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CPSC Alert: Counterfeit Smoke Alarms Distributed in Atlanta

Jul 15, 2011
CPSC Alert: Counterfeit Smoke Alarms Distributed in Atlanta
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) urged residents in the Atlanta area to check their homes for counterfeit smoke alarms. About 18,500 such alarms were distributed for free between 2006 through May 2011 as part of the Atlanta Smoke Alarm Program. 

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The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) urged residents in the Atlanta area to check their homes for counterfeit smoke alarms. About 18,500 such alarms were distributed for free between 2006 through May 2011 as part of the Atlanta Smoke Alarm Program. The smoke alarms can fail to alert residents in the event of a fire.

The Atlanta Fire Rescue Department, which distributed the alarms as part of a fire safety campaign, is recalling them and working to provide free smoke alarm inspections and replacement units. Residents who received these alarms should immediately contact the Atlanta Smoke Alarm Recall Hotline at 404.546.2733.

The counterfeit alarms can be identified by a silver Underwriters Laboratories (UL) label on the back and three sets of vented slots on the front. The UL label is counterfeit. The alarms do not have a model number or brand name printed on them. “Important: Refer to Manual for Operating Instruction and Safety” and “Do Not Paint” are stamped into the plastic on the front of the alarm in both English and German. The package states, “This Smoke Alarm save [sic] life and property by early warning!” Claims that smoke alarms can “save property” are not typical for smoke alarms. The packaging states, “10 year life lithium battery,” but the battery included with the smoke alarm is a carbon zinc, industrial, heavy-duty battery, which will power the alarm for only one year.

CPSC’s independent testing of the smoke alarms determined that the alarms pose a life safety hazard to the occupants in the event of a fire. The alarms perform poorly and inconsistently and do not meet voluntary standards requirements in UL 217, Single and Multiple Station Smoke Alarms, or the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 72, the National Fire Alarm and Signaling Code. The smoke alarms’ sensitivity settings varied greatly between the alarms tested. Some alarms did not respond within an adequate time for life safety and other alarms did not respond at all.

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