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Safety Awareness
Page
This is brought to you
by J & L as a service to all that visit our site.
This page is made up of several safety related documents as well
as links to safety related sites and services. If you have any suggestions
about safety related sites we may have missed, please contact us
with the information.
Are
you a potential victim?
No one wants to be a
victim, but life's daily activities put us all in situations where
we could become a victum. The business person going to or coming
from work or in a strange city for a business meeting, the senior
citizen taking a morning stroll or the jogger running around the
block- - average people in average situations. Whether you are shopping,
going out for an evening on the town, walking across the campus,
taking a walk in the local park, riding your bicyle, or just answering
the doorbell put you in a situation where you can become a potential
victim. It isn't hard to figure out that you or someone you know
is going to be a victim - and soon. Just look in local newspaper
or review the statistics. It can happen to you and probably will
sooner or later.
You do have several options.
(1) You can ignore all the facts and go on with your daily life
thinking that it could never happen to you.
(2) You could live in complete fear and spend a lot of your time
worrying about the possibility of a criminal assault.
(3) You can prepare yourself for the possibility of becoming a victim
by purchasing a self-protection device, learning how to use it properly,
and continue living a normal life. After all considerations, this
really the only option that makes any sense.
We cannot always count on outside help from the already overly busy
police departments. Even if you are involved in a situation where
you have someone else call for you, ever increasing response times
often find the police only arriving in time to call for an ambulance
or fill out paper work. It's a fact of life! Law enforcement divisions
cannot respond immediately to every call for assistance. And recent
court decisions have taken the position that the police have no
obligation to protect an individual.
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Workplace Violence
One in six violent crimes
occurs in the workplace, according to Department of Justice study
recently released. (Police and Security News - Sept. 1994)
The Departments Bureau of Justice Statistics(BJS) said an estimated
7 percent of all rapes, 8 percent of all robberies, and 16 percent
of all assaults occur at work. The data are from an analysis for
workplace crimes, from 1987 through 1992, gathered though the National
Criminal Victimization Survey of U.S. households.
"The workplace is the scene of almost one million violent crimes
every year", said acting BJS Director Lawerces A. Greenfeld.
"About 10 percent- or 100,000 -of these violent crimes in the
workplace involve offenders armed with handguns."
Of the approximately 3.2 million violent crimes and thefts in the
workplace, about 500,000 victims lose an estimated 1.8 million workdays
each year, and $55 million in lost wages, not including days covered
by sick and annual leave, the study said.
Among the women who experience crime at work, 40 percent are attacked
by a stranger, 35 percent by a casual acquaintance, 19 percent by
a well-know acquaintance and 1 percent by a relative. About 5 percent
are attacked by a husband, former husband, boyfriend, or former
boyfriend.
Federal, state and local government workers, who make up about 8
percent of the total U.S. workforce, accounts for 30 percent of
all workplace victims. "Several factors may be responsible
for this over representation, including a potentially high risk
of victimization for particular government occupations, such as
public safety personnel," the report noted.
In addition to the violent crimes, there was an annual average of
more than two million personal thefts in the workplace during the
period, as well as more than 200,000 motor vehicle thefts.
More than half of all workplace victimization's were not reported
to police. Among those not reporting, 40 percent said they believed
the matter was minor or too personal, and 27 percent said they reported
the incident to another official, such as company security.
Average annual numbers of workplace victimization's from 1987 through
1992.
Category |
No.
of Victimization's |
No.
with Injuries |
Aggravated
Assaults |
264,174 |
48,180
|
Simple
Assaults |
615,160
|
89,572
|
Robbery |
79,109 |
17,904 |
Rape |
13,068 |
3,438
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Normal Human Response to Danger
When a person is exposed to severe stress, the body experiences
a normal process referred to as Body Alarm Reaction, also called
"Fight or Flight response.
The ONLY thing that can help overcome
this response is proper training.
The most common reactions are:
Reduced hand-eye
coordination
Loss of manual
dexterity and fine motor skills
Loss of fine
finger movements
Panic and indecisive
Complex training
starts to breakdown
Unreliable
mental track - How many attackers?
