Home Community Important Smoke Detector Tips from Georgia Arson Control

Important Smoke Detector Tips from Georgia Arson Control

 

While having a smoke detector in your house is important, it is also important to keep up with maintenance. Agent Robert Kenimer of Robert Kenimer Insurance Agency Inc. and the Georgia Arson Control Board would like to provide the citizens of Carroll County with lifesaving smoke detector information and maintenance tips.

According to the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA), almost two-thirds of home fire deaths resulted from fires in properties without working smoke detectors. A working smoke detector significantly increases your chances of surviving a deadly home fire.

Kenimer offers the following tips for protecting your family and home from fire:

-There are many different brands of smoke detectors available on the market, but they fall under two basic types: ionization and photoelectric.

-The United States Fire Administration (USFA) recommends that every residence and place where people sleep be equipped with both ionization AND photoelectric smoke detectors, or dual sensor smoke detectors, which contain both ionization and photoelectric smoke sensors.

-If the smoke detector is powered by battery, it runs on either a disposable 9-volt battery or a non-replaceable 10-year lithium (“long-life”) battery.

-Smoke detectors are not expensive and are worth the lives they can help save. Ionization and photoelectric smoke detectors cost between $6 and $20. Dual sensor smoke detectors cost between $24 and $40.

-Install smoke detectors on every level of your home, including the basement. Many fatal fires begin late at night or early in the morning, so the USFA recommends installing smoke detectors both inside and outside of sleeping areas.

-Smoke detectors must be maintained! A smoke detector with a dead or missing battery is the same as having no smoke detector at all.
The entire smoke detector unit should be replaced every 8-10 years.

-Since you cannot (and should not) replace the lithium battery, the entire smoke detector unit should be replaced according to manufacturer’s instructions.

-Test the alarm monthly!

The Georgia Arson Control Program, Inc. (GAC) was formed in January of 1979 by property and casualty insurers writing business in Georgia. GAC, Georgia Department of Insurance and Safety Fire, and state/local law enforcement agencies, established an ARSON HOTLINE 1-800-282-5804.

A reward fund was initiated from which monetary rewards are given to individuals who come forward with information that results in the arrest and conviction of arsonists.

Visit us at: www.georgiaarsoncontrol.com

Previous articleWest Georgia Regional Membership Program – ‘Always Have a Sale in Your Pocket’
Next articleFabric Peddler Closing Store, Going Solely to Online Sales
Krystal is a graduate of the University of West Georgia with a bachelor's degree in Mass Communications and a minor in Psychology. She enjoys weightlifting, loves journalism and social media, UWG football, The Walking Dead, hanging out in bookstores, photography, cooking, doing yoga, and watching Falcons football.