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Make sure your vacation home rental is safe by following these tips
As COVID-19 restrictions are lifted, millions of people are travelling this summer. The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) in the United States is reminding consumers to look for critical safety features when staying in vacation rental homes.Travellers should make sure their vacation rental home has smoke alarms, carbon monoxide alarms, fire extinguishers, in addition to pool safety and home elevator safety features, if applicable.Among the most important safety tips for travellers are the following:Fire Safety
- 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.