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Top Tips for Fire Safety. Install smoke alarms on every level of your home, inside bedrooms and outside sleeping areas. Test smoke alarms every month. If they’re not working, change the batteries. Talk with all family members about a fire escape plan and practice the plan twice a year.
- If a Fire Starts
If a Fire Starts: Know how to safely operate a fire...
- Is Your Home a Fire Hazard
The Red Cross now offers videos and resources to help meet...
- Recover After Home Fire
Caring for Yourself & Loved Ones After a Fire Pay attention...
- Fire Safety for Pets
Pet Fire Safety. Protecting Your Pets from Potential Danger...
- Fire Safety for Kids
Pedro’s Fire Challenge is a fun and engaging interactive...
- Holiday Fire Safety
From Thanksgiving to New Year, it’s time to enjoy our...
- Home Fire Preparedness
The Red Cross now offers videos and resources to help meet...
- Fire Safety Equipment
If you have a fire, smoke alarms can cut nearly in half your...
- If a Fire Starts
Learn about Red Cross programs that empower your school to help your students, faculty, staff and community be better prepared for disasters and emergencies such as hurricanes, floods, and wildfires.
Pedro the penguin guides children through a set of activities on topics such as home fire safety, coping skills, and good old-fashioned penguin fun! At the end of the challenge, children earn a fire safety badge.
8 kwi 2020 · Learn about the operations, plans, and school fire safety equipment required by NFPA to maintain fire safety in schools.
The Prepare with Pedro: Disaster Preparedness Activity Book, a joint product of FEMA and the American Red Cross, is designed to teach young children and their families about how to stay safe during disasters and emergencies.
Fire safety is something you The American Red Cross has some excellent tips to ensure fire safety at home, including an interactive game on their page called Pedro’s Fire Safety Challenge which can be enabled on Alexa and Google Assistant and is perfect for families with younger kids (ages 4 to 8).
Follow the six guidelines below to minimize the risk of your school buildings becoming next year’s fire statistic. 1. Establish a safety plan. Use a cross-functional school-safety team to create an understandable, straightforward, flexible safety plan for your district.