1 The Safety Beacon is for informational purposes only and does...

1
The Safety Beacon is for informational purposes only and does not replace Safety Education Requirement
November 2014
SAFETY BEACON NEWSLETTER
Inside this Issue
Republished Articles
Pages
West Africa Ebola Outbreak
1-3
Enterovirus D68 [EV-68}
4-5
Safer Skies through Education
6
Thanksgiving Safety
7
Region Safety Officers
8
National Chief of Safety
George C. Vogt
gvogt@capnhq.gov
National Assistant Chief of Safety
Col Robert Castle
safety@cap.gov
National Assistant Chief of Safety Education
and Training
Lt Col Eric Shappee
safety@capnhq.gov
National Assistant Chief of Safety Cadet Programs
Lt Col Melanie Capehart
safety@capnhq.gov
National Assistant Chief of Safety Operations
Lt Col William D. Dillahunty
Lt Col Dennis R. Bannon
safety@capnhq.gov
National Assistant Chief of Safety Publications
Lt Col Sharon L. Williams
safety@capnhq.gov
2
3
4
5
6
7
Thanksgiving
Safety
The kitchen is the heart
of the home, especially at
Thanksgiving. Kids love
to be involved in holiday
preparations. Safety in
the kitchen is important,
especially on Thanksgiving
Day when there is a lot of
activity and people at home.
Did you know?
KKK Stay in the kitchen when you are cooking on the
stovetop so you can keep an eye on the food.
KKK Stay in the home when cooking your turkey and check
on it frequently.
KKK Keep children away from the stove. The stove will be
hot and kids should stay 3 feet away.
KKK Make sure kids stay away from hot food and liquids.
The steam or splash from vegetables, gravy or coffee
could cause serious burns.
KKK Keep the floor clear so you don’t trip over kids, toys,
pocketbooks or bags.
KKK Keep knives out of the reach of children.
KKK Be sure electric cords from an electric knife, coffee
maker, plate warmer or mixer are not dangling off the
counter within easy reach of a child.
KKK Keep matches and utility lighters out of the reach of
children — up high in a locked cabinet.
KKK Never leave children alone in room with a lit candle.
KKK Make sure your smoke alarms are working. Test them
by pushing the test button.
Your Source for SAFETY Information
NFPA Public Education Division U 1 Batterymarch Park, Quincy, MA 02169
Thanksgiving is the leading
day of the year for home fires
involving cooking equipment.
Have activities that
keep kids out of the kitchen
during this busy time. Games,
puzzles or books can keep
them busy. Kids can get
involved in Thanksgiving
preparations with recipes
that can be done outside
the kitchen.
www.nfpa.org/education
8
The Official Safety Newsletter of
The Civil Air Patrol-November 2014
WWW.CIVILAIRPATROL.COM
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Notes From CAP/SE -­‐
-­‐
-­‐
When our CAP Chief of Safety George Vogt asked me to write this month’s “Notes from CAP/SE”, I was happy to do it. I am Col Robert “Bob” Castle, CAP, and I am the new CAP Assistant Chief of Safety. I started out as a cadet in Illinois Wing, earning the Earhart Award before becoming a senior member while still in college. I took a break from CAP while on active duty with the U.S. Air Force. My last several years were spent in the CAP Reserve Assistance Program w here I w as assigned to the CAP-­‐USAF Southwest Region working with Oklahoma Wing. Since resuming my CAP career, I’ve served at the squadron, group, wing and region levels in Operations and Safety including four years as Commander of the Oklahoma Wing. I am excited about working at the national level to improve our safety program and help our members both on the ground
and in the air. From Maj Gen Vazquez on down, we are committed to instilling a strong culture of safety not only in our
CAP operations, but as something we take with us regardless of whether we’re performing home, school, work or
recreational activities.
We cannot accomplish our missions without you, the CAP member. I thank you for your service and your commitment
to the Safety Program.
Last month’s FAASTeam topic was Stabilized Approaches. If you weren’t able to attend a seminar, the slides are still available and make a great subject for discussion at a unit Pilot’s meeting or clinic. Consistently good landings are a result of using proper technique and flying the pattern the same way each time. Participation in the W INGS program is good for you and good for CAP. Register at FAA Safety and earn CAP Safety Education Credit as w ell as earning your FAA WINGS. Completion of a WINGS Phase also gives you 14 CFR §61.56 Flight Review credit. Let us know if you have difficulty setting up a presentation at CAP Safety. Quite a few units have already completed their FY15 Safety Surveys. Keep up the great work! For those units that haven’t started, this is an opportunity to take a fresh look at your squadron areas to look for hazards. Take a fresh set of eyes along when you do look at places your unit member’s use. You might be surprised at some of the hidden dangers! Topics or suggestions – please email us at CAP Safety
Col Charles Greenwood Lt Col John Kruger
Lt Col Bill Woody
GLR/SE
SWR/SE
SER/SE
cgreenwo@bsu.edu
John.kruger@swrcap.com wawoody@att.net
Col Charles Glass
MER/SE
csglass@juno.com
Col Emmit Williams
NCR/SE
se@ncr.cap.gov Lt Col Paul Mondoux
NER/SE
paul@nhplm.org
Lt Col Donald Johanson
RMR/SE
johansondon@msn.com Maj Gary Zaganiacz
PCR/SE
zaganiaczga@gmail.com