Risk Watch
"Saves" and "Success" are case histories of actual incidents in
which the knowledge gained from Risk Watch has been put into
action.
- A "Save"
occurs when an individual's actions, learned from Risk Watch,
result in the preservation of human life, or whose positive intervention
has prevented or minimized a potentially harmful situation.
- A "Success"
occurs when an individual's actions, learned from Risk Watch,
reduce the dangers of a potentially harmful situation.
If a "Save" or "Success"
has occurred in your community, tell us about it. Complete a Risk
Watch Success Incident Report form and return it to NFPA. For each documented
"Save" or "Success," you'll receive a special certificate to present to your local
hero.

Certificate
for Risk Watchers!
Ever have
a child who has put Risk Watch into action but...it doesn't quite qualify
as an NFPA Save or Success? NFPA has developed a
great certificate for Champions and teachers, to download and print out for
that special Risk Watcher.
| Saves! |
|
- Bloomfield, MI
- Allardt, TN
- Snohomish, WA
- Dover, DE
- Wishek,
ND
- Elizabeth
City, NC
- Glenwood,
IL
- Cheswold,
DE
- Cold
Spring, KY
- Decatur,
GA
- Midwest
City, OK
- Glenwood,
IL
- Pittsburg,
NH
- Brandon,
FL
- College
Station, TX
- Kannapolis,
NC
- Hallstead,
PA
- Old
Town, ME
- Port
Orchard, WA
|
- Trussville,
AL
- Loretto,
TN
- Sudbury,
MA
- Woonsocket,RI
- Plano,
TX
- Lake
Stevens, WA
- Wauconda,
IL
- Colorado
Springs, CO
- Oklahoma
City, OK
- Oklahoma
City, OK
- Brockville,
Ontario
- Everett,
WA
- Ponca
City, OK
- Dover,
NH
- Lynn,
MA
- Brampton,
Ontario
- Woodward,
OK
|
Risk Watch Save!
Bloomfield, MI
Seven year old Malcolm Clark knew just what to do when his mother lost consciousness after a fall down a flight of stairs.
Remembering what he had been taught in school in a special Risk Watch program taught by the Bloomfield Township Fire Department, he called 9-1-1 and calmly gave the dispatcher the necessary information –all while comforting his frightened 23-month old brother.
Risk Watch is taught as a nine-week course presented to 2nd grade students in the Bloomfield Hills Schools and taught by Bloomfield Township Fire Inspector Peter Vlahos.
Risk
Watch Save!
Allardt,
TN
School counselor Lyna Pennycuff
began teaching the Risk
Watch program in her guidance classes at the Allardt Elementary School in
September 2005. Luckily for 10 year-old Kayla Hamby and her family, the first
risk area covered was motor
vehicle safety.
On the evening of September
20, 2005, Kayla, her father and five-year-old sister, were involved in a
car crash. All three were taken to the hospital, treated and released. The
next day at school, Kayla thanked her teacher for the life saving lessons. “I
just wanted to thank you for teaching us about seat belts yesterday. My family
had a car crash last night and we are all okay because we wore our seat belts.
We usually don’t, but because of those lessons we all had them on,” said
Kayla.
As part of the motor vehicle
safety lessons, Ms. Pennycuff invited the Tennessee Highway Patrol to demonstrate
their crash rollover simulator. The simulator showed students what happens
in a crash if seat belts are not worn.
“Everyone in Kayla’s
family had survived the crash because they were wearing their seat belts
and because of the Risk Watch program,” said Ms. Pennycuff. “If
we can save one life by initiating this program it is worth it. I will continue
to teach Risk Watch in my classes.”
Risk Watch Teaching
Point: Children who have outgrown child safety seats should be properly
restrained in booster seats until they are 4’9” tall.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Snohomish, WA
Monday
morning September 12, 2005, eight-year-old Grayson Pope was tired of waiting
in line for
his turn on
the new jungle gym at the Machias Elementary
School. Instead, Grayson hopped on the nearby swings. While swinging, he
spotted a gun lying in the wood chips – he immediately yelled to
his friend, nine-year-old Khoa Nguyen, that they needed to get a teacher
right
away.
At the time of the incident, there
were 150 children playing in the school yard. The sheriff’s office
was called immediately and are currently trying to track down the owner of
the .32-caliber gun. The school sent a letter home
about the incident to parents that day.
