Thursday, July 28, 2011
Campus Fire Safety
Each year college
and university students, on- and off-campus, experience hundreds of fire-related
emergencies nationwide. There are several specific causes for fires on college
campuses, including cooking, intentionally set fires, and open flame. Overall,
most college-related fires are due to a general lack of knowledge about fire
safety and prevention.
According to
information complied by Campus FireWatch, the great majority of student fire
deaths occur in off-campus housing that lacks insufficient exits, missing or
inoperative smoke alarms, and automatic fire sprinklers. Also, use of candles,
careless smoking habits, and the misuse of alcohol-which impairs judgment and
hampers evacuation efforts-contribute to off-campus housing fire
deaths.
As the Fall
semester approaches, colleges and universities are busy preparing for the
arrival of new residents to their campus communities. Some will be first year
students moving into the residence halls. Other arriving students will be moving
off-campus and living on their own, some for the first time. For most of these
students, the last fire safety training they received was in grade school; but
with new independence comes new responsibilities. It is important that both
off-campus and on-campus students understand fire risks and know the
preventative measures that could save their lives.
Learn
the facts about campus fire safety and be fire-wise!