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What To Do After The Fire
It is hoped that this information
will assist in reducing your losses and help speed your return to a
normal lifestyle.
First, we would like to answer some
questions you might have about our fire operations and procedures.
1. Was it really necessary to
break the windows and put holes in the roof?
As a fire burns, it moves upward, then outward. Removing windows and
cutting holes in the roof, ventilation in firefighting terms, stops
that damaging outward movement of smoke and heat and enables us to
locate potential victims, and fight the fire more efficiently,
resulting in less damage in the long run. This procedure also
reduces the risk of serious injury to firefighters.
2.
Why did the firefighters put holes in the walls and ceiling?
They had to be absolutely sure there was no "hidden" fire inside the
walls, ceilings and partitions.
Insurance
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Notify your insurance
agent as soon as possible. If you are unable to
reach your agent or insurance company, most policies
require you to have your home secured against
vandalism and looting, and allow advanced funds for
your family to find lodging. Keep all receipts, in
order to be reimbursed by your insurance company. If
possible, do not disturb or remove any items before
the insurance adjuster arrives.
Some insurance
policies provide for additional living expenses
until you are able to move back home. You must keep
receipts for all expenditures.
If you are a tenant,
contact the resident manager, the owner or the
owner's insurance agent. It is the owner's
responsibility to prevent further loss to the site.
See that your personal belongings are secure either
within the building or by moving them to another
location, such as the home of a relative or friend.
Contact your own insurance agent to report the loss.
The property owner's insurance, in most cases, will
not cover the loss of your personal belongings.
Insurance and
Other Assistance:
·
Contact your insurance
company as soon as possible
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If you are renting, contact the property owner or
the owner's insurance company.
·
If you are not insured, contact your lawyer or the
IRS for directions.
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Contact the American Red Cross for disaster
relief services.
American Red Cross in
Greater New York
150 Amsterdam Ave.
New York, NY 10023
Email Address - webmaster@arcgny.org
Main Telephone Number
Call 1-877-REDCROSS
If Your Property
is not Covered by Insurance
Emergency assistance,
including temporary shelter, food, clothing, eye
glasses, and medicine is available through the
American Red Cross
and
Salvation Army. |
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Salvage
Professional fire and water damage
restoration businesses may be a good source of cleaning and restoration
of your personal belongings. Companies offering this service can be
located in the phone directory.
Clothing
Smoke odor and soot can sometimes
be washed from clothing. The following formula will often work for
clothing that can be bleached:
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4-6
teaspoons trisodium phosphate (can be purchased in paint stores)
·
1 cup
Lysol or any household chlorine bleach
·
1 gallon
warm water
Mix well, add clothes, rinse with clean
water, dry well.
To remove mildew, wash the fresh stain with soap and water. Then rinse
and dry in the sun. If the stain isn't gone, use lemon juice and salt,
or a diluted solution of household chlorine bleach.
An effective way to remove mildew from
clothing is to wash the fresh stain with soap and warm water, rinse, and
then dry in the sun. If the stain has not disappeared, use lemon juice
and salt or a diluted solution of household chlorine bleach.
Cooking Utensils
Your pots, pans, flatware, etc.,
should be washed with soapy water, rinsed and then polished with a
fine-powdered cleaner. You can polish copper and brass with special
polish, salt sprinkled on a piece of lemon, or salt sprinkled on a cloth
saturated with vinegar
Electrical Appliances
Please don’t use appliances that
have been exposed to water or steam until you have a service
representative check them. This is especially true of electrical
appliances. In addition, steam can remove the lubricant from some moving
parts.
If the fire department turned off your
gas or power during the fire, call the electric or gas company to
restore these services - do not try to do it yourself. Often a licensed
plumber or electrician must make repairs before service can be restored
Rugs and Carpets
Rugs and carpets should be
allowed to dry thoroughly. Throw rugs can be cleaned by beating,
sweeping, or vacuuming, and then shampooing. Rugs should be dried as
quickly as possible - lay them flat and expose them to a circulation of
warm, dry air. A fan turned on the rugs will speed drying. Even though
the surface seems dry, moisture remaining at the base of the tufts can
quickly cause the rug to rot.
