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Exit Drills in the Home

Plan ahead.

  • When a fire occurs, there is no time for planning. You only have seconds to react and get out alive. Sit down with your family today and make a step-by-step plan for escaping from a fire.
  • Draw a floor plan of your home, marking two ways out of every room - especially sleeping areas. Discuss the escape routes with every member of your household.
  • Agree on a meeting place outside your home where every member of the household will gather after escaping a fire to wait for the fire department. This allows you to count heads and inform the fire department if anyone is trapped inside the burning building.
  • Practice your escape plan at least twice a year. Have fire drills in your home, have some at night with the lights out. Appoint someone to be monitor and have everyone participate. A fire drill is not a race. Get out quickly, but carefully.
  • Make your exit drill realistic. Pretend that some exits are blocked by fire and practice alternative escape routes. Pretend that the lights are out and that some escape routes are filling with smoke.

Be prepared.

  • Make sure everyone in the household can unlock all doors and windows quickly, even in the dark. Windows or doors with security bars need to be equipped with quick-release devices and everyone in the household should know how to use them.
  • If you live in an apartment building, use stairways to escape. Never use an elevator during a fire. It may stop between floors or take you to a floor where the fire is burning.
  • If you live in a two-story house, and you must escape from a second-story window, be sure there is a safe way to reach the ground. Make special arrangements for children, older adults and people with disabilities. People who have difficulty moving should have a phone in their sleeping area and, if possible, should sleep on the ground floor.
  • Test doors before opening them. While kneeling or crouching at the door, reach up as high as you can and touch the door, the knob and the space between the door and its frame with the back of your hand. If the door is hot, use another escape route. If the door is cool, open it with caution.
  • If you are trapped, close all doors between you and the fire. Stuff the cracks around the doors with towels or blankets to keep out smoke. Wait at a window and signal for help with a light-colored cloth or a flashlight. If there is a phone in the room, call the fire department and tell them exactly where you are.

Get out fast.

  • In case of fire, do not stop for anything. Do not try to rescue possessions or pets. Go directly to your meeting place and then call the fire department from a neighbor's phone. Every member of your family should know how to call the fire department (911).
  • Crawl low under the smoke. Smoke contains deadly gases and heat rises. During a fire, cleaner cooler air will be found near the floor. If you encounter smoke when using your primary exit, use your alternate escape plan. If you must exit through smoke, crawl on your hands and knees keeping your head 12 to 24 inches above the floor.

And stay out.

  • Once you are out of your home, do not go back for any reason. If people are trapped, the firefighters have the best chance of rescuing them, but the firefighters must know that they are there, and only you can tell them. The heat and smoke of a fire are overpowering. Firefighters have the training, experience and protective equipment needed to enter burning buildings.

Play it safe.

  • Smoke detectors. More than half of all fatal home fires happen at night while people are asleep. Smoke detectors sound an alarm when a fire starts, alerting people before they are trapped or overcome by smoke. With smoke detectors, your risk of dying in a home fire is cut nearly in half. Install smoke detectors outside every sleeping area and on every level of your home, including the basement. Test smoke detectors monthly. Change all smoke detector batteries at least twice a year when you change your clocks. If your detector is more than 10 years old, replace it.

Make sure your smoke detector has a working battery, or if electrically operated that it is operational! Plan and Practice a fire escape plan for your family!