Crime & Safety

Change Your Clock – Change Your Battery

Lisle-Woodridge Fire District: Change the battery in your smoke alarm twice a year to protect yourself and loved ones.

Editor's note: The following is a press release from the Lisle-Woodridge Fire District. 

Standard time begins at 2 a.m. on Nov. 6 when clocks are turned back one hour.

As the fall time change approaches, the  wants to remind its residents to make another change that could save their lives –changing the batteries in their smoke detectors.

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On average, three children a day die nationally in home fires -- 80 percent of these fires occur in homes without working smoke alarms.  

The most common cause of non-working smoke alarms is dead or missing batteries. Make sure your children know and understand fire safety.

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Children are at double the risk of dying in a home fire because they often become scared and confused during fires.  

The fire district encourages residents to show their children where smoke detectors are located and make sure they recognize the sound and understand that a sounding smoke alarm signals a home fire.

Changing smoke alarm batteries twice a year is the simplest and most effective way to reduce tragic fire deaths and injuries. Even if the battery is not dead, replace it with a new battery and use the old one in a toy. Your life depends on the detector, not the toy! 

A working smoke alarm cuts the risk of dying in a home fire by nearly 50 percent.  

The Illinois Association of Fire Chiefs recommends replacing smoke alarms every 10 years.

To save lives and prevent needless injuries, the Lisle-Woodridge Fire District Fire Prevention Bureau urges all residents to adopt this simple, lifesaving habit of changing smoke alarm batteries when changing clocks back to standard time, this month at 2 a.m. on Sunday, Nov.6th.  

“Working smoke alarms provide an early warning and critical extra seconds to escape,” said Fire Prevention Chief Jim French.

 “This is particularly important for children and seniors who are most at risk of dying in a home fire.”  

In addition, Chief French recommends using this time to test the devices.  Once the new battery is installed, this can be done by pushing the “test” button.

It is also a good time to be sure a smoke alarm is installed on each level of your home.  You can test and vacuum your smoke alarms once a month to ensure proper sensitivity. Check flashlight batteries as well and place them in accessible areas of your home.  Finally, install fire extinguishers and know how to use them.

The International Association of Fire Chiefs recommends a multi- or all-purpose fire extinguisher (ABC) that is listed by an accredited testing laboratory.  Plan and practice your escape routes.  In addition to planning “two ways out”, practicing those escape routes with the entire family.  

For more information on this or any other fire prevention issue, contact the Lisle Woodridge Fire Prevention Bureau at 630-353-3030 or visit our website at www.lwfd.org .


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