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50 things you can do to protect your home
No Cost, Just A Little Time
- Move your firewood pile out of your home's
defensible space.
- Perform a FIREWISE assessment of your home.
- Clean your roof and gutters of leaves and pine
needles (best done in October).
- Clear the view of your house number so it can be
easily seen from the street.
- Put a hose (at least 100' long) on a rack and attach
it to an outside faucet.
- Trim all tree branches if they overhang your house.
- Trim all tree branches from within 20' of all
chimneys.
- Remove trees along the driveway to make it 12' wide.
- Prune branches overhanging the driveway to have 14'
overhead clearance.
- Maintain a green lawn for 30' around your home.
- If new homes are still being built in your area,
talk to the developer and local zoning officials about
building standards.
- Plan and discuss an escape plan with your family.
Have a practice drill. Include your pets.
- Get involved with your community's disaster
mitigation plans.
- Check your fire extinguishers. Are they still
charged? Are they easy to get to in an emergency? Does
everyone in the family know where they are and how to
use them?
- Clear deadwood and dense flammable vegetation from
your home's defensible space.
- Remove conifer shrubs from your home's defensible
space especially if your home is in a high-risk area.
- Review your homeowner's insurance policy for
adequate coverage. Consult your insurance agent about
costs of rebuilding and repairs in your area.
- Talk to you children about not starting fires or
playing with matches.
- If you have a burn barrel that you use for burning
trash, STOP !
- Compost leaves in the fall, don't burn them.
- If you burn your brush piles or grass in the spring,
get a burning permit.
- Always have a shovel on hand and hook up the garden
hose BEFORE you start the fire.
- Never burn if the smoke and flames are blowing
towards your home (or your neighbor's home).
- Be a Firewise advocate.
Minimal cost actions
($10 - $25 and a little time)
- Install highly visible house numbers (at least 4"
tall) on your home.
- Install big, highly visible house numbers (at least
4" tall) at the entrance of the driveway onto the
street. Use non-flammable materials and posts.
- Install metal screens on all attic, foundation,
other openings on your home to prevent accumulation of
leaves and needles.
- Hold a neighborhood meeting to talk about fire
safety. Invite your local fire chief. Have coffee and
donuts for neighbors.
- Install a fire extinguisher in the kitchen AND the
garage.
- Install a metal shield between your home and an
attached wood fence.
- Replace conifer and evergreen shrubs with
low-flammable plants in your home's defensible space.
- Thin and prune conifer trees for 30' to 100' around
your home.
- Purchase and use a NOAA weather alert radio. Many
types of emergencies are announced through this service.
- Replace vinyl gutters and downspouts with
non-flammable, metal gutters and downspouts.
- Install a spark arrestor or heavy wire screen with
opening less than 1/2" on wood burning fireplaces and
chimneys.
Moderate cost actions
($50 - $250 and a little more work)
- Build a gravel turn around area near your house big
enough to allow a fire truck to turn around.
- Join your neighbors in having an additional access
road into your neighborhood. Share the costs.
- Treat flammable materials like wood roofs, decks,
and siding with fire retardant chemicals
- Modify driveway gates to accommodate fire trucks.
They should be at least 10' wide and set back at least
30' from the road. If locked, use a key box approved by
your local fire department or use or a chain loop with
the lock that can be cut in an emergency.
- Enclose decks to prevent accumulation of leaves,
needles, and debris. Include a metal screen with a 1/8"
mesh opening to prevent sparks from getting under the
deck.
High cost actions
(more than $500)
- Replace your roof with fire-resistant materials such
as Class A shingles.
- Install a roof irrigation system to protect your
home's roof.
- Install an independent water supply for a sprinkler
system with a non-electric (e.g., propane) powered pump
capable of running unattended for 24 hours.
- Replace wood or vinyl siding with non-flammable
material.
- Replace single-pane glass windows and plastic
skylights with tempered, double-pane glass.
- Box in eaves, facias, and soffits with aluminum or
steel materials with metal screens to prevent entry of
sparks.
- Improve driveway culverts and bridges to accommodate
the weight of a fire truck.
- Relocate propane tanks inside the defensible space
but at least 10' from the house.
- Have non-flammable ground cover such as gravel
around them for 10'.
- Have electric service lines to your house placed
underground.
- Improve your driveway by straightening sharp curves
and filling in sharp dips that would hinder a fire
truck.
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