Site Directory Contact Info Preparedness Info Emergency Info Links Press Room Home

County Home Pages
Home > Get Ready Directory >  Home Hazards > Home Hazards Hunt Directory >
   
  • TASK #12
    Conduct a Home Hazards Hunt

    Document - Printable PDF

     

    Spend some time with your household members identifying hazards in
    and outside of your home. Keeping your house safe helps keep you and your loved ones safe. Minimize the impact of an emergency or disaster by safeguarding your home. Anything that can move, fall, break or cause a fire is a potential hazard. If you have young children, be creative and make it fun!

    • Check batteries in smoke alarms every six months and make sure they are on each level of your home and outside every bedroom.
       
    • Repair defective electrical wiring and leaky gas connections.
       
    • Fasten shelves securely.
       
    • Place heavy objects on lower shelves.
       
    • Hang pictures and mirrors away from beds.
       
    • Brace overhead light fixtures.
       
    • Strap water heater to wall studs.
       
    • Repair cracks in ceilings or foundations.
       
    • Place oily polishing rags or waste in covered metal cans.
       
    • Store weed killers, pesticides and flammable products away from heat sources.
       
    • Clean and repair chimneys, flue pipes, vent connectors and gas vents.
       
    • Unless local officials advise otherwise, or there is immediate threat to life or safety, leave natural gas on because you will need it for heating and cooking when you return home. If you turn your gas off, a licensed professional is required to turn it back on, and it may take weeks for a professional to respond.
       
    • If high winds are expected, cover the outside of all windows of your home. Use shutters that are rated to provide significant protection from windblown debris or fit plywood coverings over all windows. Damage happens when wind gets inside a home through a broken window, door or damaged roof. Tape does not prevent windows from breaking and is not recommended.
       
    • If flooding is expected, consider using sand bags to keep water away from your home. It takes two people about one hour to fill and place 100 sandbags, giving you a wall one foot high and 20 feet long. Make sure you have enough sand, burlap or plastic bags, shovels, strong helpers and time to place them properly.

    Identify potential risks inside your home
    and outside your home





This information has been developed using the following resources:
Lassen County Public Health (CA) and UCLA Health Systems.

Created and Hosted by Visual Imagry, Inc. / VIPlanning