This article was posted 07/13/2007 and is most likely outdated.

Fire Prompts Fire Safety Warning
 

 

Topic - Safety
Subject -
Fire Prompts Fire Safety Warning

July 13, 2007
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Fire Prompts Fire Safety Warning

 

TORONTO - July 12, 2007 – Ontarians should plug portable air conditioners directly into electrical outlets or, if that is not possible, use heavy-duty appliance extension cords warns Deputy Fire Marshal Doug Crawford.  This fire safety warning comes after the Office of the Fire Marshal (OFM) confirmed a near million-dollar fire in Barrie began with the improper use of an extension cord.

 

When OFM investigators arrived at the Dunlop Street West building, which contained nine apartments and three retail outlets, they noted a refrigerator and a portable air conditioner plugged into a 16-gauge extension cord.  OFM investigators examined the electrical wire within the melted cord and noted obvious arcing damage.

“If you can, plug portable air conditioners directly into an electrical outlet.  If that is not possible, use a ‘listed’ 14 gauge, three-wire grounding type appliance extension cord,” said Crawford. “The type of cord at the fire scene was a light-duty extension cord. These cannot handle the load of air conditioners and other heavy appliances.  For example, last summer, a young father and his three-week-old child tragically died in an apartment fire where an extension cord was being used improperly with a portable air conditioner.  Fortunately in this latest fire, no one was injured and the fire alarm system was functional.”

As the warm weather continues and people turn to their air conditioners for relief, these fires should serve as reminders, for landlords and tenants in particular, of how important it is to ensure that air conditioners are operating safely and that homes and multi-unit dwellings be equipped with working smoke alarms on every storey and outside sleeping areas. 
 
The fast-moving fire began on Sunday and left a number of Barrie businesses out of operation and several people homeless. The Office of the Fire Marshal, Barrie Fire & Emergency Service and the Barrie Police Service conducted the investigation.

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Comments
  • This has been a problem for our industry since it first started. 16 gauge and 18 gauge cords should not be manufactured. It is a common practice to install a 15 amp receptacle on a 20 amp circuit. Plug a 18 gauge cord into this 15 amp device and draw up to 19 plus amps through the 18 gauge cord. This cord is rated at 7.5 amps. After the fire has been put out, the fire department states that it was an electrical fire. How can we win this battle.

    Ralph Tramontana

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