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Let’s Get Ready: Power Safety

Keep the whole family safe around electricity. 

Of your many jobs as a caregiver, keeping your family safe is naturally your most important concern. Whether it’s helping your child buckle their seat belt or changing the batteries in your smoke detector, your child’s safety is never far from your mind — and sometimes it’s literally in your hands. 

Electricity helps us do amazing things: write e-mails, keep the nightlight on, and cook dinner. But it can also be dangerous. In this guide, you’ll find… 

  • Strategies to keep your home power-safe for children 
  • Ways to talk about power safety with little ones 
  • Information about the special helpers who keep our power sources safe 
  • Tips for keeping the whole family safe during a power outage 

Preview the guide below:

Creating a Power-Safe Home

Use Safety Covers

Cover stove knobs and electrical outlets that children may be tempted to touch or play with.

Keep electricity and water apart

Radios, phones, hair dryers, or any plugged-in device should stay far from sinks, tubs, pools, or puddles.

Have tools checked and ready

Keep a flashlight with extra batteries, a charged battery pack for phones or tablets, and a multipurpose Type ABC fire extinguisher (effective for wood, liquids, and electrical fires), and working smoke alarms and carbon monoxide alarms on every floor. Check these tools monthly to make sure they work when you need them.

Set hot-water temperature to 120 °F / 49 °C to avoid burns

Always test the water with the inside of your wrist or elbow to make sure it feels warm, not hot, before putting an infant in the tub and never leave children unattended while bathing or showering.

Talking to Your Child About Power Safety

You are your child’s first teacher! What you say makes a big difference in helping your child stay safe around electricity:

Power-ful Helpers!

Introduce children to some of the helpers who keep us safe. Invite them to color each picture as you read aloud.

Our No-Power Plan

Whether it lasts for hours or days, a power outage (blackout) can be challenging for the whole family.