The Student Awareness of Fire Education (S.A.F.E.) Program is a state initiative to provide resources to local fire departments to conduct fire and life safety education programs in grades K-12. The mission is to enable students to recognize the dangers of fire and more specifically the fire hazards tobacco products pose.
Key Fire Safety Behaviors
There are 23 Key Fire Safety Behaviors which are taught in age and developmentally appropriate ways, such as:
Fire and life safety is easily combined with math, science, language arts, health, and physical education lessons. Integration into the existing curriculum topics is essential.
Benefits
Proven Success
Since the program’s inception in 1995, more than 150 children throughout the Commonwealth who participated in the S.A.F.E. Program have saved themselves or a loved one, and were honored as Young Heroes by the Department of Fire Services. Some success stories are:
How Is S.A.F.E. Funded?
The careless use and disposal of smoking materials is the single leading cause of fire deaths in the state and in the country. Due to the tremendous risk of injury and death in fires started by tobacco products, the Legislature appropriated funding from monies raised through the cigarette sales tax.
Voters approved this tax to fund programs aimed at combating tobacco use.
How does the Department of Fire Services help?
DFS provides programmatic support to local S.A.F.E. Programs through in-service training, site visits and technical assistance. The Massachusetts Firefighting Academy provides training to fire educators. Fiscal Affairs manages the financial side of the grant applications.