What is Behavioral Based Safety?

This video is posted for, an example of behavioral based safety and not for training purposes

Behavioral Safety (Behavior Based Safety, Behavioral Based Safety) Articles

SPS Articles by E. Scott Geller, Ph.D. & Safety Performance Solutions

Welcome to the Internet’s most comprehensive source of Behavior Based Safety articles. Below is our collection of Behavior Based Safety Articles and some People-Based Safety Articles. If you have any questions or would like more information, please feel free to contact us and we would be pleased to talk with you.

Check back regularly for the latest information from the innovators of Behavior Based Safety. Enjoy!

Practical Articles:

Theoretical Articles:

ISHN Articles by E. Scott Geller, Ph.D., Senior Partner SPS

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

2000

1999

1998

1997

1996

How Would a Court Rate Your Training Programs?

Your training programs make the difference between safe workers and injured workers. They can also protect you from liability. Here’s a case in point.
Brendan” worked for a chemical company for 30 years before he was injured. A mechanic, Brendan was hurt when he and another employee tried to replace three broken drive belts on a blending blower. Three fingers on Brendan’s right hand were injured when they were pinched between the drive belt and a pulley.The incident occurred after the two workers had cut the electrical power to the blower. But they had failed to eliminate the reverse airflow to the equipment. Although the pulley continued to rotate, neither Brendan nor his co-worker shut off the air valve to the blower or asked a supervisor for help. Instead they inserted an aluminum broom handle into the machine to stop the pulley from rotating.

Shortly after Brendan started working on the blower, the broom handle broke, the pulley began to move, and his hand was pulled into the blower.

During the previous 12 years, Brendan had received training on the company’s lockout rules 10 times. The most recent training had taken place 1 month before the injury, when he successfully completed a multiple choice test on those safety rules after the training session.

Employer Opposes WC Claim

When Brendan filed for workers’ compensation benefits, the company opposed the claim, saying the employee had caused his own injury because he did not follow safety rules with which he was thoroughly familiar after years of training.

The administrative law judge agreed and reduced the workers’ comp award by more than a third. Under Missouri law, workers’ comp awards can be reduced 25 to 50 percent if:

  • A worker fails to obey a reasonable safety rule of which he or she had knowledge
  • The employer made a reasonable effort to cause the employee to obey the rule

The employee appealed the ruling to the Missouri Court of Appeals.

What the Court Said

The appeals court rejected the employee’s challenge to the reduction in benefits, saying:

“[S]ubstantial evidence in the record supports the Commission’s determination that [the employer] made reasonable efforts to cause employee compliance with its lockout rules. [The employer] distributed written safety materials and conducted regular safety training seminars educating employees concerning the rules, and warning them that ‘[d]isciplinary action will be taken if employees fail to follow necessary guidelines…up to and including termination.’

“Training records revealed that [Brendan] received almost annual training on these rules…and successfully completed a written test to confirm his understanding of those rules.

“This supports the Commission’s conclusion that [the employer's] lockout rules were not simply ‘on the books,’ and ‘dusted off’…. [E]mployees were actively and repeatedly trained on these rules, and they were warned of discipline up to and including termination if they failed to comply.”

Although this case deals specifically with Missouri state law, it serves as a good reminder to all employers about the need to train workers on safety rules and to document both their completion of training courses and their understanding of the material covered.

Source: BLR

OSHA QuickTakes – February 15, 2012

In this issue

OSHA’s free On-site Consultation Program helps fund innovative safety training center in Maine

Governor of Maine, Paul LePage and Director of Workplace Safety and Health, David Wacker
Governor of Maine, Paul LePage (left) and Director of Workplace Safety and Health, David Wacker (right) at the SafetyWorks! Grand Opening.

In addition to providing free and confidential advice to small and medium-sized businesses in all states across the country, OSHA’s On-site Consultation Program helped fund a new state-of-the-art SafetyWorks! Safety Training Institute in Augusta, Maine. The funding assistance from OSHA allowed Maine’s On-site Consultation Program, SafetyWorks!, to build the new Institute.

