Crime & Safety

Hamden Fire Chief Reminds Residents to 'Prevent Kitchen Fires’

Fire Prevention Week is Oct. 6-12.

From Hamden Fire Chief David Berardesca:

Fire Prevention Week will soon be here, and from Oct. 6-12 the Hamden Fire Department is joining forces with the nonprofit National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) to remind local residents to ‘Prevent Kitchen Fires.' 

During this year's fire safety campaign, firefighters and safety advocates will be spreading the word about the dangers of kitchen fires – most of which result from unattended cooking—and teaching local residents how to prevent kitchen fires from starting in the first place.

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According to the latest NFPA research, cooking is the leading cause of home fires. Two of every five home fires begin in the kitchen—more than any other place in the home. Cooking fires are also the leading cause of home fire-related injuries.

"Often when we're called to a fire that started in the kitchen, the residents tell us that they only left the kitchen for a few minutes," said Fire Chief David Berardesca. "Sadly, that's all it takes for a dangerous fire to start. We hope that Fire Prevention Week will help us reach community members before they've suffered a damaging lesson."

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Among the safety tips that firefighters and safety advocates will be emphasizing:

  • Stay in the kitchen when you are frying, grilling, broiling, or boiling food.
  • If you must leave the room, even for a short period of time, turn off the stove.
  • When you are simmering, baking, or roasting food, check it regularly, stay in the home, and use a timer to remind you.
  • If you have young children, use the stove’s back burners whenever possible. Keep children and pets at least three away from the stove.
  • When you cook, wear clothing with tight-fitting sleeves.
  • Keep potholders, oven mitts, wooden utensils, paper and plastic bags, towels, and anything else that can burn, away from your stovetop.
  • Clean up food and grease from burners and stove-tops.

Kitchen Fire Facts

  • Two of every five home fires start in the kitchen.
  • Unattended cooking was a factor in 34 percent of reported home cooking fires.
  • Two-thirds of home cooking fires started with ignition of food or other cooking materials. 
  • Ranges accounted for the 58 percent of home cooking fire incidents. Ovens accounted for 16 percent.
  • Children under five face a higher risk of non-fire burns associated with cooking than being burned in a cooking fire.
  • Microwave ovens are one of the leading home products associated with scald burn injuries not related to fires. Nearly half (44 percent) of the microwave oven injuries seen at emergency rooms in 2011 were scald burns.

For questions on this or other fire safety related items, please contact the Fire Chief's office at (203) 407 5880.


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