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General News

21 February, 2025

Be fire safe - know your plan

Fire and Rescue NSW (FRNSW) is urging the community to prepare a home escape plan so that families can escape safely should a fire occur.

By Supplied

Be fire safe - know your plan - feature photo

Accidental home fires can catch people unawares. Fire and Rescue NSW (FRNSW) is urging the community to prepare a home escape plan so that families can escape safely should a fire occur.

Having a home escape plan in conjunction with a working smoke alarm will greatly increase your chances of getting out safely. Every second counts.

A home fire escape plan involves identifying escape routes from each room of the home as well as a place to meet once safely outside.

Know your fire escape plan no matter where you are, familiarise yourself with the layout and establish a clear fire escape plan.

This includes knowing all exits and safe paths to quickly evacuate if needed.

Tips on preparing a home escape plan:

• Draw a floor plan of your home and mark your escape plan identifying two ways out of each room. Discuss your escape plan with your family/roommates.

• Make sure that windows and screens can be easily opened.

• Provide alternatives for anyone with a disability.

• Decide on a safe outside meeting place e.g. near the letterbox.

• Practice your plan at least twice a year, making sure that everyone is involved.

• Once you get out, stay out, and call Triple Zero (000). Never go back inside a burning building

If you live in an apartment building:

• Learn and practice your building's evacuation plan.

• If you hear the fire alarm, leave immediately.

• Use the stairs - never use a lift/elevator during a fire

FRNSW commissioner Jeremy Fewtrell said “With-out an escape plan, you are placing the lives of everybody in your home in jeopardy.

“Plan your actions before a fire happens and give you and your family the extra seconds needed to escape alive.

“Home fire escape plans are especially important for people with reduced mobility and for children,” he said.

“Children can easily become disoriented and if they don’t have an escape plan, they can waste precious minutes searching for parents/care givers or escaping the wrong way and getting trapped.

“Parents/care givers should show their children how to escape from each room and make sure they know where to meet once they are out of the house,” Mr Few-trell said.

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