As reward for their actions, Grayson’s parents took him out to dinner
and Khoa’s parents let him have a sleepover that night! Although Khoa
is new to the school, Grayson has had Risk Watch lessons for the last two years.
His second grade teacher Crissy Hall, felt that the firearm lessons were so
important that she covered the risk area twice during the school year. Grayson’s
parents are thankful for Risk Watch and credit the program as being responsible
for the way Grayson handled the incident.
Risk Watch has been implemented in Machias Elementary since 2001.
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Watch Save!
Dover,
DE
Fabien
Perry and his baby sister, Ariana
were driving in the car
with their grandmother, Gloria
DeNigris when she became dizzy.
Ms. DeNigris was able to pull
the car over to the side of the
road before she blacked out. Ten-year
old Fabien put his Risk
Watch knowledge into
action and grabbed his grandmother’s cell phone and called 9-1-1 for
help. He was able to work with the dispatcher to figure out where the car
was located. The ambulance
arrived and his grandmother was taken to the local hospital where she was treated
for a minor stroke.
Fabien was taught how to dial 9-1-1 by his fourth grade teacher Phyllis Simon
at the North Dover Elementary School. He is continuing his Risk Watch lessons
in fifth grade.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Wishek,
ND
Eleven-year-old Justin
Deede was walking home from a friend’s house
on January 23, 2005, wh en he heard Harold Mensing, 74, calling for help. Mensing
had slipped on the ice and was unable to get up. “He told me he couldn’t
move,” said Justin. “He thought he had a broken bone or something.”
Justin ran to a nearby home and asked them to call 9-1-1 while he returned
to wait with Mensing. The paramedics responded and Mensing was taken to the
hospital and treated for a broken leg.
Justin says Risk Watch helped him
know what to do when he heard Mensing’s
calls. “I saw that he was hurt and realized right away that someone had
to call 9-1-1,” he told local paper, The Wishek Star. Justin is a sixth grade student at the Wishek Elementary School.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Elizabeth
City, NC
When seven-year-old Shevonda Joyner came home from school
on January 7, 2004, she found her great-grandmother,
68-year-old Thelma Joyner, disoriented and confused.
Knowing that something was wrong, Shevonda ran to the next door neighbor and
called 9-1-1. The paramedics responded and Thelma was taken to the hospital
and treated for diabetes shock.
Shevonda’s quick action was credited to her participation in the Risk
Watch program at the P.W. Moore Elementary School. Her teacher, Miriam
Noble, brings the Risk Watch program to students in kindergarten,
first and second grades. Noble has also helped to implement the program in
upper elementary grades. The Risk Watch implementation in Elizabeth
City was made possible with funding NFPA received through the FIRE Act grant.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Glenwood, IL
Nine-year-old Jabari Henderson has been credited with saving his grandfather’s
life because he knew how to respond in an emergency. On May 14, 2004, he walked
into the kitchen and found his 67-year-old grandfather, Jesse Coleman, experiencing
a seizure. At the time of the incident, Jabari was home alone with his grandfather
and younger brother, Javaris.
The fourth grader immediately called
9-1-1 and requested an ambulance. When the paramedics arrived, he asked for
identification before letting them in
the home. He then assisted them by retrieving his grandfather’s medications.
Jesse Coleman was taken to the hospital were he spent several days.
Jabari was taught Risk
Watch at the Hickory Bend Elementary School in conjunction
with the Glenwood Fire Department. He has been using the Risk Watch program
since kindergarten. Responding to emergency situations and calling 9-1-1 has
been covered in his class each year.
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Risk
Watch Save! Cheswold, DE
On an April 21, 2004, visit with her grandfather 10-year-old Sarah Caldwell
was able to put her Risk Watch knowledge into action. Sarah, her
mother, Juliette Caldwell, and younger sister Selena went to visit her
grandfather, Louis Caldwell Sr., who wasn’t feeling well. While sitting
with him, the 67-year-old slumped over, started vomiting and was having
trouble breathing. Sarah immediately called her mother into the room. Mrs.
Caldwell instructed her to take her little sister into the other room.
Sarah proceeded to call
9-1-1 and calmly tell the operator that her grandfather was diabetic and
was having trouble breathing. She stayed on the phone and provided all the
necessary information. The paramedics responded quickly and Mr. Caldwell
was taken to the hospital where he was treated for a bleeding ulcer and high
blood sugar.
