Thomasville Fire Rescue to celebrate National Pet Fire Safety Day

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From staff reports

THOMASVILLE — Friday is recognized as “National Pet Fire Safety Day,” an awareness day to educate pet owners about potential risks when pets are left home alone and provide them with proven prevention measures to ensure their safety.

In 2009, The American Kennel Club teamed up with the ADT Security Services and the National Volunteer Fire Council to establish National Pet Fire Safety Day, a day devoted to educating pet owners on how to keep their pets safe in the event of an emergency.

According to the National Fire Protection Association, pets or wild animals play a big role in starting about 750 home fires each year. These fires involve cooking equipment, fireplaces, wiring, candles and more. It is important to keep in mind the following safety tips if you have a pet at home:

♦ Keep pets away from stoves, countertops, candles, lamps and space heaters;

♦ Always use a metal or heat-tempered glass screen on a fireplace and keep it in place;

♦ Have a “pet-free” zone at least 3 feet from the fireplace;

♦ Consider battery-operated or flameless candles;

♦ Watch pets to ensure they don’t chew electrical cords.

“Making sure you have working smoke alarms is the first way to protect your family and pet in a home fire,” Mike Mann, Fire & Life Safety Captain for Thomasville Fire Rescue, said. “Working smoke alarms increase your chance of getting out of a fire by 50%.”

Create a home evacuation plan that you can use to quickly escape from a fire and make sure your pets are a part of that plan. When leaving your home or securing your pet at night, secure your pet near an entrance so it’s quicker to grab your pet on the way out in case of an emergency. In the event of a disaster, notify the firefighter if your pet is trapped inside so they can handle these emergencies with more care and equipment.

“Anything that you would do for your kids, do for your pets because that’s the best way to keep them safe,” Mann said.

Thomasville Fire Rescue offers free smoke and carbon monoxide alarm installations to ensure the community’s safety. For more information on pet fire safety, visit www.nfpa.org or call Thomasville Fire Rescue at (229) 227-4099.

Special Photo: City of Thomasville

Author

Except for a brief period, Albany Herald Editor Carlton Fletcher has been a newspaperman, working as Sports Writer/Columnist for the weekly Ocilla Star, as Sports Writer/Sports Editor with The Tifton Gazette, and as Sports Writer/Copy Editor/News Reporter/Features Editor and Editor of the paper. He has won numerous awards for sports, news, business and column writing, including a first-place Business Writing award in last year’s Georgia Press Association awards competition.

Read Carlton’s stories.

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