.....

RE Library Home

Search Library

Add This Library
To Your Web Site

Real Estate Forum

Advertise With Us

Submit Your Articles
To This Library

Library Site Map

National Window Safety Week - 11/22/2004 - Home Condo Doors Windows

National Window Safety Week

In honor of National Window Safety Week, April 18-24, 2004, take some time to assess the state of your home’s windows and your family’s awareness of their critical role in terms of overall home safety. 

 
Your windows can serve as secondary escape routes from your home and are invaluable in case of emergency; every member of your family should know how to take advantage of a window exit during a fire.  However, it is equally as important for homeowners to understand that open windows can be hazardous, especially to young children, and to be familiar with the important steps you can take to prevent accidental falls.
 
The tips below can help ensure that your windows provide a trouble-free escape route for your family in an emergency while remaining safe for youngsters in your home.
  • Windows provide one of the fastest, easiest alternatives to escape a house fire.  Sit down with your family to design an emergency escape plan—and practice it.  Always be sure that there is at least one window in each sleeping and living area that is available as an alternate escape route during a home emergency.
  • Make sure that your windows open and close easily.  When performing spring repairs, be careful not to accidentally paint or nail your windows shut, making emergency escape impossible.  Do not install window unit air conditioners where they could block or impede escape during an emergency.
  • While security bars, grilles and window grates keep intruders out, they also can lock you in.  If the devices do not have a simple and functioning release mechanism, they are useless when you are trying to escape a fire.
  • When children are present, make sure that windows are closed and locked.  Set and enforce rules to keep your children from playing around windows or patio doors, and keep furniture, along with any other objects that children may climb, away from windows.
  • Don’t depend on window screens to prevent falls.  Insect screens are designed to provide ventilation while keeping pests and debris out—not to keep youngsters in.
    Plant shrubs and other soft landscaping underneath windows to lessen the impact in case of a fall; the degree of potential injury can be significantly affected by the surface on which the victim falls.
For more information about National Window Safety Week and additional window safety tips, visit the National Safety Council Web site at www.nsc.org/aware/window/.

 


Related Articles:
AMSCO Windows Launches Renaissance Series Composite Window | Sliding Doors Don't Have to Be Eyesore
Doors And Windows - Energy Efficient Windows | Low-E Glass and Spectrally Selective Glazing
 

Article reprinted with permission Copyright ©. Article presentation format, categories, and content management system Copyright © Nemmar.com.

.....


Copyright © 1990-2007 All Rights Reserved - Terms and Conditions Our copyright is very strictly enforced!
Page copy protected against web site content infringement by Copyscape