SafetyWorks! is an outreach program designed to reduce job-related injuries, illnesses and deaths and provide free training and consultation to Maine employers. The new SafetyWorks! Institute offers traditional classrooms as well as innovative hands-on training equipment, including a full-size fork lift, a confined space simulator and rescue station, an ergonomics station, an electrical panel and a scaffolding station. For more information see the news release.

State-of-the-art training equipment
State-of-the-art training equipment at the SafetyWorks! Institute.

Like Maine’s program, OSHA’s On-site Consultation services are separate from enforcement and do not result in penalties or citations. Consultants from state agencies or universities work with employers to identify workplace hazards, provide advice on compliance with OSHA standards, and assist in establishing safety and health management systems. To request an on-site consultation, call 1-800-321-OSHA [6742] or visit http://www.osha.gov/dcsp/smallbusiness/consult.html.
OSHA extends temporary enforcement measures in residential construction

OSHA will extend for six months its temporary enforcement measures in residential construction. The temporary enforcement measures, extended through September 15, 2012, include priority free on-site compliance assistance, penalty reductions, extended abatement dates, measures to assure consistency and increased outreach. Fatalities from falls are the number one cause of workplace death in construction.

Over the past year, OSHA has worked closely with the industry, conducting over 1,000 outreach sessions nationwide to assist employers in complying with the new directive. OSHA will continue to work with employers to ensure a clear understanding of, and to facilitate compliance with, the new policy.

OSHA’s Web page also has a wide variety of educational and training materials to assist employers with compliance, including multiple easy-to-read fact sheets, PowerPoint and slide presentations, as well as other educational materials. To access these materials, visit OSHA’s Fall Protection in Residential Construction page.

OSHA cites grain company after 2 teenage workers suffer leg amputations at Kremlin, Okla., facility

OSHA has cited Zaloudek Grain Co. with four serious safety violations following an incident involving two 17-year-olds in August 2011. Both suffered leg amputations when they became caught in an inadequately guarded screw auger while cleaning out a grain flat storage structure at the company’s facility in Kremlin. OSHA investigators found serious violations including failures to affix or secure the machine guard over the moving screw auger, provide training for workers assigned to enter grain structures, ensure the storage structure’s exit was free and unobstructed, and provide exit signs from the storage structure. Proposed penalties total $21,500. See the news release for more information.

In September, OSHA’s Oklahoma City Area Office opened a separate, comprehensive safety inspection of the Kremlin facility under the agency’s Regional Emphasis Program for Grain Handling Facilities that uncovered five additional serious violations. Citations, with fines totaling $12,500, were issued on Dec. 20 and contested by the employer.

OSHA has fined grain operators in Wisconsin, Illinois, Colorado, South Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma and Nebraska following preventable fatalities and injuries in grain storage bins. In addition to enforcement actions, OSHA sent a notification letter to 13,000 grain elevator operators warning them of proper safety precautions.

OSHA proposes $365,500 in fines to Wal-Mart for repeat and serious safety and health hazards at Rochester, N.Y., store

OSHA cited Wal-Mart Stores Inc. for a total of 24 alleged repeat and serious violations of workplace safety and health standards at its supercenter store No. 2859 in Rochester. The Bentonville, Ark.-based retailer faces a total of $365,500 in proposed fines following inspections conducted by OSHA’s Buffalo Area Office initiated in response to a complaint.

The Rochester inspections led OSHA to identify fall hazards, obstructed exit routes, an absence of lockout/tagout procedures for energy sources that would allow workers to safely perform maintenance on a compactor, an unguarded grinder, no training for workers using personal protective equipment, a lack of eye and face protection, and a lack of information and training on hazardous chemicals in the workplace. These conditions resulted in citations for 10 repeat violations with $288,000 in fines. See the news release for more information.

IOSHA cites 3 employers following investigations after fatal injuries at 2011 Indiana State Fair

Indiana OSHA has cited three organizations involved in the Indiana State Fair accident on August 13, 2011 that resulted in fatal injuries of two workers. Fifty-eight people were injured and 7 were killed when a gust of wind toppled stage equipment just before the band Sugarland was scheduled to perform.

