QUESTION IMAGE
Question
what is the primary purpose of having two escape routes from each room in a fire safety plan?
a. to avoid needing to practice drills
b. to ensure an alternate route if one is blocked
c. to increase the number of exits in the house
d. to confuse intruders
where should smoke alarms be installed in the home?
a. in the attic and basement
b. in every closet
c. near bedrooms and hallways
d. only in the kitchen
Response
First Question (Purpose of two escape routes):
Brief Explanations
- Option a: Fire drills are still necessary, so this is incorrect.
- Option b: In a fire, one route might be blocked (e.g., by fire/smoke), so a second route provides an alternate way to escape. This makes sense for safety.
- Option c: The goal isn't just to increase exit count, but to ensure safety via redundancy.
- Option d: Escape routes are for occupants, not to confuse intruders.
Brief Explanations
- Option a: Attic/basement may not be primary areas for fire detection affecting occupants; bedrooms/hallways are more critical.
- Option b: Closets have low fire risk and aren't key areas for alerting people.
- Option c: Bedrooms and hallways are areas where people sleep or move, so alarms here alert them to fire/smoke, which is standard safety practice.
- Option d: Kitchen has false alarms from cooking, and limiting to kitchen misses other areas.
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b. To ensure an alternate route if one is blocked