Check your smoke detectors, Ontario fire marshal says with 27 fatal fires in 2022
Global News
Ontario's Office of the Fire Marshal says there have been 27 fatal fires so far this year in the province, resulting in 40 deaths.
As we change our clocks for daylight time this weekend, Ontario’s Office of the Fire Marshal is calling on everyone to take the time to check their smoke detectors as well.
The plea comes after 27 fatal fires, killing 40 people, were reported in the province in the first two months of the year.
“There’s nothing that indicates any systemic issues related to these fires,” deputy fire marshal Tim Beckett said in an interview on Thursday. “But there are a lot of contributing pieces that the public needs to understand around fires.”
January saw 11 fires that resulted in 21 deaths, while 19 people died in 16 fires last month.
Fire officials have been stressing the importance of having working fire alarms, but Beckett said on average about half of fatal, preventable house fires in Ontario do not have working devices.
“It’s not a ‘nice to have,’ it’s a must-have,” he said. “It’s an Ontario law requiring working smoke alarms to be located in every residential home and they need to be located in every storey of the home and outside every sleeping area.”
He also said that for added protection, it’s highly recommended that a smoke alarm be installed in every bedroom.
Beckett did not go into detail into some of the causes of this year’s fatal fires, but said a common issue is people not paying attention, whether it be in the kitchen while cooking, discarded cigarette butts or unattended candles.