IOSHA cited the Indiana State Fair Commission with one serious violation for failure to conduct a life safety evaluation and cited Local 30 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees for 3 serious violations. Violations included failure to consider soil conditions when placing cable anchor points for the grandstand stage; failure to provide fall protection for workers 4 feet or more above ground level; and, failure to conduct a personal protective equipment hazard assessment of the worksite to determine the personal protective equipment required while erecting the load bearing roof and the grandstand.

IOSHA also cited Mid-America Sound Corporation for 3 knowing violations, including failure to develop and implement an Operations Management Plan, failure to develop a risk assessment plan, failure to maintain and use current engineering calculations and documentation, and failure to provide appropriate, qualified supervision. See the news release* for more information.

OSHA proposes $169,000 in fines to Hartford, Conn., contractor for repeatedly exposing workers to cave-in hazards

OSHA proposed a total of $169,000 in fines against contractor Penney Construction Co. LLC, in Hartford, Conn., chiefly for exposing its workers to cave-in hazards while repairing a sewer line in a 10-foot-deep trench. An inspection by OSHA’s Hartford Area Office found that not only did the trench lack any protection to prevent the walls from collapsing onto workers, the cave-in hazard was intensified by the presence of an unsupported sidewalk and catch basin overhanging the trench. OSHA standards require that trenches or excavations 5 feet or deeper be protected against collapse through shoring, sloping of the soil or use of a protective trench box. Even after being informed that the conditions posed an imminent danger, the employer continued to send workers into the trench. Detailed information on trenching and excavation hazards as well as safe working procedures is available on the OSHA Web site.

OSHA has placed Penney Construction in its Severe Violator Enforcement Program, which mandates targeted follow-up inspections to ensure compliance with the law. Initiated in June 2010, the program focuses on recalcitrant employers that endanger workers by committing willful, repeat or failure-to-abate violations. See the news release for more information.

OSHA cites Beasley Forest Products in Georgia for combustible dust and other hazards; $78,000 proposed in penalties

OSHA has cited Beasley Forest Products Inc. for 21 safety and health violations at its Sandersville hardwood sawmill production facility. OSHA opened an inspection in October after receiving a complaint. Proposed penalties total $78,000.

Twelve serious safety violations involve failing to develop specific lockout/tagout procedures for the energy sources of equipment, properly use compressed air for cleaning, install guardrails on walkways to prevent workers from falling 5-18 feet, provide standard handrails on stairways, provide signage prohibiting unauthorized foot or vehicle traffic where logs were being loaded and unloaded, provide machine guards, repair a damaged ladder, allow access to the circuit breaker box, and install covers on electrical boxes for the sorter control cab and the sorter system.

Four serious health violations include failing to establish and implement a hazard communication program for workers exposed to combustible dust, prevent the accumulation of combustible dust, implement a hearing conservation program, and properly store oxygen and acetylene cylinders. See the news release for more information.

Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis promotes international worker rights through new collaborations

Secretary Solis and Minister Kharge
Secretary Solis and Minister Kharge, signing an historic memorandum of understanding for U.S.-India labor issues.

In two recent meetings, Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis pledged to collaborate on international worker rights issues. At a Feb. 1 meeting in Washington, D.C., Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis met with Colombia Minister of Labor Rafael Pardo to discuss Colombia’s recent achievements in protecting workers’ rights, address challenges that remain, and award a grant of $2 million to the International Labour Organization (ILO) to develop a robust presence in Colombia.

The following day, Secretary Solis and Minister of Labour and Employment Mallikarjun Kharge of the Republic of India signed a memorandum of understanding to encourage dialogue and cooperation between the United States and India on labor and employment issues. The memorandum will enable the Labor Department to begin dialogue with its counterpart in India occupation safety and health issues as well as other labor topics, with their counterparts in India.

