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Smoke Alarm Information

Department Smoke Alarm Program:

In collaboration with our Community Development Department we are offering our community help with installing and replacing batteries and smoke alarms.

Supplies are limited, so we kindly request that you meet the following qualifications to receive a smoke alarm:

1. Reside in the City of Meridian
2. Not a renter. If you're renting, your landlord should provide a working smoke alarm.
3. Low-income or unable to get an alarm, and/or facing physical challenges and/or a senior on a fixed income.

We encourage residents, whenever possible to buy their own smoke alarms and batteries. This helps our team respond more quickly to your needs.

To schedule assistance, please contact Fire Administration at 208-888-1234.

Your Safety is important to us, and we're here to support you. If we can't fulfill your request, we suggest reaching out to family, friends, neighbors, or a handyman for assistance. 

Smoke Alarm Information & Resources:

The Meridian Fire Department would like to emphasize the critical nature of having properly installed and functioning smoke detectors. Smoke alarms provide precious time to escape and can be the difference between life and death.

If your smoke alarm is going off, please call 911.

If your smoke alarm is chirping, we recommend asking a family member, friend, neighbor or a local handyman service for assistance. 

The National Fire Protection Association offers several smoke alarm safety tips, including:

  • Install smoke alarms in every sleeping room and outside each separate sleeping area.
  • Install alarms on every level of the home and consider extra alarms for larger homes.
  • Smoke alarms should be interconnected, so when one sounds, they all sound.
  • Test all smoke alarms at least once a month and replace batteries as necessary.
  • Keep smoke alarms at least 10 feet (3 meters) away from the stove to reduce false alarms.
  • Consider using special alarms with strobe lights and bed shakers for those who are hearing impaired or deaf.
  • Replace all smoke alarms every ten years.

New smoke alarms on the market employ different types of technology, including multi-sensing, which can detect smoke and carbon monoxide.

In the event of a smoke alarm sounding, evacuate the building immediately and stay outside.

For more information on proper smoke alarm installation and other safety tips, please visit www.nfpa.org/smokealarms.

Carbon Monoxide FAQ

1. Have you read your manufacturer’s instructions to identify what the alarm sound means? Try to identify what the alarm is telling you.
2. If you suspect that you have CO in your home, please leave the home immediately and move to a fresh air location outdoors. Make sure everyone is accounted for.
3. Call 911 or your local gas company.
4. Do not reenter the house until it is safe to do so and emergency responders have given you permission.

Carbon Monoxide is a by-product of incomplete combustion. Unsafe levels of carbon monoxide in the home can be produced by malfunctioning or poorly vented fuel-burning appliances such as furnaces, ranges, water heaters, room heaters or gas powered motors that are not vented properly such as running your car in the garage. The amount of CO in the air may rise to a level that can cause illness or even death.

Malfunctioning furnaces, ranges, water heaters and room heaters. Other sources of unsafe levels of CO include portable generators, fireplaces, and charcoal that is burned in homes and other enclosed areas. Propane,
natural gas, wood burning fireplaces, pellet stoves, oil burning appliances, and attached garages are other sources.

CO poisoning victims may initially suffer flu-like symptoms including nausea, fatigue, headaches, dizziness, confusion and breathing difficulty. Symptoms may vary between family members due to the individual’s body size and health. Because CO poisoning often causes a victim’s blood pressure to rise, the victim’s skin may take on a pink or red cast. If a person continues breathing CO, they may experience cardiac trauma, brain damage, coma or death.

Have your fuel-burning appliances inspected by a qualified technician at least once a year. A qualified technician should have practical knowledge of the operation, installation and proper ventilation of fossil-fuel burning
appliances. Install UL Listed CO alarms inside your home. If you currently suspect CO in your home, please notify your local Fire Department via 911, or your local gas company.

The optimal CO Detector is the plug in style that includes a battery backup. The combination smoke detectors with CO detectors that are commonly placed on the ceiling are most effective when combined with a second CO detector placed closer to the floor. Detectors can be purchased at any home improvement store. CO detectors will not detect methane gas or natural gas in its purest state.

These types of CO detectors can identify any appliances in your home that may not be working properly. These may give you advance warning of a potential problem with an appliance. The alarms without digital readouts will only sound if the CO amount is at a dangerous level.

Follow manufacturer’s instructions for placement and installation. Each CO detector is different. A CO detector should be on each occupiable level of the home. But in general, there should be an alarm located on the wall, ceiling or other location outside each separate
sleeping area (you do not need one outside each bedroom but in the immediate vicinity of the bedrooms).

A CO detector should be on each occupiable level of a dwelling unit including basements. (not attics and crawl spaces) Follow the installation height per the manufacturer’s instructions. Each CO detector is different.


Keep 15 feet away from appliances that produce carbon monoxide like a gas stove or fireplace.

CO gas can be anywhere and everywhere. CO gas is equal to or slightly lighter than air, and disperses evenly with the air in a room. Therefore, install a CO alarm where air circulation is best.

Do not mount a CO alarm within 1 foot of the ceiling/wall intersection or other dead air spaces.

For earliest warning of CO presence we
recommend that you install at least one CO alarm on every separate living level of your home.


Avoid installing a CO alarm near bathrooms or in shower areas; in closets, crawlspaces, unused attics or unheated areas; within 5 feet of any fuel burning appliance; within one foot of any wall or corner; in rooms where chemicals or cleaning supplies are frequently used; directly above a sink, bathtub or basin; directly above
or below air exchange or heating vents and behind drapes, furniture or appliances or in any other dead air space.

Read your manufacturer’s instructions to determine the sounds your CO detector makes when sounding an alarm or notifying you of low batteries. Do not ignore a chirping sound as it may mean that you have dangerous levels of CO in your home.


CO Detectors may chirp when they detect carbon monoxide. Unlike smoke detectors that chirp when their batteries are low, CO detectors can chirp when they initially detect carbon monoxide and they will generally emit a persistent chirp or alarm as the detection of gas increases or is prolonged. This is determined by the individual manufacturer of the alarm.

You will need to read your manufacturer’s instructions to determine the sounds your alarm makes. Unlike smoke detectors, CO monitors are not standard in the alarm sounds that they make.

Yes, they function like hardwired smoke detectors. If a hardwired combination Smoke/CO detectors sounds indicating a detection of unsafe levels of CO, other units in the house will also sound.

As of January 1st, all new homes and remodels on homes built after Jan 1, 2005, must have CO Detectors if they have a fuel burning appliance or attached garage (propane, natural gas, wood stove, pellet stove, oil burning appliance).

Buildings requiring CO detectors include the following: New apartments complexes, hotels, motels, boarding houses and dormitories. Residential rental properties must have CO detectors as well.

Not at this time. 

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