Sunday, June 15, 2014

Carbon Monoxide News June 15, 2014 - posts updated frequently

Every day is a carbon monoxide safety education day.
Scroll back in time through our archives for previous CO News links.
We can learn from others mistakes and efforts to prevent poisoning.


“Hope is nature's veil for hiding truth's nakedness.”
Alfred Nobel (1833-1896, bio link)

What will you be doing today?
Who will be responsible for the air you breathe?
You may be the only person who can prevent your own poisoning.

We are all vulnerable to carbon monoxide exposure and poisoning.
Everyone has been poisoned by CO and will be poisoned again. The degree of the poisoning depends upon allowing yourself to be in a situation where someone else controls the air you breathe and the mechanisms for alarming notification.

Please read the alarm information on the package and in the instructions that come with the unit. Know when your fire department and emergency responders begin wearing their breathing apparatus and what their civilian evacuation levels are for carbon monoxide; it may be as soon as the gas is present in your presence. Pregnant women, infants & children, people with heart & respiratory struggles, those suffering depression or chronic headaches and all people of vulnerable health should be alerted as soon as the gas begins to concentrate, around 10 PPM (parts per million).

Do not take risks with carbon monoxide. Take responsibility for the air you breathe and the combustion systems you are responsible for. If you don’t do it for yourself, do it for others.

Help prevent injuries and deaths; don’t guess about carbon monoxide.

Measure carbon monoxide for safety and knowledge. The more you test the more you learn. Measurement is continuing education at its best.
Bob Dwyer, CSME Carbon Monoxide Safety 

CO and Air Quality News Links
The Best Western deaths one year later
Watauga Democrat
Among all the talk since then of felony charges, lawsuits, carbon monoxide detectors and bureaucratic failures, it should not be forgotten that two families have spent more than a year now without their loved ones. For them, this was no ghost story, nor a fleeting headline…

Odessa Walmart Evacuated After Storage Area Fire
NewsWest9.com
Crews could not go inside due to the high levels of carbon monoxide in the building…

Rural Metro Fire Department receives pet oxygen masks donation
Knoxville daily sun
The most important first line treatment for animals rescued from burning buildings or those that are victims of carbon monoxide poisoning is immediate ...

North Carolina lawmakers want to hide the facts by not measuring them
Wishing our way to cleaner air
Charlotte Observer
The monitors provide valuable data about a region's air quality and help regulators predict where problems will worsen… Tucked inside a 65-page bill called the Regulatory Reform Act (Senate Bill 734) is one sentence that requires the state to eliminate the majority of its 132 air-quality monitors. The provision requires the Department of Environment and Natural Resources, run by Secretary John Skvarla, to remove any monitors that are not explicitly required by the federal Environmental Protection Agency. That, advocates say, would mean getting rid of 80 percent of the monitors in some parts of the state, such as western North Carolina… 

Who is responsible for the air you breathe? 
Take control inside your homes. 
-Link to:  CO alarm standards  

The lowest U.L. 2034 & CSA 6.19 carbon monoxide alarm test point is: 
- 70 PPM to 149 PPM –resist one hour, must alarm before 4 hours 
Please read the alarm information on the package and in the instructions. Know when your fire department and emergency responders begin wearing their breathing apparatus and what their civilian evacuation levels are for carbon monoxide; it may be before 70 PPM. It is for pregnant women, infants & children, the elderly and all people of vulnerable health. Bob Dwyer, CSME Carbon Monoxide Safety 

Consider low level protection for carbon monoxide and smoldering fire detection problems; don't leave anyone behind.

These following links may be of some use to you: 

· Please take CARBON MONOXIDE SAFETY CARE during all holiday and everyday activities.

National Conference of State Legislatures 
Carbon Monoxide Detectors State Statutes 

Twenty-eight U.S. states have statutes that require carbon monoxide detectors in certain residential buildings. Updated Feb. 2014
Alaska | California | Colorado | Connecticut | Delaware | Florida |
  |Vermont | Virginia | Washington | Wisconsin | |Minnesota 
  
Red Cross - Typhoon Appeal continues in the Philippines. Another please, with hopes of another thank you. Bob Dwyer, CSME Carbon Monoxide Safety

Red Cross - Disaster Relief to safely assist law enforcement, fire department, utility company, city, county and state authorities as repair and rebuilding moves forward. Bob Dwyer, CSME Carbon Monoxide Safety

Nationally, the Red Cross provides food and shelter to people affected by as many as 70,000 fires annually, or about one fire every eight minutes.

The following companies are acknowledged for their continued support of carbon monoxide safety education and this daily news blog. They may just have what you are looking for. 
Fieldpiece Instruments 
The Energy Conservatory 
IntelliTec Colleges 

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