New Mexico OSHA and Oil & Gas Association announce collaborative effort to increase worker safety

The New Mexico Occupational Health and Safety Bureau (NM OSHA) and the New Mexico Oil & Gas Association (NMOGA) signed an agreement Jan. 25 that establishes an alliance to foster safer and more healthful New Mexico workplaces. As part of the Alliance Agreement, a team of representatives from both organizations will meet quarterly to develop a plan of action, determine working procedures, and identify roles and responsibilities of the participants. The two organizations will also work together during state safety conferences and encourage participation from industry representatives through development of materials, training programs, workshops, seminars, and lectures. The Alliance will remain in effect for two years. See the news release* for more information.

New fact sheet provides information on protecting shipyard workers from eye injuries during welding and cutting operations

A new OSHA fact sheet, Eye Protection against Radiant Energy during Welding and Cutting in Shipyard Employment,* is intended to help prevent worker eye injuries in the maritime industry. Electromagnetic energy given off by an arc or flame, commonly referred to as radiant energy or light radiation, can injure workers’ eyes. For protection from radiant energy, employers must ensure that workers use the necessary personal protective equipment, such as safety glasses, goggles, welding helmets or welding face shields. This equipment must have filter lenses with a shade number that provides the appropriate level of protection. A shade number indicates the intensity of light radiation that is allowed to pass through a filter lens to one’s eyes. The higher the shade number, the darker the filter and the less light radiation that will pass through the lens. Tables in the fact sheet provide the proper shade numbers to be used under various conditions when performing welding operations including gas and metal arc welding and oxygen cutting.

Nurses’ miscarriages linked to chemicals at work

A new study from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has found a greater-than-expected risk of miscarriages among nurses exposed to hazardous substances at work. Occupational exposure to chemotherapy drugs and disinfectants were associated with increased risk of miscarriage. The published article is available in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.

More workers are injured in the healthcare and social assistance industry sector than any other. Health care workers face a number of serious safety and health hazards, including bloodborne pathogens, chemicals, gases, lifting and repetitive tasks, workplace violence, radioactive materials, and x-rays. For more information, visit OSHA’s Safety and Health topics page about healthcare facilities.

NIOSH webinar today on workers’ compensation among health care workers

In a webinar today, February 15, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) will address the use of intervention evaluation research to address the leading causes of workers’ compensation among health care workers.

Dr. Jim Collins, Associate Director for Science for the NIOSH Division of Safety Research will discuss how hazards in healthcare facilities can be understood by evaluating the injury risks associated with patient lifting, slips, trips, and falls. Webinar participants will learn “best practices” for safety and health and develop a plan for reducing risks at their own facilities.

The webcast, available here, will run from 12-1pm EST.

OSHA alerts workers to falls and other hazards when removing snow from rooftops

A new OSHA hazard alert warns workers of falls and other hazards that every year result in deaths and serious injuries during snow or ice removal from rooftops and elevated surfaces. Workers are at risk for falling off roof edges, through skylights, and from ladders and aerial lifts. Workers may also be injured or killed by a roof collapse. The alert provides methods for preventing these hazards, such as using snow removal methods that do not involve workers going on roofs, evaluating the maximum weight a roof or structure can bear, requiring that workers use fall protection equipment, and ensuring that workers use ladders and aerial lifts safely. Other hazards include injuries associated with the use of snow blowers and other mechanized equipment, entrapment and suffocation under falling snow drifts or snow piles, shock/electrocution hazards from contacting power lines or damaged extension cords, frostbite or hypothermia from cold and windy conditions and musculoskeletal injuries from overexertion.

OSHA also recently created a Winter Storms Web page to provide information on protecting workers from hazards during winter storm response and recovery operations.

Job openings

Are you interested in a career with the Department of Labor? DOL has job opportunities throughout the country, including openings in OSHA

Job Opening! – Safety Coordinator – East Central, Illinois Area

Please Contact Recruiter Directly! I am posting this as a favor to them!

