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Make sure your vacation home rental is safe by following these tips
- Check for adequate smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors. Smoke alarms should be on every level of the home, outside each sleeping area and inside every bedroom.
- Carbon monoxide alarms should be on every level of the home outside sleeping areas.
- Make sure there is a fire extinguisher in the home.
- Have a fire escape plan (providing two ways out each room).
- Avoid deadly furniture and TV tip-overs; don’t let children climb on furniture, and don’t place toys and remotes where children might be tempted to climb up to reach for them.
- Keep cleaning supplies in a locked cabinet or out of reach of children.
- Keep all window cords out of reach of children.
- Keep baby’s sleep space free from pillows and blankets, and use cribs that meet CPSC safety standards.
- Even when travelling, ensure that baby sleeps in a flat crib or play yard with a well-fitting sheet.
- Check SaferProducts.gov to be sure none of the child or infant products in a vacation rental are subject to a recall. If they are, do not use them, and notify the property or rental manager.
- Never leave a child unattended in or near water, and always designate an adult Water Watcher. This person should not be reading, texting, using a smartphone or otherwise be distracted.
- There should be an alarm on the door leading from the house to the pool.
- Pools and spas should be surrounded by a fence at least four feet high with self-closing and self-latching gates.
- Pools and spas should have drain covers that meet federal standards; consumers can ask property or rental managers for confirmation.
- Life-saving equipment, such as life rings or reaching poles, should be available for use.
- Make sure kids learn to swim.
- Keep children away from pool drains.
- Know how to perform CPR on children and adults.
- Be aware of a deadly gap (greater than 4 inches deep) that may exist between the interior and exterior doors of home elevators.
- Children, from ages 2 through 16, have been crushed to death in this gap. In some incidents, children have suffered multiple skull fractures, fractured vertebrae, traumatic asphyxia and other horrific and lifelong injuries.
- Lock the elevator so that it cannot be accessed by children; or lock all exterior (hoistway) doors to the elevator.
- Don’t let children play with or around residential elevators.