| What Is S.A.F.E.? The
Student Awareness of Fire Education (S.A.F.E.)
Program is a state initiative to provide
resources to local fire departments to conduct
fire and life safety education programs in
grades K-12. The mission is to enable students
to recognize the dangers of fire and more
specifically the fire hazards tobacco products
pose.
Key Fire Safety Behaviors
There are 23 Key Fire Safety Behaviors that
should be taught in age and developmentally
appropriate ways, such as:
- Stop, Drop, and Roll
- Making and Practicing Home Escape Plans
- Reporting Fires and Emergencies
- Crawl Low Under Smoke
- Smoke Detector Maintenance
- Kitchen Safety
- Holiday Safety and more
Fire and life safety is easily combined with
math, science, language arts, health, and
physical education lessons. Integration into the
existing curriculum topics is essential.
Benefits
- Training children reduces anxiety levels
so they are able to react to stressful
situations
- Fire, School, Health and Police
Departments working together to help
children survive
- Family medical and health care cost
reductions
- Firefighter as a role model
- Fires, burns and deaths reduced.
Proven Success
In the first nine years of the S.A.F.E.
Program we have honored more than 185 children
who have used the lessons they learned in school
through the S.A.F.E. Program in real life
emergencies. We call these youngsters who
remained calm in a difficult situation, our
"YOUNG HEROES" . Many families claim
they are alive today because their youngsters
“made” them install smoke alarms and practice a
home escape plan, or reported an emergency, or
persuaded a grandmother to ‘stop, drop, and
roll’. Some success stories are:
- A 12-year old boy blocks smoke by
closing the door and covering cracks with a
blanket to save four younger siblings.
- A girl leads her brother to safety by
crawling low under smoke in the house to
outdoors.
- A boy calls rescuers on 9-1-1 to save
his sister from choking.
- Smoke detector awakens 7-year old who
rouses the family and instructs them to "get
out."
- Family who rehearsed home escape plan as
a homework assignment use it to get out
alive.
How Was S.A.F.E. Originally Funded?
- The careless use and disposal of smoking
materials is the single leading cause of
fire deaths in the state and in the country.
- Due to the tremendous risk of injury and
death in fires started by tobacco products,
the Legislature appropriated funding from
monies raised through the cigarette sales
tax for Fiscal Years 1996 to 2002.
- Since 2002, the approximately 200 fire
departments who were able to keep their
programs alive have done so sharing a
federal grant, which was one-third of the
funding received in previous years, and
through support from their local
communities.
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