Safety Coordinator

Our client, a leader in their industry is looking for someone to lead safety programs and compliance within a metal fabrication environment. The individual will lead all safety initiatives, conduct safety training programs, perform safety audits and involved in regulatory compliance. Company is located in East Central Illinois.

Decatur, IL, Champaign, IL, Sullivan, IL all commutable cities to company location.

Qualifications:

  • Bachelor’s Degree Safety Engineering, Industrial Technology or Associates related degree
  • 2+ years leading safety initiatives within a metal fabrication environment from safety training programs, performing audits, compliance and regulatory documentation.
  • Physical Demands: Walk, Sit, Bend, Twist and navigate all areas of office and plant.

Responsibilities:

  • Uncovering safety hazards, issues and implementing safety improvements.
  • Working with and addressing all incident investigations, employee complaints.
  • Developing a strong safety presence on fabrication floor.
  • Creating safety training and implementation.
  • Leading Safety Committees.
  • Leading Incident Investigations from recording to prevention and improvement implementations.
  • Working with all floor audits from safety of personnel to equipment.
  • Working with all safety equipment and tools within metal fabrication.
  • Working with safety and environmental compliance reporting and records.
  • Working experience with disposal of hazardous waste and all measurements records including noise, hearing, air sampling, recordkeeping.
  • Working with all facility security measures including alarms and video surveillance.
  • Preparing or working with following documentation for compliance; PPE, Safety Data Reports, HazMat, EPA, OSHA, Ergonomics and machine guarding, MS Office.
  • Experience working with workers compensation and return to work documentation and procedures.

Salary

$47k – $51k Based on experience + Bonus

Please send all inquiries and resumes to nwitsman and reference “Job #NW3933″ in the SUBJECT line or call Direct line 855-833-5545

Northern Steel Castings Cited by OSHA at Wisconsin Plant for Silica Dust Exposure

Posted by on November 28, 2011

The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration has cited Northern Steel Castings for two safety and four health violations at its Wisconsin Rapids carbon steel foundry, including for overexposing workers to crystalline silica, a known respiratory hazard, according to a Nov. 28 press release.

Proposed fines total $95,480.

OSHA initiated the inspection after receiving a complaint alleging overexposure to crystalline silica, a basic component of soil, sand, granite and other minerals. When workers chip, cut, drill or grind objects that contain silica, small particles can be created and breathing in crystalline silica dust can cause silicosis, an incurable condition that reduces the ability of lungs to take in oxygen.

Northern Steel Castings also was cited for two repeat health violations for allowing workers to be overexposed to iron oxide and copper fumes in the foundry, and for exposing employees to fire hazards when welding inside plywood booths.

A repeat violation exists when an employer previously has been cited for the same or a similar violation of a standard, regulation, rule or order at any other facility in federal enforcement states within the last five years. The company was cited for these violations in 2006.

Additionally, three serious health violations were cited for failing to keep eating surfaces free from contamination by hexavalent chromium; failing to provide ventilation when welding, and for failing to provide adequate emergency exits.

A serious violation occurs when there is substantial probability that death or serious physical harm could result from a hazard about which the employer knew or should have known.

Northern Steel Castings had been inspected by OSHA 24 times prior to this inspection and was cited for overexposure to silica six other times. The company has 15 business days from receipt of its citations and penalties to comply, request an informal conference with OSHA’s area director or contest the findings before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission.

Fire Prevention News: Weekly Roundup – August 19, 2011

Selected Fire Prevention related articles appearing in the past week from scores of e-sources in the news media.