Tunnel vision
- swivel head to compensate
Auditory exclusion
- unable to hear loud noises, shouts, etc
Muscle tightening
- epinephrine (adrenaline) flooding
Time and space
distortion - slow motion
Memory disturbance
- out of sequence
black outs, size distortion
How you will react depends
on several things, the most important is proper training, and the
second is practice.
Buying a can of my pepper spray is a good idea, but unless
you have proper training and practice in the use of the spray as
well as awareness training, there is a chance you could be surprised
and overcome by an attacker.
Lets hope this never happens, but if it does, it's not because my
spray failed, but because you did.
False sense of
Security
Owning a pepper spray or stun gun without the knowledge or training
in how to use them could be a false sense of security.
I don't just want to sell you a spray and tell you "this is
all the protection you need". Yes, a spray or a stun gun can
be a helpful weapon in a potentially bad situation, but you must
know how to use them. I can not stress this point enough.
Both myself and my family are very safety conscious, as well we
should be in this day and age. This is the reason I got into the
self defense products business to begin with. I sell only quality
products, but regardless of quality, the product I sell you is just
a tool. Like any tool there is a right way and a wrong way to use
it. If you never plan to practice
or train with the weapon, you may as well not waste your money.
That's right, a retailer
telling you not to buy his product if you wont take the time to
learn how to use it.
There is a simple explanation for my feelings on this. I care
about peoples safety, and to have a pepper spray or a stun gun in
a purse or glovebox is
a false sense of security. If you are surprised from behind, you
will never reach the weapon quick enough. I don't want this to happen
to anyone, so
BE PREPAIRED. If you feel any sense of danger (a gut feeling), grab
the weapon and hold it until you are in a safe area. If you are
ready and holding the weapon when a violent attack occurs, you have
a much greater chance of driving off the perpetrator and living
to tell about it. In fact if you do use a Fox Labs pepper spray
in a defensive measure, and you send me a police report documenting
the attack, I will replace the unit free of charge.
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The summer has ended and a new school year begins. For some children
it is a time to return to their classroom, renew old friendships and to
meet new friends. For other students it means going to a different school,
excited and eager to face a new time in their life or perhaps with some
reservation.
As the children are heading back to school, during the early mornings
roads become crowded with pedestrians, bikes and cars in the rush to work
and school. It is important to help the children get to and from school
safely, here are some tips:
Riding the Bus
School bus transportation is safe. In fact, buses are safer than cars!
Even so, last year, approximately 26 students were killed and another
9,000 were injured in incidents involving school buses. More often than
not, these deaths and injuries didn't occur in a crash, but as the pupils
were entering and exiting the bus. Remember these safety tips:
* Have a safe place to wait for your bus, away from traffic and the street.
* Stay away from the bus until it comes to a complete stop and the driver
signals you to enter.
* When being dropped off, exit the bus and walk ten giant steps away from
the bus. Keep a safe distance between you and the bus. Also, remember
that the bus driver can see you best when you are back away from the bus.
* Use the handrail to enter and exit the bus.
* Stay away from the bus until the driver gives his/her signal that it's
okay to approach.
* Be aware of the street traffic around you. Drivers are required
to follow certain rules of the road concerning school buses, however,
not all do. Protect yourself and watch out!
Walking and Biking to School
Even if you don't ride in a motor vehicle, you still have to protect yourself.
Because of minimal supervision, young pedestrians face a wide variety
of decisions making situations and dangers while walking to and from school.
Here are a few basic safety tips to follow:
* Mind all traffic signals and/or the crossing guard -- never cross the
street against a light, even if you don't see any traffic coming.
* Walk your bike through intersections.
* Walk with a buddy.
* Wear reflective material...it makes you more visible to street traffic.
Riding in a Car
* You might have heard before that most traffic crashes
occur close to home ... they do.
* Safety belts are the best form of protection passengers have in the
event of a crash. They can lower your risk of injury by 45%.
* You are four times more likely to be seriously injured or killed if
ejected from the vehicle in a crash.
* Everyone needs to be buckled up properly. That means older kids in seat
belts, younger kids in booster seats and little kids in child safety seats.
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