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| 2006 Fire Prevention Week
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“Prevent Cooking Fires, Watch What You Heat!”
Fire Prevention Week 2006 focuses attention on a huge problem, kitchen fires, the number one cause of structure fires in homes. Direct property loss due to kitchen fires averaged $519 million over a four-year period. Cooking equipment fires are the leading cause of structure fires today. Cooking fires have caused approximately 105,400 home fires in this country. Those fires were responsible for 270 deaths, 4,230 injuries, and estimated property losses of $519 million.
Fire Safety Media’s Fire Prevention Week materials provide your department the high-impact print, video and support materials you need to call the public’s attention this enormous source of tragedy.
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Fire Prevention Week 2006 Poster
Poster - Grades: All
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This full-color poster illustrates the 2006 Fire Prevention Week theme, which instructs you to "Watch What You Heat!"
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I Can Be Safe in the Kitchen Bag
Carry Bag - Grades: All
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This sturdy plastic bag is decorated with the 2006 Fire Prevention Week "Watch What You Heat!" illustration.
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Fire Prevention Week 2006 Ballon
Balloon - Grades: All
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Celebrate Fire Prevention Week 2006 in style with these great 9-inch balloons, which are white with red imprint.
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I Can Be Safe In the Kitchen
Ribbon - Grades: All
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These cheerful red self-stick satin ribbons declare your fire safety message loud and clear.
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I Can Be Safe in the Kitchen sticker
Sticker - Grades: K-6th
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The I Can Be Safe in the Kitchen message will really "stick with" children when you give them these great full-color stickers!
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Facts
| Over a four-year period these fires resulted in 105,400 fires, 270 civilian deaths, 4,230 injuries, and $519 million damage to property. |
| Kitchen fires are the number one cause of structure fires in homes. |
| Cooking equipment fires are the leading cause of structure fires. |
| Children five and under make up about 7% of our country’s population. This age group is twice the risk of the national average after being accounted for 14% of home fire deaths. |
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