Campaigns / Other Fire Prevention Efforts

  1. Campus Fire Safety
  2. Inspections/Code enforcement
  3. Smoke Alarms
  4. Sprinklers
  5. Wildland Fire Safety
  6. Other Fire Safety News
  7. Saves
  8. International News

Links to Fire Prevention-related news articles – Updated 08/15/2011

Campaigns/ Other Fire Prevention Activities

  1. Tragedy spurs door-to-door smoke alarm giveaway The volunteers helped residents install working smoke alarms. In response to a Bryans Road house fire that killed a child last week, the Bryans Road Volunteer Fire Department led a door-to-door campaign Saturday to check and install smoke detectors …
  2. Handsome hydrants benefit fire prevention The money goes toward fire prevention training efforts at elementary schools in Hartsville. The mayor and his family have already signed up for the program. “My family of course my girls loving pink and the whole pink-a-licious thing, we’re going to
  3. 2011 Iowa State Fair to End on an Entertaining Note Established in 1911, the Iowa State Fire Marshal’s office is celebrating 100 years of fire prevention. To mark the milestone anniversary, they will attempt to break the world record for most people simultaneously demonstrating “Stop, Drop and Roll“.
  4. Free smoke alarms for deaf going to 50 families An effort is underway across the state to install special smoke alarms in the homes of families with at least one member of the household who is hard of hearing or deaf. Cedar Rapids Fire Department spokesperson Greg …
  5. Free Smoke Detectors Offered Residents should still perform their monthly testing by pressing the test button on the smoke detector . If the detector fails the test, the detector should be replaced. Mount Pleasant Fire Department staff will install new smoke detectors and replace …
  6. Sunnyside Fire Department visits Lomeli’s childcare With the purpose of giving fire safety demonstrations and provide a fun time to kids, the Sunnyside Fire Department visited Lomeli’s Childcare Center August 3. More than 20 kids had the opportunity to learn the work of a
  7. Bergen County Juvenile Fire Prevention Program Hosts U2 Tribute Band On November 5, 2011 the Bergen County Juvenile Fire Prevention Program is hosting a live concert at Mexicali Live in Teaneck NJ. The event will feature the renowned U2 tribute band,
  8. Newark Youths Learn Fire Prevention at Public Safety Academy Antonella Rao Forty Newark youths joined city firefighters Wednesday morning to learn fire prevention techniques. The students are part of Newark Youth Public Safety Academy — an effort launched July 20 by Newark Mayor Cory Booker to educate children

Campus Fire Safety

  1. Pitt State RAs train to prepare for residents To help the RAs, the Pittsburg Fire Department rolled a ladder truck to the parking lot of the Crimson Commons for a fire safety session that included up-to-date fire awareness videos as well as demonstrations on how to spot fire hazards and how to
  2. Sioux Falls Fire Rescue puts on controlled burn demonstration One dorm room (cell) will be equipped with a smoke detector and a sprinkler head. One dorm room (cell) will be equipped with a smoke detector and NO sprinkler head. You will be able to observe the significant damage between the two mock dormitory rooms
  3. Campus Fire Safety Training Set for Today The tips will help fraternity and sorority members, parents, campus fire and security officials, and administrators with fire safety and emergency planning. ASSE is joining the West Virginia University Environmental Health and Safety staff,
  4. Boulder fire department, CU to hold fire safety training
  5. WVU Student Leaders Train in Fire Safety for Upcoming School Year Several thousand students will move into a dorm room at WVU next week, so, on Thursday, the resident assistants responsible for watching over them were on campus a little early this year to learn what to do in case of a fire.
  6. Campus Fire Safety Training Set for Today The American Society of Safety Engineers announced that its Fire Prevention Practice Specialty will release campus-related fire prevention tips today during an event at West Virginia University’s Fieldcrest Hall in Morgantown, W.Va.

Inspections / Code enforcement

  1. The dangerous side of solar and wind power projects The California state fire marshal recently updated guidelines recommending that roofs with solar installations have a 3-foot walkway for firefighters to maneuver. Meanwhile, Hans Petersen’s employer, SolarCity, said it has beefed up its safety rules…
  2. Maryland’s New School-Bus Fireproofing Law Called ‘a Step Up’ Langley explained that SB 369, which was backed by the California nonprofit organization Citizens for Fire Safety, originally included the requirement that each plastic component contained in the engine compartment of a school bus …
  3. Decade after 9/11 World Trade Center attacks, skyscraper safety improving Following an exhaustive federal probe of what caused the towers’ downfall, and years of debate and strife over how to respond, the building and fire codes that dictate safety features in new high-rises finally are reflecting the disaster’s harsh