Sarah was taught Risk
Watch by third grade teacher Phyllis Simon at the Fairview Elementary
School. She has been using the Risk Watch program since first
grade. Responding to emergency situations and calling 9-1-1 has been covered
in her class each year.
“I feel good about it, that he is still here. I hope other children learn
to stay calm like Risk Watch teaches,” Sarah told local paper,
The Dover Post.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Cold Spring, KY
Ten-year-old
Chelsea Deaton woke up coughing from smoke at 1 a.m. on November
10, 2003. She immediately jumped
out of bed and ran across the hall to wake
up her two younger sisters, Shelby, 7, and Ivy, 2. She ushered both of them
back to her bedroom where she shut the door to slow the smoke, she then pushed
open the screen window and pushed her sisters out of the first floor window
where they landed in the bushes below. The girls then ran to a neighbor’s
home to call the fire department. The children were taken to the hospital were
they were treated for smoke inhalation. Chelsea later told Central Campbell County Fire District Chief Gerald Sandfoss,
that she did what she was taught at school.
Chelsea had learned about fire safety, which included developing an escape
plan in the classroom, only 12 days earlier when firefighters from the Central
Campbell County Fire District, came to her classroom as part of the school's
Risk Watch program. Shelby has also had Risk Watch lessons.
Note: The home had no smoke alarms. Later investigations found the cause of
the fire to have been discarded smoking materials, which the mother had placed
in the trash earlier that night. The children's mother was not home at the time of the fire. According to the
local paper, she has been charged with three counts of wanton endangerment
for leaving the children home alone and DUI. back
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Risk
Watch Save!

Decatur, GA
April 30, 2003 -- The
Milling family was eating dinner when seven-year-old DeAnthony's older
brother, Demetrius, started to choke on a piece of bacon. DeAnthony immediately
rushed to his brother's side and performed the Heimlich maneuver.
Within a few
seconds, Demetrius coughed up the piece of bacon. DeAnthony learned the
Heimlich maneuver as part of the choking, suffocation and strangulation
unit of Risk Watch at the Leslie J. Steele Elementary School.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Midwest,
OK
March 28, 2003
-- As eight-year-old Ciara Mitchell watched her classmate Danielle
Reames choke on a piece of candy, she remembered what her principal,
Kevin Hill, told her class about the Heimlich maneuver. She didn't
waste anytime putting her Risk Watch lesson into action."She
(Danielle) was turning blue...she was hitting another kid in the
back because she couldn't breathe," Ciara told local paper the
Midwest City Sun. "I didn’t' think about anything, I just
did it," she said.Ciara
was taught the life-saving technique at the Ridgecrest Elementary
School by third grade teacher Ruth Henderson. In addition, Principal
Hill went to each classroom and discussed safety measures and the
Heimlich as a result of a local girl choking to death at a nearby
school in March 2003.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Glenwood, IL
August 12, 2003 -- Thanks to seven-year-old Gerry Melendez and his Risk
Watch lessons,
being safely buckled up has become a habit in his family. So when his family
was
involved in a car crash everyone walked away uninjured. Gerry learned his life-saving
skills from first grade teacher Amy Hein at the Hickory Bend Elementary School
in Glenwood, Illinois. During the school
year he received a booster seat from Ms. Hein, who makes them available to
all her students every year. Gerry went a step further and requested, and received,
a safety seat for his one-year-old sister, Ruby. At the time of the crash,
Gerry and Ruby were safely buckled in their respective booster and safety seats.
Their parents, Ruben and Carol, and uncle, Cesar
Quiroga, were also wearing their safety belts (thanks to Gerry's persistence).
The family, en route to their yearly vacation in Mexico, was traveling through
an intersection when a pick-up truck whose driver had gone through a stop sign
hit them. Although no one was hurt, the Melendez's car was totaled.
back to top Risk
Watch Save!
Pittsburg,
NH
On February 1, 2003, Logan Chase used skills learned from Risk Watch to
save his mom's life. Kim Chase was in the bathroom getting ready for a meeting
while having a quick snack of egg noodles. When one of the noodles lodged in her
throat she tried to stay calm and remove it. She tried, unsuccessfully, to self-induce
the Heimlich maneuver by throwing herself against the bathtub and sink. After
hearing the noise, Logan came in to find his mom turning blue and blacking out.
