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KEARNEY — Every 24 seconds a fire department in the United States responds to a fire somewhere in the country, according to the National Fire Protection Association, NFPA.

As the winter months close in, it becomes particularly important that families and businesses practice good fire prevention to avoid a costly accident or disaster.

Here are some facts about fire related incidents from the NFPA, between 2013 and 2017 there were 19 fire deaths per year. People living in rural areas, those who smoke cigarettes, people with disabilities and households below the poverty line are at greater risk for fires.

The NFPA notes risk factors themselves do not cause fires; they do play a role showing who is at greater risk.

Across the United States a fire within a structure occurs every 63 seconds and a home fire occurs every 87 seconds. Home fires themselves were responsible for 11,200 civilian injuries and 74 percent of all fire deaths occur in the home.

Brian Neben, Central Nebraska Today

Overall, there was an estimated $25.6 billion in property damage because of fires in 2018, this is an increase from past years, this number includes the $12 billion loss in Northern California due to wildfires.

The leading cause of fires in the United States was caused by unattended equipment, the second leading cause is electrical fires, according to NFPA research.

Fires involving electrical failure or malfunctions accounted for the highest share of civilian deaths and direct property damage, nearly two of five fires involving electrical failure occurred during cold weather months from November through February.

Smoke alarms are a key to providing an early warning of fire and give people additional time to escape. According to the NFPA, almost three out of every four home fire deaths resulted from fires in homes which did not have smoke alarms, or the alarms were not working.

“The death rate per 1,000 reported home fires was more than twice as high in homes that did not have any working smoke alarms either because no smoke alarm was present or an alarm was present but did not operate, as it was in homes with working smoke alarms,” per the NFPA website.

In fires which smoke alarms were present, but did not operate, 43 percent of the smoke alarms had missing, or disconnected batteries and dead batteries account for 25 percent of smoke alarms failures.

Every family should have a fire escape plan already in place in the event of a fire in the home. The fire academy E.S.C.A.P.E. lists the following tips on their website:

Draw or map out the layout of your home, marking two exits from every room (typically a door and a window) and a path from each exit to the outside.

Pick a meeting place outside in front of your home where everyone will meet upon exiting (examples include a sidewalk, fence, driveway, or neighbor’s house).

Mark the location of all smoke alarms in your home. (There should be at least one on every level, in each bedroom, and near all sleeping areas).

Make sure everyone knows how to call 911 or the local emergency number from a mobile phone or neighbor’s phone once they’re safety outside.

Brian Neben, Central Nebraska Today

Fire needs three key ingredients, a fuel – something to burn, heat – enough to make the fuel burn and air – especially oxygen.

All three components must be present at the same time to have a fire. Fire will burn until one or more of the components are removed and traditional fire extinguishing methods involve removing the fuel, heat, or oxygen, according to the NFPA.

Fire Prevention Week this year runs Oct. 8-14 and fire departments across the nation host programs to help raise awareness about how to prevent fires.

The theme of this year’s Fire Prevention Week is “Cooking Safety Starts with You.”

The week-long event traces its roots back to the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, the tragedy killed 300 people, left 100,000 homeless and destroyed over 17,000 structures.

The fire burned more than 2,000 acres in 27 hours. Chicago quickly rebuilt and the successful restoration was memorialized with festivities, including a new impetus on fire prevention.