Smoke Alarms

  1. Free smoke alarms for deaf going to 50 families An effort is underway across the state to install special smoke alarms in the homes of families with at least one member of the household who is hard of hearing or deaf. Cedar Rapids Fire Department spokesperson Greg …
  2. Free Smoke Detectors Offered Residents should still perform their monthly testing by pressing the test button on the smoke detector . If the detector fails the test, the detector should be replaced. Mount Pleasant Fire Department staff will install new smoke detectors and replace …
  3. Tragedy spurs door-to-door smoke alarm giveaway The volunteers helped residents install working smoke alarms. In response to a Bryans Road house fire that killed a child last week, the Bryans Road Volunteer Fire Department led a door-to-door campaign Saturday to check and install smoke detectors ..
  4. Firefighters and businesses team up to install visual smoke alarms in Bluffs home Through Project Alex and the “100 Year – 100%” campaign, the Council Bluffs Fire Department and the Iowa State Fire Marshal’s have both been working to ensure that every resident in Council Bluffs has at least one working smoke detector in their home. .

Sprinklers

  1. Illinois town hosts sprinkler demonstration during “National Night Out” “National Night Out”, an annual event to raise public safety awareness endorsed by several towns and cities across the country, was the stage for the town of Berwyn, Illinois to provide its community with an opportunity to witness the life saving power of residential sprinklers. According to the town’s mayor, the primary focus of the event is to “allow the citizens to see how their police and fire departments keep them safe”, providing the side-by-side demonstration with an effective…
  2. Midway Fire Rescue capitalizes on successful fire sprinkler activation to increase awareness After a successful activation of a fire sprinkler system in a multifamily structure fire Midway Fire Rescue in Pawleys Island, South Carolina issued a press release highlighting the importance of the system in protecting life and property. WMBF News online published an article based on the press release, stating; “If there had not been a fire sprinkler system in the building, the building would have suffered considerable losses and the lives of the residents and firefighters would have been in danger.”…
  3. Builder Magazine features educational video on residential sprinklers online version of Builder Magazine recently, providing an easy-to-follow narrative on the installation of residential fire sprinklers. Aimed at providing the builders community with the  myths and facts regarding the design and installation of home fire sprinkler systems, the video also promotes available educational resources, pointing out that there are trade ups available for builders, and that the marketability of their products could be increased when sprinkler systems are installed.
  4. Home Fire Sprinkler Coalition is recipient of fire prevention and safety grant The nonprofit Home Fire Sprinkler Coalition (HFSC) is the recipient of a Fire Prevention and Safety Grant (through the Grant Programs Directorate of FEMA) to underwrite a multi-faceted U.S. educational program. The funding will help fire departments increase local activities that improve knowledge of the dangers of home fires and the value of installing home fire sprinkler systems.  It will also educate homebuilders and others to refute common myths and increase interest in the life-saving sprinkler technology.

Wildland Fire Safety

  1. Fire marshal announces new tool in wildfire battle “Some ways to increase the safety of your home and family are easy to do …
  2. Drought exhausting already strained fire departments “I think 2005 taught a lot of people about fire safety ,” said Eddy, who also thanks the Red Cross for hydrating so many emergency responders. “People are paying closer attention to burn bans.” However, in order to make sure these rural fire departments
  3. State Responsibility Area Fee’s Causing Concern For Residents The main issue that many have with the fee is that the funds are only meant to cover fire prevention, not actual firefighting. Berlant says ” fire prevention is the work done before a fire starts. That could be brush clearance, that could be educating