For information on cleaning and
preserving carpets, call your carpet dealer or installer or a qualified
carpet cleaning professional.
Leather and Books
Wipe your leather goods with a
damp cloth, then with a dry cloth. Stuff your purses and shoes with
newspapers to retain their shape. Leave your suitcases open. Leather
goods should be dried away from heat and sun. When leather goods are
dry, clean with saddle soap. You can use steel wool or a suede brush on
suede. Rinse leather and suede jackets in cold water and dry away from
heat and sun.
Books can be dried by placing them on end
with pages separated. Then they should be piled and pressed to prevent
the pages from crinkling. Alternating drying and pressing will help
prevent mildew until the books are thoroughly dry. If your books are
very damp, sprinkle cornstarch or talc between the pages, leave for
several hours, then brush off. A fan turned on the books will help them
dry.
Photographs
Preserving damaged photographs is
often very important to victims of fires, floods and other disasters. If
photographs are not burned they can usually be saved. Never try to peel
apart photographs that have stuck together. Always remember that
photographs were originally developed in water solutions and then
washed.
Soak the photos in clear, clean water and
rinse carefully and thoroughly and let stuck photographs separate on
their own. If they stay damp they can be damaged by mold. If you have
quantities of wet photos, wrap them in plastic wrap and freeze them,
then thaw them and wash them a few at a time. After washing the photos,
dry them image side up on a smooth hard surface like a glass table or
kitchen counter.
Walls, Floors and Furniture
To remove soot and smoke from
walls, furniture and floors, use a mild soap or detergent or mix
together the following solution:
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4 to 6
tbsp. Tri-Sodium Phosphate
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1 cup
household cleaner or chlorine bleach
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1 gallon
warm water
Wear rubber gloves when cleaning with
this solution. Be sure to rinse your walls and furniture with clear warm
water and dry thoroughly after washing them with this solution.
Wash a small area of wall at one time,
working from the floor up. Then rinse the wall with clear water
immediately. Ceilings should be washed last. If the weather allows, open
windows and use a fan to circulate air.
Do not repaint until walls and ceilings
are completely dry.
Your wallpaper can also be repaired. Use
a commercial paste to repaste a loose edge or section. Contact your
wallpaper dealer or installer for information on wallpaper cleaners.
Washable wallpaper can be cleansed like any ordinary wall, but care must
be taken not to soak the paper. Work from bottom to top to prevent
streaking.
Wood Furniture
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Do not
dry your furniture in the sun. The wood will warp and twist out of
shape.
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Clear
off mud and dirt.
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Remove
drawers. Let them dry thoroughly so there will be no sticking when you
replace them.
·
Scrub
wood furniture or fixtures with a stiff brush and a cleaning solution.
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Wet wood
can decay and mold, so dry thoroughly. Open doors and windows for good
ventilation. Turn on your furnace or air conditioner, if necessary.
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If mold
forms, wipe the wood with a cloth soaked in a mixture of borax dissolved
in hot water.
To remove white spots or film, rub the
wood surface with a cloth soaked in a solution of 1/2 cup household
ammonia and 1/2 cup water. Then wipe the surface dry and polish with wax
or rub the surface with a cloth soaked in a solution of 1/2 cup
turpentine and 1/2 cup linseed oil. Be careful - turpentine is
combustible. Please remember, oily rags can start fires by spontaneous
combustion. You do not want another fire. Put all used rags in an
airtight metal container like a paint can and place outside away from
your home.
You can also rub the wood surface with a
fine grade steel wool pad dripped in liquid polishing wax, clean the
area with a soft cloth and then buff.
