Fire Safety In Your HOA Community

firesafety.jpg

Fires can start anywhere at any time. Help keep your homeowners and community safe with regular fire education and preventive actions.

Whether your homeowners association is a gated community or a condo building, there are important things you can do to help keep your community—and those who live in it—safe from fire.

Educate homeowners on fire safety

Fire safety isn’t likely at the top of your homeowners’ to-do lists. Help put it there by maintaining a steady flow of communications and events around fire safety:

  • Invite a fire officer from your local fire department to speak at a community meeting.
  • Send a form to homeowners twice a year to remind them to change the batteries in their smoke detectors. Require them to certify that they have done so on the form and mail it back to the board.
  • Include a fire safety checklist in your newsletter or other homeowner communication.
  • Provide tips of simple things homeowners can do to prevent fires , such as installing a screen in front of fireplaces, replacing electrical cords that do not work properly or have loose connections, turning off appliances when not in use and keeping a working fire extinguisher in the kitchen and garage.
  • Remind homeowners to clear roofs of pine needles, leaves and other debris and to keep flammable items off balconies and patios.
  • Stress the importance of emergency planning .

Keep buildings and grounds safe

The HOA board can also take steps take to help keep buildings and grounds fire safe:

  • Have your building inspected by your local fire department. Ideally, you should do this once a year, but codes on inspection frequencies vary from state to state. The inspection is free so there’s no reason to skip it.
  • Create a defensible space around homes and buildings. This space serves as a buffer between structures and combustible vegetation and should be at least 30 feet (ideally 100 feet).
  • Prune vegetation and trees, especially any branches that hang over roofs or are less than six feet from the ground.
  • Remove any dead trees and cut grass often.
  • Where possible, replace flammable vegetation with plants that possess fire-resistant traits, such as plants whose leaves have a high moisture content.
  • Clearly mark all emergency water sources and create easy firefighter access to these sources.
  • If your community is a mid- or high-rise, hold regular fire drills so homeowners recognize the alarm signal and have a clear plan of how to exit the building. If you live in gated community, encourage homeowners to hold drills of their own.
Source: Red Cross, AssociaLiving.com, Firesafecouncil.org, HOALeader.com, CherryRanchHOA.com, ReadyforWildfire.org
Search All Articles
Related Articles
Caution: Bully on Board
Bully_word_image Do you have a bully on your HOA board? The kind of person whose presence is hard to endure.
Nobody Wants to Be the Board Treasurer - What Do You Do?
768px-green_tick.svg The most important board role and the one with the most work is the Treasurer.
Money Tips for Young People
Taxespreadsm Financial matters can seem complicated as a Millennial.
Are You Prepared for a Blizzard?
Blizzard 2017 saw some of the most extreme weather in years

More...
Most Popular
Oklahoma - The Sooner State
Statesealthumb Oklahoma's capital is an easy one to remember -- Oklahoma City.
Follow procedures for collecting HOA fees
Fees Your HOA may be required to follow the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act.
How Your Association Can Go Green
Goinggreenthumb Al Gore has warned us about global warming and most of us think we should do something.
Saving Water Can Save You Money
Savewater1_th Excellent tips and planning guide for saving money by saving water in your garden and landscaping.

More...

Zip Code Profiler

Neighborhoods, Home Values, Schools, City & State Data, Sex Offender Lists, more.

Instant Home Value!
Create a Mobile Website
View Site in Mobile | Classic
Share by: