. Account: Meet at the agreed outside location.
5. Call: Dial 911 from outside. Never go back inside.
Home Fire Prevention
Most home fire risk comes from ordinary habits: cooking, heating, overloaded electrical systems,
candles, smoking materials, lithium batteries, fireplaces, and grills. The fixes are
not complicated. They just require attention.
Prevention // Daily Discipline
Cooking Safety
Cooking is one of the most common home fire causes. Do not leave active cooking unattended.
Stay in the kitchen while frying, grilling, or broiling.
Keep towels, paper, sleeves, and packaging away from burners.
Turn pot handles inward so they cannot be bumped.
Keep a lid nearby to smother small pan fires.
Never throw water on a grease fire.
Heating Safety
Space heaters, fireplaces, furnaces, and chimneys need distance, maintenance, and common sense.
Keep anything that can burn at least 3 feet from heat sources.
Turn portable heaters off before sleeping or leaving.
Use heaters listed by a recognized testing lab.
Have chimneys and heating systems inspected regularly.
Never use ovens or grills to heat a home.
Electrical Safety
Electrical fires usually start with neglect: damaged cords, poor loading, heat buildup, or bad repairs.
Replace frayed, cracked, or warm cords.
Do not overload outlets or power strips.
Use extension cords temporarily, not permanently.
Keep cords out from under rugs and furniture.
Call a qualified electrician for recurring breaker trips.
Battery Safety
Lithium battery fires can be intense. Treat charging as a controlled activity, not background noise.
Use manufacturer approved chargers.
Do not charge damaged, swollen, or overheated batteries.
Avoid charging devices on beds, couches, or under pillows.
Store e-bikes and scooters away from exits when possible.
Recycle batteries properly. Do not toss loose lithium cells in the trash.
Smoke Alarms
Working smoke alarms are the most basic home fire survival tool. They are only useful if they are tested and working.
Install alarms inside bedrooms, outside sleeping areas, and on every level.
Test alarms monthly.
Replace batteries as recommended by the manufacturer.
A fire escape plan should be simple enough for a half-asleep person to execute in smoke.
The plan fails if people need to debate it during the emergency.
Escape // Practice Twice a Year
Build the Plan
Map 2 ways out of every room, usually a door and a window.
Pick an outside meeting place: mailbox, tree, driveway, neighbor's porch.
Assign help for children, older adults, disabled family members, and pets.
Make sure windows open, screens release, and security bars can be unlocked.
Keep exit paths clear. Clutter is not just ugly, it is dangerous.
Practice the Plan
Run a home fire drill during the day and at night.
Practice crawling low under simulated smoke.
Teach children not to hide from firefighters.
Close doors behind you if possible.
Once outside, stay outside. No phones, wallets, pets, or hero trips.
Add alarms, clear exits, use accessible devices if needed.
Hallways
Are exits blocked by furniture, boxes, or shoes?
Keep escape paths open at all times.
Second Floor
Is there a secondary escape route?
Consider a listed escape ladder and practice setup safely.
Garage
Are fuel, paint, tools, batteries, and chargers controlled?
Store flammables properly and keep ignition sources separated.
Kitchen
Can a small cooking fire be isolated quickly?
Keep lids, extinguisher, and clear exits available.
Fire Extinguishers
Extinguishers are for small, early fires only. They are not a substitute for evacuation.
Your exit must stay behind you, and you must know what is burning before you reach for one.
PASS // Small Fires Only
When to Use One
The fire is small and contained.
Everyone else is evacuating.
Someone has already called 911.
You have a clear exit behind you.
You know the extinguisher is right for the fire type.
When Not to Use One
Smoke is heavy or spreading.
The fire is between you and the exit.
The fire involves unknown chemicals or electrical hazards.
Good intentions are not a skill set. Take real training when you can. First aid, CPR, AED,
bleeding control, evacuation planning, and fire safety education all matter.
Training // Build Capability
First Aid, CPR, AED
Basic emergency care, CPR, and AED use through the American Red Cross.
Even if you do not live in the West, outdoor fire awareness matters. Dry fuels, wind,
careless burning, campfires, equipment sparks, and dragging chains can create serious incidents fast.
Wildland // Watch the Weather
Red Flag Awareness
A Red Flag Warning means weather conditions can support rapid fire ignition and spread.
Delay burning, grilling, welding, brush work, and other risky outdoor activities.