He told her not to worry -- he knew what to do. The five-foot one-inch tall nine-year-old,
calmly got behind her and performed the Heimlich maneuver. After two tries, the
noodle finally came out. Logan was taught the Heimlich maneuver at the Pittsburg
School by EMTs Jill Young and Paula Chapple as part of the choking, strangulation
and suffocation unit of Risk Watch. "(Risk Watch) is a really
good program," Mrs. Chase told the local paper. "I just want to let
everyone know how good...I can't believe how calm he was. I really didn't think
I was going to make it."
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Risk
Watch Save!
Brandon,
FL
 In
the hustle and bustle of the holiday season it is important to keep fire safety
in mind. Christine Chasse found out the hard way when getting ready for a holiday
party on December 20, 2002. A plastic container, which had been left in the oven
while cleaning, ignited when the oven was turned on. Luckily, Christines
five-year-old son, Isaac, knew what to do. When Christine walked into the smoke-filled
kitchen and opened the oven and found flames she started to scream. Isaac, who
was playing with his seven-month-old baby sister, Leah, heard his mom and ran
into the room to see what was wrong. When he saw the smoke he immediately left
the room. Christine was calling 9-1-1 when her husband, Joseph, came in and put
the fire out with a fire extinguisher. Christine went to get the kids out of the
house and discovered Isaac was already outside with his sister. He told his mom
that when he saw the smoke and heard the smoke alarms he knew he had to get out
of the house. So he picked up his sister and got out! He then told her that she
should have done the same thing and not tried to put the fire out.
"Luckily for me, Isaac was calm under pressure and acted quickly, because
in reality the fire could have gotten much worse," Christine said. "I
was proud of Isaac because he did exactly what he learned in school." As
a result of the fire, the Chasse family now have developed and practiced an escape
plan together. Isaac was taught Risk Watch at the Children's Academy by
teacher Janice Mitchell. Risk Watch was launched in the community in September
2002 after the Hillsborough County Fire and Rescue received a Risk Watch
Champion Mentorship Grant from NFPA. The grant was made possible through FEMA
and the U.S. Fire Administration's historic FIRE Act grant program.
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Risk
Watch Save!
College Station, TX
August 30, 2002 -- As a faculty member at the College Hill Elementary School,
a Risk Watch school in College Station, TX, Diane Walter knew the importance
of bike helmets. Diane strictly enforced the 'no helmet, no ride' rule with her
own three children, including 13-year-old son Mick. Diane was firm with her son
that if he didn't wear his helmet, he wouldn't be allowed to ride his bike to
school. After much discussion, Mick agreed. While riding home with a friend, Mick
was hit by a car and thrown to the pavement hitting his head. The force of the
impact caused Mick's shoe to end up in the middle of the five-lane street and
totaled his bike. "My son was able to walk away from this incident with only
bruises and scrapes because he was wearing his bike helmet," said Diane.
"I feel the Risk Watch program is such an important part of teaching
safety to our kids. I hope my son's story can be told to other students to impress
upon them the importance of bike helmets. And, yes, it can happen to them,"
Diane added.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Kannapolis, NC
On the night of December 16, 2002, four-year-old Rahman Carney escaped serious
injury when his home was destroyed by fire. The fire apparently started in Rahman's
bedroom when covers from his bed fell onto a lamp and ignited. Awakened by the
smoke alarm, he quickly got out of the room. Rahman ran into the hallway and met
the rest of his family, who also had been awakened by the smoke alarms. Rahman's
parents, Frederick and Kristina, his three-year-old sister, Rhamyyah, and another
person staying at the home, Demont Byers, all escaped the home safely.
While interviewing the family, Shane Pethel a fire investigator with the Kannapolis
Fire Department,
noticed the bottom of Rahman's slippers were burned. Rahman had been wearing thick
socks and slippers to bed because he had stepped on a Christmas ornament and injured
his foot. "He was lucky," Pethel told the local paper. "When you
look at his slippers, both the bottoms had been burned down to the socks, so his
feet were on fire while he was in bed, "said Pethel.
Rahman later told his teacher that he remembered what his teachers and the firefighter
had told him and he knew he needed to get low, get outside and not to hide. Rahman
also said that he knew not to be afraid of the firefighters and not to take anything
with him -- just get out. He added that although he knew how to stop, drop, and
roll he didn't have to use it.
