Community Corner

Spring Forward: It is Time to Change Those Clocks

ReadyWisconsin offers safety checks to complete while setting the clocks ahead an hour.

Did you sleep in this morning? Hit the snooze a few times? The extra hours you might have afforded yourself Saturday won’t be available Sunday morning. Daylight Savings Time begins at 2 a.m. Sunday.

Yes, you read right. It is that time of year when we have set our clocks an hour ahead and lose an hour of sleep.

That means if you normally wake up on a Sunday at 8 a.m., you would end up waking up at what currently feels like 7 a.m.

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ReadyWisconsin, through the Wisconsin Department of Military Affairs, offers these tips of ways to ready your home as you change your clocks:

  • Smoke Detectors – This is a perfect time to check and replace batteries if needed and to make sure the devices around your house are working properly. The U.S. Consumer Products Safety Commission estimates that about 16 million homes in the country have smoke alarms that do not work. In most cases, the batteries are dead or missing. Nearly 2,700 people die and more than 15,000 are injured each year because of fires that started in their homes.
  • Carbon Monoxide Detectors – Make sure you have CO Detectors and they are working.  All homes and duplexes in Wisconsin are required to have carbon monoxide detectors.  That law took affect on February 1st, 2011. The measure requires detectors on every level of the home, including the basement, but not the attic or storage areas. Any dwelling that requires a building permit will be required to have carbon monoxide detectors directly wired to the electrical service with a backup battery. Existing buildings can use stand-alone battery-powered detectors. According to the Centers for Disease Control, carbon monoxide is the leading cause of accidental poisoning deaths in the United States, with more than 20,000 people visiting the emergency room and nearly 500 killed each year from overexposure to the gas.
  • Emergency Kits – Everyone should have a basic emergency kit in their home with supplies such as food and water to last you and your family for at least three days. Other items like a battery powered or crank radio, flashlights, first aid kit should also be included. Daylight Saving Time is a perfect time to get a kit and if you already have a kit check it to make sure food and other items are not near or past their expiration dates.

 

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