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Do You Have a Fire Extinguisher Education Program?

Posted by Gary Finch on August 1, 2015

  Every business that has portable fire extinguishers, including funeral homes and cemeteries, should have a written firefighting plan. In addition, any employee authorized to operate a fire extinguisher should have observed or taken part in an actual fire extinguisher demonstration.

  Space does not allow us a chance to display a full section on Fire Extinguisher Training. The full plan features six sections and a quiz. We have featured Section Five.

  OSHA Standard 1910.157(g)(1) states: “Where the employer has provided portable fire extinguishers for employee use in the workplace, the employer shall also provide an educational program to familiarize employees with the general principles of fire extinguisher use and the hazards involved with incipient stage firefighting.

  If you do not have a plan to comply with 157(g)(1), you need to get a full plan. You should also check into other required written, training, and documentation programs OSHA requires.

 

Fire Extinguishers/Section Five/Rules for Fighting Fires – Oklahoma State University

  Fires can be very dangerous and you should always be certain that you will not endanger yourself or others when attempting to put out a fire. For this reason, when a fire is discovered:

  Assist any person in immediate danger to safety, if it can be accomplished without risk to you.

  Activate the building fire alarm system or notify the fire department by dialing 911 (or designating someone else to notify them for you). When you activate the building fire alarm system, it will automatically notify the fire department and get help on the way. It will also sound the building alarms to notify other occupants, and it will shut down the air handling units to prevent the spread of smoke throughout the building.

  Only after having done these two things, if the fire is small, you may attempt to use an extinguisher to put it out.

  However, before deciding to fight the fire, keep these rules in mind:

  Know what is burning. If you don't know what is burning, you don’t know what type of extinguisher to use. Even if you have an ABC extinguisher, there may be something in the fire that is going to explode or produce highly toxic smoke. Chances are, you will know what’s burning, or at least have a pretty good idea, but if you don't, let the fire department handle it.

  The fire is spreading rapidly beyond the spot where it started. The time to use an extinguisher is in the incipient, or beginning, stages of a fire. If the fire is already spreading quickly, it is best to simply evacuate the building. When evacuating a building, close doors and windows behind you as you leave.

 

Do Not Fight the Fire If:

 You don't have adequate or appropriate equipment. If you don't have the correct type or large enough extinguisher, it is best not to try to fight the fire.

  You might inhale toxic smoke. If the fire is producing large amounts of smoke that you would have to breathe in order to fight it, it is best not to try. Any sort of combustion will produce some amount of carbon monoxide, but when synthetic materials such as the nylon in carpeting or foam padding in a sofa burn, they can produce highly toxic gases such as hydrogen cyanide, acrolein, and ammonia in addition to carbon monoxide. These gases can be fatal in very small amounts.

  Your instincts tell you not to. If you are uncomfortable with the situation for any reason, just let the fire department do their job.

  The final rule is to always position yourself with an exit or means of escape at your back before you attempt to use an extinguisher to put out a fire. In case the extinguisher malfunctions, or something unexpected happens, you need to be able to get out quickly, and you don’t want to become trapped. Just remember: always keep an exit at your back.


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