Randy Frazier of the Kannapolis Fire Department, along with McKnight Head Start
teachers, taught Rahman fire safety through the Risk Watch program. Risk
Watch is currently being taught in eight schools in the community through
the Kannapolis Fire Department.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Hallstead, PA
On the evening of October 6, 2002, 10-year-old Whitman Dixon and his seven-year-old
sister Samantha used the knowledge they learned from Risk Watch to escape
a devastating fire in their mobile home. Samantha and Whitman's mother, Mary,
discovered the fire when she smelled smoke and immediately woke the children up.
The children stayed calm as they put their escape plan into action. The door was
blocked by fire so the family used their second way out, through a bedroom window.
Once outside, Mary called 9-1-1. The Dixon's home was completely destroyed; the
cause of the fire was undetermined. The entire family escaped safely because they
had discussed what to do in case of a fire and had a plan. Whitman and Samantha
were taught Risk Watch at the Choconut Valley Elementary School by teachers
Patricia Todd and Jessie Puzo. The town of Hallstead is one of several communities
served by the Choconut Valley School, which is one of the five sites in the 2002
Risk Watch Champion Management Team pilot program in Pennsylvania.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Old Town, ME
On the afternoon of October 29, 2002, 12-year-old Matt Thebarge used the lessons
he learned in Risk Watch to help save his brother's life. Matt's 10-year-old
brother Josh was sucking on a jawbreaker candy when it became lodged in his throat.
Matt immediately began to do the Heimlich maneuver, while the boys' mother called
9-1-1. After three attempts, Matt cleared Josh's airway. Although he was no longer
choking when the rescue personnel arrived, Josh was taken to the hospital for
further evaluation. Matt later told his mother that he learned how to do the Heimlich
in health class and had also seen it on TV. Risk Watch was incorporated
into the health curriculum in Old Town, Maine, in 2001 after Assistant Fire Chief
James Lavoie of the Old Town Fire Department met with the school system's curriculum
coordinator about the program. Currently, Risk Watch is being taught in
38 classrooms from kindergarten to fifth grade in the community.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Port Orchard, WA
October 20, 2002--The following incident was taken directly from
seven-year-old Isabella Thaxtons diary. Isabella is a second grade student
at the South Colby Elementary School in Port Orchard, WA:
"Last night was really scary. Could have died age:7, months:4, weeks:0 saying:
I'm too young to die. P.S. I am ya know. Anyways, I was watching TV and dad was
on the computer. In the kitchen, chicken nuggets and stuff boiling in the pot
on the stove. And then the trouble started. The smoke detector was going off,
I was really scared. Smoke was in every room of the house. Dad got the potholder,
smart but hot stuff came out and daddy got the biggest blisters in the world!
I crawled all the way to the door and out of it. And daddy took it out of the
house and covered it with dirt (see Risk Watch Teaching Point below). P.S.
My dad had to repaint the kitchen and he is going to the doctor and that is really
scary to know he could have been killed. The end. If you are caught in a fire
and you can't breathe get down on the floor on your hands and knees! Crawl low
under smoke you will find clean air; crawl low under smoke and get out of there
on your hands and knees like a dog in a chase crawl low under smoke and leave
that place." Isabella's class was taught the fire prevention component of
Risk Watch days before this incident occurred. "Fire safety education
served its purpose. A child was empowered with the knowledge needed to act to
preserve her life and well being, " said Sarah Simmons, Isabella's second
grade teacher. The Risk Watch program has been in the community since 1998
under the leadership of Public Education Officer Lisa Kirkemo (a 1995 NFPA Champion)
of the Kitsap Fire Department. South Colby Elementary has been a Risk Watch
school since 2000.
Risk Watch Teaching Point: Never leave cooking food unattended
on the stove top, and keep a close eye on food cooking inside the oven. Always
keep a potholder, oven mitt and lid handy. If a small grease fire starts in a
pan, put on an oven mitt and smother the flames by carefully sliding the lid over
the pan. Turn off the burner. Don't remove the lid until it is completely cool.
Never lift a burning pan from the stove. If you are not able to extinguish the
fire immediately, leave the home and call the fire department from outside the
home.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Trussville,
AL
Jenna Bishop and Lindsay Foster, both 15 years old, were passengers in a serious
car crash when lights from an oncoming car blinded the driver of the car causing
the car to hit a power pole and roll over. Their car was totaled. Luckily both
girls, and the 19-year-old driver, were wearing their safety belts. The Trussville
Fire & Rescue members arrived to find Jenna and Lindsay shaken but uninjured.
