New Smoke Detector Campaign
12/1/2015 • 8 years ago
The information on this page may be outdated as it was published 8 years ago.
Fire Officials Launch
New Smoke Alarm Public Awareness Campaign
Smoke Alarms – A Sound You Can Live With Focuses on Replacing Aging
Smoke Alarms
Cambridge Fire Chief Gerald R. Reardon joins State Fire
Marshal Stephen D. Coan and Wellesley Fire Chief Rick DeLorie, president of the
Fire Chiefs’ Association of Massachusetts, announcing the launch of a new
statewide smoke alarm public awareness campaign – Smoke Alarms: A Sound You Can
Live With. Chief Reardon said, “Do you remember the last time you replaced your
smoke alarms? Was it more than ten years ago? When you moved into or built your
home? If you don’t remember, it may be time to do so.”
State Fire Marshal Coan said, “Most people know they are
supposed to have working smoke alarms, but the one thing most people don’t know
is that they should replace their entire alarms about every ten years.” Major
manufacturers of smoke alarms indicate they have a service life of about ten
years and recommend replacement after that.
Chief DeLorie said, “Over the course of ten years, we all
replace many home appliances such as toasters, coffee makers, even
refrigerators. No home appliance lasts forever. It’s important to replace aging
smoke alarms too.”
Chief Reardon said, “This fall and winter, when you are
cleaning and replacing the batteries in your smoke alarms, check the
manufactured date stamped on the back of the alarm to see how old it is. If it
doesn’t have one, then it is already more than ten years old and needs to be
replaced.”
Smoke Alarms- A Sound
You Can Live With
The statewide campaign is designed to support fire
department education efforts and will include television and radio public
service announcements (PSAs), transit ads, and social media.
No Working Smoke
Alarms in 36% of Fire Deaths in 1 & 2-Family Homes
In 2014, you were more likely to die in a fire in a one-
and two-family home than in any other residence and one without a working smoke
alarm. There were 10% more fire deaths in one- and two-family homes than all
other residential occupancies combined. Thirty-six percent of the fire deaths
in one- and two-family homes occurred where there no working smoke alarms or
where they failed to operate. In Massachusetts, one- and two family homes built
before 1975 must have working smoke alarms that are less than ten years before
they can be sold.
In a fire seconds count. Fire doubles in size every sixty
seconds. The products in the modern home emit extremely toxic gases. Smoke and heat
can make escape impossible in less than 2-3 minutes in the average home that
does not have sprinklers. Working smoke alarms provide early warning and give
families crucial seconds to use their escape plan.
For more information on smoke alarms and home escape plans,
contact the Cambridge Fire Department at http://www.cambridgema.gov/cfd or the
Department of Fire Services at www.mass.gov/DFS.