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Tips for living safely in apartment buildings or mobile home communities: Make sure you have smoke alarms that work. The apartment/mobile home complex is required to have a fire extinguisher
within 75-feet travel distance. You should not use fixed or portable barbecues
in or under any attached covered patios, balconies, covered walkways
or roof overhangs. Don’t park in front of fire hydrants and don’t park in fire
lanes. Never leave smoking materials burning. Never smoke in bed. Have a fire escape plan. Practice it. Make sure there’s a number on your apartment/mobile home door. Keep a copy of your apartment/mobile home number and apartment building
number, inside your apartment/mobile home, near the phone. Don’t run extension cords under carpets or from unit-to-unit. Get acquainted with the elderly folks in your building or community. |
Special hazards that affect people who live in apartments or mobile homes:Often, there is only one way in or out---no back door. Stairways are often built entirely of wood. If the stairwell or walkway is on fire, you may not be able to exit through the front door. Congested parking can mean blocked fire hydrants and/or blocked fire lanes. (A ladder truck can be 8 to 9-feet wide and 50-feet long. A blocked fire lane can slow down response time.) An apartment building is, in effect, a very densely populated neighborhood. (If the downstairs or next-door apartment is on fire, it can spread quickly to adjoining apartments in a matter of minutes.) Without properly working smoke alarms, it may take a long time before you find out that another part of the apartment building is on fire. Consequently, this could cut your chances of getting out of the building alive. |
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