"If it had not been for you coming to our school and teaching us about motor
vehicle safety, we would not have been wearing our safety belts," Lindsey
told a firefighter at the scene. Both girls told firefighters that they had not
worn their safety belts before participating in the Risk Watch® program.
The Trussville Fire Department has been teaching Risk Watch in local elementary,
middle and junior high schools since 1999 through a grant from the Alabama Fire
College (lead agency for the Alabama Champion Management Team established in 2000).
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Risk
Watch Save!
Loretto, TN
Risk Watch training made all the difference for third grade teacher Shelly
Fisher when student, Jamie Mattox, choked on a fruit-roll-up. After returning
from a classroom break, Fisher noticed something in Jamie's mouth and asked her
to spit it out. "When she (Jamie) turned from the garbage can, I knew it
was lodged in her throat," Fisher told the Lawrence County Advocate. "I
asked her if she could talk to me and she couldn't, she just shook her head. So,
I did the Heimlich maneuver. After about two or three times she had it in her
hand." As part of the school's Risk Watch program, nurses had demonstrated
the Heimlich maneuver to teachers and students just a week before the incident
occurred.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Sudbury, MA
Lives Saved: five
In the early morning hours of January 6, 2002, the Strait family was awakened
by the sound of their smoke alarms and banging pipes. An electrical fire in the
basement had shorted the hard-wired smoke alarms in the home, filling the basement
and main floor with smoke. The intense smoke triggered the battery-operated smoke
alarms outside the family members' bedrooms. The Straits immediately put their
escape plan into action. Eight-year-old Greg and his mom crawled low under smoke
and out the front door. His two teenage sisters, Julie and Laura, went with their
dad out a second route through the kitchen. Once at their outside meeting place,
the family took a head count and called the fire department. The fire was put
out quickly, although the house suffered severe damage from the smoke. Firefighter
and Fire Safety Educator Kevin Moreau, an NFPA Risk Watch Champion who
responded to the scene said, "Without that working battery-operated smoke
alarm they probably wouldn't have lived." When asked how her family knew
what to do Mrs. Strait said, "Greg made us do it. Every year the kids bring
home the assignment to draw the escape map and check smoke alarms and every year
my husband and I would roll our eyes...last September Greg insisted that we needed
to do his map and escape plan as part of the school's Risk Watch program.
So we did it and it really helped us the morning of the fire." The family
cat was even saved because the Strait's knew the importance of closing doors behind
them. Greg was taught Risk Watch as part of the Sudbury School's Wellness
curriculum in conjunction with the Sudbury Fire Department.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Woonsocket, RI
On
the night of October 18, 2001, five-year-old Matthew Bergeron took action and
helped his family escape a fire in their home. The fire started when heat from
a pan of boiling water melted an unlit candle, placed too close to the burner,
causing the wax to ignite. The fire quickly spread causing the kitchen to fill
up with black smoke. Matthew, who had learned about fire safety in school the
day before, stayed calm and reminded his brother, Joe, 8, and sister, Carrie,
4, to get out of the home and go to their outside meeting place. He also told
them to crawl low under the smoke and reminded his mom to call 911. As part of
a Risk Watch homework assignment, Matthew and his mom had developed an
escape plan the night before the fire. The Woonsocket Fire Department, along with
first grade teacher Melissa Pierce at the Bernon Heights Elementary School, taught
Matthew fire safety through the Risk Watch program. "As an educator,
I was thankful for the opportunity to have taught such safety strategies in the
event of an emergency," said Ms. Pierce.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Plano, TX
Ten-year-old Jessica Holley, a fourth grader at the Davis Elementary
School, developed and practiced a home fire escape plan with her
family as part of a Risk Watch homework assignment. Firefighters
visited her classroom on August 26, 1998, to reinforce the importance
of having and practicing a home fire escape plan. Ten days later,
at 12:50 a.m., Jessica's father was dozing when he heard a crackling
sound and discovered a fire in the garage. He quickly alerted his
family, who exited the home through the front door, and proceeded
to their outside meeting place. When the fire department arrived,
the family was able to assure the firefighters that everyone had
escaped the burning home safely. The Holley home, and a majority
of the family's personal belongings, were destroyed by the fire.
