Burton Fire and Rescue

"Your friends and neighbors, serving you"
Home
About Us
Become a firefighter
Contact Us
Events
Fire Prevention
Stations
Apparatus
Training
Personnel
Training for year
Training and Event Calendar
Safety Tips
After The Fire
Back To School Safety!
Bicycle Safety
BURN INJURIES
Burning Wood Safely
Candle Safety
Carbon Monoxide
Children Playing with Fir
Choosing a Babysitter
Cooking Fires
CPR
Disaster Preparedness
Electrical Safety
Escape Plan for Apartment
Espanol
Extension Cords Can Cause
Fire Safety for Older Adu
Fire Safety for the Disab
Fireworks in Michigan
Grilling Safety
Gun Safety
Hazardous Materials
Heat Emergencies
Home Fire Drills
Home Fire Sprinkler Syste
Hotel/Motel Safety
House Numbers
In Case of Emergency
Internet Safety
Lights & Sirens
Mobile Home Safety
Motor vehicle Fires
Overheated Clothes Dryers
Playground Safety
Poison Safety
Public Assembly
Radiological Accidents
Safety for the Hearing Im
Security Bars
Sleepover Fire Safety
Smoke Detectors
Swine Flu - H1N1
Terrorism
Thunderstorm Safety
Vacation Safety
Water Safety
When to call 911
Winter Driving Safety
Winter Safety
yellow jackets to hornets
Links

Safety for the Hearing Impaired

Fire safety for people who are deaf or hard of hearing

Smoke setectors save lives. But those who are deaf or hard of hearing cannot depend on the sound of the regular alarm to alert them to a fire. There are now a variety of smoke alarms on the market that combine sound and strobe lights to alert those with limited hearing that there is a fire in the home.

 

Facts & figures*

19 of every 20 homes (95%) in the U.S. have at least one smoke alarm.

More than half of home fire deaths result from fires in the 5% of homes with no smoke alarms.

Almost half of all fatal fires start at night when people are asleep.

 

(*From NFPA's U.S. Experience with Smoke Alarms and Other Fire Alarms and national estimates reported to U.S. municipal fire departments based on NFIRS and NFPA survey.) 

Safety Tips

 

Consider installing a smoke alarm that uses a flashing light, vibration and/or sound to alert people to a fire emergency. The majority of fatal fires occur when people are sleeping, and because smoke can put people into a deeper sleep, it is important to have the necessary early warning of a fire to ensure that they wake up.

Be sure that the smoke alarm you buy carries the label of an independent testing laboratory.

Keep a communications device nearby. If you use a TTY/TTD device, place it close to the bed so that communication with emergency personnel is possible should fire or smoke trap you in your room.