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Safety First Can Keep Halloween Hazards From Haunting

Starting with candles, smart choices, planning and placement of decorations are the safest ways to prevent electrical and fire accidents.
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Stories : Safety
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SCE Using Data to Become Safer, Smarter

SCE Using Data to Become Safer, Smarter

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Halloween Trick or Treat Safety Infographics
SCE Using Data to Become Safer, Smarter

SCE Using Data to Become Safer, Smarter

Scott Todd, an operations senior supervisor at Southern California Edison, can often do a visual check of electrical equipment, like a power pole or transformer, and identify problems or issues and how to mitigate them ...
View Story
Battery Shop Using Exoskeletons to Reduce Back Strain

Battery Shop Using Exoskeletons to Reduce Back Strain

Just past Indio is Desert Center, the place where Steve Hoff is headed this morning. As a battery electrician, his job today will be to upgrade and install a DC battery system for a telecommunications site with coworker Ben Lettman. ...
View Story
Nothing Romantic About Metallic Balloon Outages

Nothing Romantic About Metallic Balloon Outages

Candlelight dinners are not as romantic when they are not planned. Metallic balloons may seem like the perfect gesture to show how much you care this Valentine’s Day. However, they are the cause of thousands of power outages ...
View Story
New Technology Sounds the Alarm on Wildfire Hazards

New Technology Sounds the Alarm on Wildfire Hazards

Brendan Kirkpatrick distinctly remembers a windy autumn evening in October 2017 when he anxiously waited to hear back from his parents as the Nuns Fire — one of a series of fires that year — burned less than a mile from his childhood home in picturesque Sonoma Valley. ...
View Story
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Stories : Safety
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Safety First Can Keep Halloween Hazards From Haunting

Starting with candles, smart choices, planning and placement of decorations are the safest ways to prevent electrical and fire accidents.
Paul Netter
Paul Netter
Energized by Edison Writer
@SCE_PaulN
Contributors
Infographic: Larry Tsuei
Published on October 22, 2018
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Halloween Safety 2018
Trick or treaters should be well lit with reflective tape, glow sticks or flashlights, wear flame-resistant costumes and not have their vision obstructed by masks.


Your Halloween decorations might be considered the best, the scariest or even the most realistic looking.

But are they the safest?

If light strands or electrical cords are thrown into trees or vegetation near power lines or placed on utility poles, they aren’t. If highly flammable decorations like cornstalks and ghosts are left too close to heat sources like incandescent lightbulbs, they’re not. And, if combustible items like spider webs and goblins are placed too close to burning candles, they most certainly are not.

With candles and decorations very high on the list of the $9 billion in Halloween spending expected this year and more than 175 million Americans likely to participate in the festivities, Southern California Edison joins public safety experts nationwide in encouraging smart and careful decisions with decorations, candles and costumes to avoid electrical and fire accidents.

“We want families and celebrants to enjoy their decorations as safely as possible,” said Andrew S. Martinez, SCE’s vice president of Safety, Security and Business Resiliency. “For example, jack-o’-lanterns should always be illuminated with flameless candles. Actually, they’re ideal for all decorations since they provide the same effect as burning candles and, most importantly, they are not a fire hazard.”

That fire hazard is epitomized by Halloween being among the highest days annually for candle fires and that candles ignite 41 percent of the estimated 860 yearly home decoration fires (excluding Christmas trees).

Candles, however, are only one of the many potential hazards posed by installing and maintaining decorations this Halloween. SCE offers additional dos and don’ts on decorating safely around electricity:


DECORATING DOS:

  • Always look up and look out for power lines when decorating outside and always stay at least 10 feet away from them.
  • Carefully inspect electrical lights and cords, discarding any with broken bulbs or damaged wires.
  • Consider LED lights that generate less heat and are far more efficient.
  • Use plastic zip cords when hanging lights instead of staples, tacks and nails.
  • Keep highly flammable decorations like cornstalks and ghosts at least three feet away from heat sources like space heaters.

DECORATING DON’TS:

  • Avoid overloading extension cords. Follow manufacturer’s instructions for use of extension cords and connection of strands of light.
  • Never connect two extension cords to extend their length and never place them in pinched positions.
  • Look out for unsafe electrical decorations by using only those bearing the labels of trusted independent safety organizations like Underwriters Laboratories (UL), Intertek or CSA.
  • Never use electrical products outdoors that are marked “for indoor use”.
  • Never leave decorations on when leaving home or going to bed.

“You should always choose your decorations with safety in mind,” said Martinez. “Smart planning and careful placement of those decorations are the best preparation for a fun and safe Halloween.”

Tags: Halloween safety
Halloween Trick or Treat Safety Infographics

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