Home safety is top priority for our loved ones and ourselves. Below are useful tips you can use to help protect you, your family and your home.
REMEMBER TO CALL 911 if you are experiencing an immediate threat or any danger.
General Safety Suggestions
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Make sure your security cameras/equipment is in good working order.
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Plan to "burglarize" yourself. You'll discover any weaknesses in your security system that may have previously escaped your notice.
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Lock your home, even if you go out only for a short time. Many burglars just walk in through an unlocked door or window.
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Change all the locks and tumblers when you move into a new house.
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For the most effective alarm system, conceal all wiring. A professional burglar looks for places where he or she can disconnect the security system.
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Your house should appear occupied at all times. Use timers to switch lights and radios on and off when you're not at home.
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If you plan to be out of town:
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Let a neighbor know when you will be gone
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Arrange to have your mail and newspapers removed
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If you have a faulty alarm that frequently goes off, get it fixed immediately and tell your neighbors that it's been repaired. Many people ignore an alarm that goes off periodically.
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A spring-latch lock is easy prey for burglars who are "loiding" experts. Loiding is the method of slipping a plastic credit card against the latch tongue to depress it and unlock the door. A deadbolt defies any such attack. It is only vulnerable when there is enough space between the door and its frame to allow an intruder to use power tools or a hacksaw.
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If you lose your keys, change the locks immediately.
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Before turning your house key over to a professional house cleaner for several hours, make sure the person is honest and reputable as well as hardworking. Check all references thoroughly. If the house cleaner is from a firm, call your local Better Business Bureau to check on the firm's reputation.
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Instead of keeping a spare key in a mailbox, under the doormat, or on a nail behind the garage, wrap the key in foil -- or put it in a 35mm film can -- and bury it where you can easily find it if you need it.
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Don't leave notes for service people or family members on the door. These act as a welcome mat for a burglar.
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If the entrances to your home are dark, consider installing lighting with an infrared detector. Most thieves don't want to be observed trying to get in a door.
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Talk to your neighbors about any suspicious people or strange cars you notice lurking about.
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To keep your tools from being stolen, paint the handles. Thieves avoid items that are easy to identify.
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Trees located near windows or shrubbery that might shield a burglar from view can be major flaws in your home-protection plan. Consider your landscaping plan in light of your protection needs.
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Ask for credentials from any salesperson who requests entry to your home. Ask that their ID be pushed under the door. Many professional burglars use this cover to check out homes. If you're doubtful, check with the person's office before letting him or her in.
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Do not list your full name on your mailbox or your entry in the telephone book. Use only your initial and your last name.
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If someone comes to your door asking to use the phone to call a mechanic or the police, keep the door locked and make the call yourself.
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Dogs are good deterrents to burglars. Even a small, noisy dog can be effective -- burglars do not like to have attention drawn to their presence. Be aware, however, that trained guard dogs do not make good pets. Obedience training and attack training are entirely different, and only the former is appropriate for a house pet.
Safety Tips from Sharon Hobby
ANSWER YOUR DOOR, even if you do not open it, to let the person know someone IS in the home.
Remember, the past "MO" witnessed by victims involved one person knocking on the front door while others went to the side or rear of the home. IF no one answered the door, a cell phone call was made to those in the rear of the home to go ahead and break in and they opened the front door for their partner. If that call didn't come, they knew the person at the door was engaged in conversation with the home owner and returned to the vehicle; the person at the door ended his conversation, returned to the car, and they drove off.
Check your home; maybe find secure places to hide targeted items--jewelry, guns, cash, electronics.
If you have an alarm system, make sure you use it. That said, some of the nearby break ins several years ago occurred in homes with alarms...the thieves just limited their time robbing those homes.
Let your closest neighbors know if you are having work done, housekeeper schedule, or if you will be out of town. If you will be away, stop your paper and mail or have someone pick it up (and those random things that end up in our driveways).
When walking or driving through the neighborhood, look in driveways, at what "workmen" are doing--does it look like they are carrying supplies in or out of the home? Or, does it look like bags or electronics being loaded into the truck? Is the yardwork equipment off the truck? Is yardwork actually being done??
GET TAG NUMBERS or, at least, accurate descriptions of any suspicious vehicles.
Call 911 for anything suspicious looking or for any alarms you hear going off--tell then to dispatch the police to the address immediately and THEN you will be happy to answer their questions more thoroughly (please try to get them to do this). During past break in sprees, it took at least eleven minutes from the start of the 911 call to arrival of the police...and the thieves clearly KNEW this would be the case. Even though the alarm was sounding, they continued loading the stolen vehicle for 10 minutes, left a few things behind, and drove off before the police arrived.
The police have said repeatedly that no call is unimportant to 911--that enables them to do their job!
Thankfully, our area does not have the criminal activity experienced by so many other neighborhoods. Let’s do our part to discourage would be criminals!