carbon monoxide detector videos image
joe
O.K. I got to do a safety class for my job. I am a server at a chain restaurant and May is safety month for the business. To start out I have a batcher s in Fire Science and Public Safety. I do not have a job pertaining to my degree for two reasons. The current state of job employment in the country and post Air Force injuries. I got seriously hurt in Iraq, so I can no longer be a firefighter, but I got job offers for a safety coordinator. Anyways since I am part of the NFPA (National Fire Association Association) I've seen the report of deaths from lack of operational smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors. It make me think of putting up a flyer on the bulletin board to check your smoke detectors at work, approved by my mangers. Well now I got the title âFire Marshal Billâ if anyone remembers that skit. Well I am the joke of the job so to say and now my managers put me in charge of the yearly safety meeting. Now I do not care what my co-workers say about me, I can take a joke as well as the next guy, but I do want to be taken seriously during the meeting.
First off my Dad died when I was ten when his house caught fire. His smoke detectors did not work and he died in his sleep from smoke inhalation. Also when I was a firefighter, I was a volunteer for two years before I joined the Air Force, I pulled a little girl out of a house that had a small fire. The house had smoke detectors, but now batteries in the device. The little girl and the mother died that night, getting the picture?
Well my class is on, you guessed it, fire safety at work and home. My place of employment tries to be proactive at work and home when it comes to safety, don't ask. Well did not tell my employees or my mangers about the above statements. This is a good opportunity for me to get some experience in teaching since the career I am pursuing will be teaching companies safety and injury prevention. The problem is that most of the co workers are young, 18, 19 year olds that do not want to come to this meeting. Don't get me wrong I like them all and do not get offended easily, but I do want them to âgetâ something out of this. At least have them check their smoke detectors, or get them installed.
Well should I do a power point presentation, video, Have sparky the dog come? The last one is a joke. Should I tell them my personal experiences? I don't want to be overly dramatic but get my point across. Oh, I did give my mangers a synopsis of what I am covering to make sure it is good with the layers, policies, etc. I just need some ideas to deliver the information with out looking stupid or boring. Please help and feel free to comment
P.S. If you got anything from the second paragraph: Check your smoke and carbon monoxide detectors.
Answer
Safety meetings are mandatory in most workplaces and your fellow workers need to shut up and listen and it will be as painless as possible. You should check with your boss and find out what NOT to do. also, you should say something about yourself if they are giving you a hard time about FM Bill, or you could play that up a little and show them you have a sense of humor.
try looking at:
http://www.ehow.com/list_6728336_workplace-safety-restaurants.html
http://www.restaurant.org/profitability/support/legal/osha/
http://www.lni.wa.gov/WorkplaceRights/TeenWorkers/JobSafety/RestaurantProgram/Resources/
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/restaurant/index.html
http://www.nraef.org/Public/HIDDEN-Page-SI-files/2011-SI-Level-1-Workplace-Safety
I think slips and falls are important issues to cove in a restaurant.
You can always put in some info about home detectors at the end.
Safety meetings are mandatory in most workplaces and your fellow workers need to shut up and listen and it will be as painless as possible. You should check with your boss and find out what NOT to do. also, you should say something about yourself if they are giving you a hard time about FM Bill, or you could play that up a little and show them you have a sense of humor.
try looking at:
http://www.ehow.com/list_6728336_workplace-safety-restaurants.html
http://www.restaurant.org/profitability/support/legal/osha/
http://www.lni.wa.gov/WorkplaceRights/TeenWorkers/JobSafety/RestaurantProgram/Resources/
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/restaurant/index.html
http://www.nraef.org/Public/HIDDEN-Page-SI-files/2011-SI-Level-1-Workplace-Safety
I think slips and falls are important issues to cove in a restaurant.
You can always put in some info about home detectors at the end.
bedrooms in the basement?
valerie
I am in the middle of a huge dilemma! I my family has been expanding QUICKLY! I moved into my house three years ago with my daughter, husband, and myself. Now three years later my family of 5 has outgrown my three very small bedroom house! We have had our house on the market for a 1 1/2 years with no luck and we are getting desperate. We have decided that the only feasible choice is to move the three kids (ages 4, 3, 1) bedrooms down to the basement. I was a little nervous about it at first, the basement is already finished with 2 rooms with closets already. I have come around to idea with the understanding that we are going to be putting 2 egress windows in (we already have 4 windows but they are just small rectangles), baby video monitors in every room, and an alarm system installed with alarms on every window, smoke detectors, and carbon monoxide detectors. My husband and I will stay on the main floor, but our house if fairly small (1000 sq feet on each level), but I am still a little nervous. Does anybody have any thoughts on this?
Answer
Leave the litteones in the 3 rooms upstairs and go down with your bedroom and a family room. This will keep the noise level down on the main floor in the evenings. Utilizing the baby monitors you wouldn't be the first parents to be a floor away from the little ones. Also you need to be really sure that your basement is up to code to be considered a habitable living space. In the event of an emergency you and your husband are the ones that are most mobile.
Leave the litteones in the 3 rooms upstairs and go down with your bedroom and a family room. This will keep the noise level down on the main floor in the evenings. Utilizing the baby monitors you wouldn't be the first parents to be a floor away from the little ones. Also you need to be really sure that your basement is up to code to be considered a habitable living space. In the event of an emergency you and your husband are the ones that are most mobile.
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