Knock, knock! Wake Up and check your alarms with Ottawa Fire Services | Page 22 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: June 4, 2026 - 09:53

Stay informed

Knock, knock! Wake Up and check your alarms with Ottawa Fire Services

June 4, 2026
Firefighters are visiting homes across Ottawa this month

As part of the spring Wake Up! program, firefighters from Ottawa Fire Services will visit homes across the city this month to ensure smoke and carbon monoxide alarms are present and working.

Every Sunday in June, uniformed firefighters will:

  • Visit select residential areas between 10 am and 4 pm.
  • Offer to inspect and test smoke alarms and carbon monoxide alarms.
  • Share information on fire safety and home escape planning.
  • Leave a door hanger with fire safety information if no one is home.

Residents are not obligated to provide firefighters access to their home.

About smoke and carbon monoxide alarms

Ontario’s Fire Code requires that homes have a working smoke alarm on each storey and outside each sleeping area. Additional requirements apply to newer homes built after 2014.

Make sure your smoke alarms are working by:

  • Testing your alarms once per month
  • Replacing the alarms’ batteries once per year
  • Installing new alarms once every 10 years or as instructed by the manufacturer

If the home has an attached garage, a wood stove or a fuel-fired appliance,  carbon monoxide alarms are also required outside sleeping areas and on each storey. Installation of carbon monoxide alarms on each storey of the home, where applicable, was added to the Ontario Fire Code as of January 1, 2026.

Visit Ottawa Fire Services for more information on smoke and carbon monoxide alarms, including where to install these alarms in your building and other safety tips.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Last Wednesday, the Mark Carney government tabled the Safe Social Media Act, Bill C-34, legislation that would make online services responsible for addressing harmful content on their platforms. The headline is a restriction on social media accounts for children under sixteen. Canada did not invent that idea. Australia did, and Australia has now been running the experiment for six months. The early results are worth examining before anyone declares this bill a solution or a failure. First, what the bill does. It applies to social media services, including livestreaming and user-uploaded...
June 15, 2026 - 12:55 | B. E. Rybak | Walrus
A London woman is facing criminal charges after a car was allegedly driven into the rear of a fitness centre at Sherwood Forest Mall on Friday.
June 15, 2026 - 12:51 | Rachel Morgan | Global News - Ottawa
A 12-year-old boy is charged with attempted murder after a stolen vehicle struck a Toronto police officer early Monday, police said. The boy faces charges including theft of a motor vehicle, dangerous operation, failing to stop for police, assaulting a peace officer and leaving the scene of an accident, Toronto police said. He cannot be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act. Officers responded to a report of a vehicle theft near Donlands Avenue and O’Connor Drive shortly after 1 a.m., the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) said. Two cruisers tried to box the vehicle on the Leaside...
June 15, 2026 - 12:44 | Mason Kossak | National Post