Although the home was equipped with smoke alarms and a fire extinguisher,
the fire, which burned in the wall between the house and the garage,
was above the level of the alarms. Mr. Holley told firefighters
that the family had not had a home fire escape plan prior to Jessica
completing her Risk Watch homework assignment.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Lake Stevens,
WA
Five-year-old Courtney Maxfield and her 2-year-old brother Zackary,
asked their mother if they could have a treat. Mrs. Maxfield, who
was on the phone, gave them each a piece of candy. She suddenly
heard Courtney say, "Zackary, you will be okay. Let's go see Mommy."
As Courtney was pulling Zackary towards their mother, Mrs. Maxfield
noticed her son's face was turning red and he was choking. She quickly
hung up the phone and turned around. By then, Courtney was standing
behind Zackary, with her arms around his stomach trying to give
him the Heimlich maneuver. Just as Mrs. Maxfield bent down to see
why Zackary was choking, he let out a small cough along with the
remaining piece of candy and began to cry. Courtney said, "Did I
save his life?" "Yes, Courtney, I think you may have," said her
mother. Courtney's class at the Sunnydale Preschool completed the
Risk Watch lesson on choking in November. Courtney's teacher,
Mrs. Brengman, had demonstrated the Heimlich maneuver for the class.
She told them it is what a grown-up would do if someone was choking
on something in their mouth.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Wauconda,
IL
In January 1999, fifth grader, Lauren Robbin, found herself in an
emergency situation that required her to act fast. Lauren was home
watching her 16-month-old brother upstairs while her mother was
downstairs. Lauren's brother put a piece of licorice in his mouth
and it became lodged in his throat. He started to turn blue and
was unable to breathe. Lauren performed the Heimlich maneuver on
her brother and dislodged the piece of candy. Another daughter yelled
for Lauren's mother, who rushed in to find that the emergency had
been handled. Lauren had saved her brother's life. Lauren learned
these life-saving skills from her teacher, Beth Kuglin, at the Wauconda
Grade School.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Colorado
Springs, CO
On April 13, 1999, 6-year-old Sarah Wilie, was sleeping with her
pregnant mother while her father was out of town. Around 3:00 a.m.,
Sarah heard her mother making strange sounds. Sarah immediately
dialed 911 to get help. According to Marilyn Wittman, Sarah's first
grade teacher at the Bricker Elementary School, the dispatcher told
Sarah to listen to her mother's chest to see if she could hear any
sounds. Sarah could not hear any sounds. The dispatcher kept Sarah
on the telephone while she waited for firefighters and paramedics
to arrive. Sarah's mother was taken to the hospital by ambulance.
She had gone into a diabetic coma. Without Sarah's knowledge of
choking, suffocation and strangulation, and her additional knowledge
of how to dial 911, taught by the Colorado Springs Fire Department's
Office of Public Education, this situation might have ended tragically.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Oklahoma
City, OK
On May 12, 1999, 12-year-old Ridawn Ketcherside used her Risk
Watch skills to save the life of 6-year-old Tanner Woods. While
babysitting Tanner, the two were having a snack of cookies and pudding,
when Tanner started laughing with his mouth full of food. He then
started to choke; Ridawn immediately performed the Heimlich maneuver
on him and removed the food from his throat. After calming Tanner
down, Ridawn called her mother to report the incident.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Oklahoma
City, OK
Seven-year-old Matthew Markham learned the importance of motor vehicle
safety from the Risk Watch program, taught by his first grade
teacher Vanessa Wilmoth. So when Mark went for a drive with his
grandmother, he told her he had to sit in the back seat, with a
safety belt on. Soon after, they were involved in a car crash that
caused the passenger-side airbag to deploy. Matthew escaped the
incident with only bruises.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Brockville,
Ontario
Before going for a bike ride, 9-year-old Daniel Kelly insisted that
his mother wear a helmet. Minutes later, at a rain-soaked intersection,
"I ran smack into a bus," Mrs. Kelly told the Brockville Recorder
and Times. "I don't remember anything after that. I had 21 stitches
in my head. I still have a concussion. I was bruised. I lost my
teeth. But I sure felt lucky. If I hadn't had the helmet on, I would
have had serious brain damage or I wouldn't be here," said Mrs.