Documents
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Documents are very important to your
well-being and can be damaged or destroyed as a result of a fire
or other disaster. The following documents should be located if
at all possible. |
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Birth Certificate
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Credit Cards
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Driver's Licenses
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Title to Deeds
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Bank Book
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Stocks and Bonds
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Insurance Policies
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Wills
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Military Discharge Papers
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Medical Records
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Passports
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Death Certificate |
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Payment Books
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Social Security Cards
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Warranties
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Marriage Papers
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Income Tax Records
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Divorce Decree
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Auto Registration
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Citizenship Papers
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Title Cards
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Animal Registration Papers
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Prepaid Burial Contract |
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A good investment is a fire-proof
safe that is UL rated for a minimum of 1 hour @ 1700°F. This is
usually enough time for firefighters to extinguish a blaze. You
will then be able to recover your preserved documents when it is
deemed safe. |
Wash your canned goods
in detergent and water. Do the same for food in jars. If the labels come
off, be sure you mark the contents on the can or jar with a grease
pencil. Don't use canned goods when cans have bulged or are dented or
rusted.
If your home freezer has stopped running,
you can still save the frozen food:
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Keep the
freezer closed. Your freezer has enough insulation to keep food frozen
for a least one day - perhaps as many as two or three days.
·
Move
your food to a neighbor's freezer or commercial freezer firm
·
wrap the
frozen food in newspapers and blankets, or use insulated boxes.
If your food has thawed, observe the
following procedures:
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Fruits
can be refrozen if they still taste and smell good. Otherwise, if the
fruits are not spoiled, they can be eaten at once.
·
Do not
refreeze vegetables if they have thawed completely. Refreeze only if
there are ice crystals in the vegetables.
·
If your
vegetables have thawed and cannot be used soon, throw them out. If you
have any doubts whether your vegetables are spoiling, throw them out
·
Meats
may by refrozen (if ice crystals remain) but cook thoroughly before
eating.
Refrigerators and freezers
To remove odor from your refrigerator or
freezer, wash the inside with a solution of baking soda and water or use
one cup of vinegar or household ammonia to one gallon of water. Some
baking soda in an open container or a piece of charcoal can be placed in
the refrigerator to absorb odor.
CAUTION:
When cleaning or discarding any refrigerator or freezer BE
SURE THE DOORS ARE REMOVED OR
SECURED AGAINST CLOSING ON A YOUNG CHILD!
Financial
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If your U.S. Savings
Bonds have been mutilated or destroyed, write to:
U.S. Treasury Department
Bureau of Loans and Currency
537 W. Clark Street
Chicago, Illinois 60605
ATTN: Bond Consultant
Include name(s) and address(s) on
bonds, approximate date or time period when purchased,
denominations and approximate number of each.
Mutilated currency can be mailed or
personally delivered to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. A
letter should accompany the submitted currency and give the
estimated value of the currency and explain how the currency was
mutilated. All mutilated currency should be sent by "Registered
Mail, Return Receipt Requested" to: Department of the Treasury,
Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Office of Currency Standards,
P.O. Box 37048, Washington, D.C. 20013. Insuring the shipment is
the responsibility of the sender.
The Bureau's special currency examiners
are usually able to determine the value of mutilated currency
when it has been carefully packed and boxed as described below:
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Regardless of the condition of the currency, DO NOT disturb the
fragments any more than is absolutely necessary.
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If the currency is brittle or inclined to fall apart, pack it
carefully in plastic without disturbing the fragments, and place
the package in a secure container.
·
If the currency was mutilated in a purse, box, or other
container, it should be left in the container to protect the
fragments from further damage.
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If it is absolutely necessary to remove the fragments from the
container, send the container along with the currency and any
other contents that may have currency fragments attached.
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If the currency was flat when mutilated, do not roll or fold the
notes.
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If the currency was in a roll when mutilated, do not attempt to
unroll or straighten it out.
If coin or any other metal is mixed
with the currency, carefully remove it. Any fused, melted, or
otherwise mutilated coins should be sent for evaluation to the:
Superintendent, U.S. Mint, P. O. Box 400, Philadelphia, PA
19105.
The amount of time needed to process
each case varies with its complexity and the case workload of
the examiner. For cases that are expected to take longer than
four weeks to process, BEP will issue a written confirmation of
receipt. |
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A go
od investment is a fire-proof safe that is UL rated for a
minimum of 1 hour @ 1700°F. This is usually enough time for
firefighters to extinguish a blaze. You will then be able to
recover your preserved documents when it is deemed safe. |
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