Other Fire Safety News

  1. Don’t make your home so secure it’s dangerous
  2. Preventing burns from hot fireplace glass More than 2,000 children ages 5 and younger suffered burn injuries from gas fireplaces from 1999 through March 2009, according to research conducted by Carol Pollack-Nelson, Ph.D., an independent safety consultant. The problem: the glass front on gas fireplaces gets…
  3. Merced Fire Dept. offers safety tips for grilling safety If you smell gas while cooking, immediately get away from the grill and call the fire department. For additional safety tips, go online to the fire safety public education page within the fire department section of the city of Merced website.
  4. Tip Sheet: Hotel and Motel Safety These are just some of the tips and pointers about fire safety in overnight establishments like these. Naugatuck Deputy Fire Chief Ellen Murray provided the above sheet for the public’s understanding of the issue. Interested in a follow-up to this
  5. House, building fires in Wichita jump nearly 50 percent The Fire Department has received a grant to pay for a fire safety trailer, which Crisp plans to take to every school in Wichita. The small house is used to teach children what to do in the event of a fire. Fire officials also encourage parents of
  6. Paramedics get kits to deter fire fatalities Within the past month, a Town of Tonawanda woman and a Kenmore man were killed in fires. Now the paramedic vehicles serving the town and village carry a new tool to help save lives before fire victims reach the hospital.
  7. Common Voices wins award for fire safety public service announcement campaign Common Voices, an Advocates’ Coalition of individuals affected by fire, has received two Bronze Telly Awards – one of the most prestigious awards in advertising and video and film production – for a fire safety public service announcement campaign, as well as for one of the individual videos within the campaign: “Sleep with a Firefighter” The award-winning Common Voices PSA campaign was among more than 11,000 entries from all 50 states and five continents and is comprised of six testimonies…
  8. Home Alone Plans For Kids Make sure at least one approved smoke alarm is installed and operating on each level of the home. ” Limit the time the child spends in front of the television or computer. Activate parental controls. Use programs that limit the sites children can visit

Saves

  1. Family Escapes Overnight House Fire Fire officials said smoke detectors woke the family, and they were able to get out of the house. When they did they found their garage on fire. Firefighters said there is extensive damage to the house. They are also still looking for the family’s cat,
  2. Family of Five Escape River Rock House Fire Smoke detectors inside a home in the Rivertree Subdivision saved the lives of a family of 5 early yesterday morning. As we first reported yesterday, a large fire broke out just before 2am Monday in the garage of a home in the 900
  3. Fire sprinkler system aids in saving building – A Pawleys Island multi-family dwelling was saved on Sunday because of an Automatic Fire Sprinkler System. Without the fire sprinkler system, the five story midrise would have suffered considerable losses.
  4. Man talks about escape from Lake Forest Drive fire Lester, 27, and Heather Smith managed to get out of their burning Lake Forest Drive home on Saturday morning relatively unscathed thanks to a smoke alarm and some quick thinking.
  5. Sprinkler prevents fire from spreading “The fire sprinklers were very effective in stopping this fire in its tracks. Although there is water damage, it is minimal compared to the damage that would have occurred if the fire had proceeded unchecked,” Bohling said. US Rep.
  6. Sprinklers contain fire at UGM donation center The fire started in a second floor breakroom and was extinguished by the building’s fire sprinkler system. An employee found the fire and called 911. “The fire sprinkler system operated as designed, controlling the fire and preventing fire spread
  7. Imperial Avenue: 5 rescued from house fire They also rescued an elderly couple from the lower level. The father tells Channel 3 that the smoke detector woke him up and alerted him to the fire. The house is about one block east of convicted serial killer Anthony Sowell’s house.
  8. Fire guts local residence Smoke alarms awoke the residents shortly after 5 am Saturday and everyone was able to escape as flames began to engulf the rear of the home. Plainview firefighters were summoned at 5:07 am and upon arrival found that flames already were burning through

Fire Prevention News: International

  1. Littlehampton firefighters make pledges to community “It teaches children the importance of fire safety , from an early age. “The kids we have already spoken to are so switched on and really bright. They got behind the course 100 per cent and the information really stuck. “This scheme is an essential part
  2. No smoke alarm in five out of six fatal fire homes FIVE out of six homes where a fatal fire occurs do not have a working smoke alarm. Even though the alarms can be bought for just €20, new figures show that householders are still not getting the message that installing the alarms can save