Kelly. Daniel learned about bicycle safety when Risk Watch
was taught in his class at Commonwealth Public School.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Everett,
WA
Eight-year-old Johnathon Terry and his cousin Kimi were playing
in his aunt and uncle's room, when Kimi opened a drawer and showed
Jonathon a pistol and bullets. Johnathon immediately told Kimi to
close the drawer and not to touch it. The pistol was not touched
by either child. Johnathon also said that Kimi tried to open a cabinet
that contained other firearms. Luckily, the cabinet was locked and
couldn't be opened. Johnathon told his mother about the incident
the next day. His mother said she was shocked and horrified, but
very proud and happy that Johnathon knew the pistol was dangerous
and didn't touch it. She also confronted his aunt and uncle about
the situation so that it would not happen again. Johnathon learned
how to react in this type of situation in Mrs. Chandler's second-grade
class at Skyline Elementary, where she teaches the Risk Watch
curriculum.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Ponca City,
OK
Thanks
to 3-year-old Kyle Beliel, wearing safety belts has become a habit
in his family. This was partially due to Kyle being taught the Risk
Watch program by his teacher, Mrs. Mayer. "Make it click," Kyle
would say when getting into the car, "That's what Mrs. Mayer taught
us - Make it click." So when the pickup truck that Kyle, his aunt,
and two siblings were riding in went off of the highway into an
embankment, all of them were wearing their safety belts. They all
walked away from the crash unharmed.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Dover, NH
On January 5, 2001, 11-year-old Sarah Kimball was babysitting her
8-year-old brother Alex, while their mother went to the store. When
the smoke alarm sounded, Sarah immediately grabbed her brother and
safely exited the home. She then ran to a neighbor's home and called
911. Upon arrival, the firefighters found that the stove had been
mistakenly turned on and a pan of grease had begun to smoke, triggering
the smoke alarm. Sarah wasted no time getting out of the home; she
knew not to stop for her coat and shoes even though there was snow
on the ground. Sarah's family had planned and practiced a home fire
escape plan as a result of Risk Watch being taught in Sarah's
fourth grade class at the Garrison Elementary School.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Lynn, MA
On December 30, 2000, 10-year-old Ryan Boda and his 6-year-old brother Steven
got in the car with their father. When Steven refused to put on his safety belt,
Ryan tried to explain to him why wearing a safety belt is so important. After
much discussion, Ryan took matters into his own hands and buckled up his little
brother. Immediately after, Ryan, Steven and their father, were involved in a
minor car crash. Due to Ryan's persistence no one was injured. Ms. Olmstead, the
boys' mother, said that although the car crash was only a small "bumper bender,"
it taught Steven an important lesson. Since the crash, Steven always puts his
safety belt on without his big brother having to tell him. Ryan was taught Risk
Watch by fourth grade teacher Mrs. Mendel at the St. Christopher School in
Nashua, NH, and the Nashua Fire Department.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Brampton,
Ontario
On March 7, 2001, sixth grader Junior Bailey put his Risk Watch
knowledge into action
in his classroom. Juniors class
was busy doing an assignment when classmate Michael Gale began to
choke on a coin that he was playing with. Junior, who was sharpening
his pencil, walked by Michael's desk and noticed him choking. He
immediately performed the Heimlich maneuver and dislodged the coin.
When asked how he felt about what he did, Junior said he was proud
of himself but scared that it wouldnt work. Junior was taught
the Heimlich maneuver during a Risk Watch lesson taught by
Diane Farley a registered nurse and teaching assistant at the Sir
Wilfrid Laurier Public School.
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Risk
Watch Save!
Woodward,
OK
On December 20, 2000, Kendra McCoy and Jon Thomas used the skills
they learned from Risk Watch, to help their family escape
a home fire. While watching television, Kendra noticed smoke coming
from a lamp and quickly alerted her parents, John and Retha. While
both parents went to investigate the cause of the smoke, Kendra,
8, and Jon, 10, jumped into action. Following the home escape plan
the family had previously developed, Kendra and Jon helped older
sister Ashland, and younger brother Freddy, safely out of the home
and to their outside meeting place. After discovering a fire in
the familys laundry room, Retha and John quickly joined the
children outside and waited for the fire department. Although the
home suffered extensive damage, the entire family escaped safely.
The family had planned and practiced a home fire escape plan as
a result of Risk Watch being taught in Kendras second
grade class, and Jons fourth grade class at the Cedar Heights
Elementary School. "I am so pleased with the program,"
said Retha McCoy. "Jon and Kendra werent scared and didnt
panic, they knew what to do."
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