Safety tips for Halloween will keep kids safe

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Halloween is only a week away and soon little ghosts, goblins and witches trick-or-treating will fill our streets.

To help ensure this Halloween is safe for children, Livingston County Sheriff Mike Murphy offers the following safety tips:

• Costumes should be short enough to prevent tripping. Masks should not be too restrictive with adequate holes for proper respiration and peripheral vision. Consider using cosmetics to create fun or scary faces instead of masks.

• Watch costumed children around pets. The pet may not recognize the child and become frightened, especially if the child is using a prop such as a sword or dagger as part of their costume.

• Avoid hard plastic or wooden props, opting instead for items made of foam rubber, which is soft and flexible.

• To help make the child more visible after dark, trick-or-treaters should carry a brightly colored bag and a flashlight or glow stick. Add reflective tape to the sides, front, and back of the child’s costume.

• At all times, watch for traffic and avoid walking in the street whenever possible.

• An adult should always accompany young children. A parent should stay within close range of young children at all times and never allow a child to go down a street alone. Walk children to each house and wait near the porch or front entrance of the home until they return. Older children should travel in pairs or in groups at all times while trick-or- treating and never venture down a dark, empty street.

• Parents should know the route that their children are following. Children should always walk together to the front door of each house and only cross the street at crosswalks.
AVOID dark, unlit homes.

• Children should save their candy until they get home so an adult can inspect it. Discard any unwrapped or suspicious looking goodies. If the child gets sick, call the family doctor or the hospital emergency room immediately and save all wrappers. It is also helpful to determine what he or she ate and which house it came from.

• Keep flammable items, such as jack-o-lanterns, away from small children, pets, and flammable materials such as draperies, furniture, and paper decorations. Never leave a candle burning unattended.

“Halloween is a fun time in Livingston County,” said Sheriff Murphy. “Let’s make it a safe time as well.”

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The Livingston Post is the only locally owned, all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Mich. It was launched by award-winning journalists who were laid off from the Livingston County Daily Press & Argus by Gannett Co. Inc. in 2009.