Calls about carbon monoxide rise as exhausts clog in Regina's cold weather - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Calls about carbon monoxide rise as exhausts clog in Regina's cold weather

The Regina Fire Department has responded to a significantly higher number of calls for carbon monoxide issues in recent weeks and is reminding residents to be CO conscious.

Calls for carbon monoxide last month nearly doubled previous December

Water heater and furnace exhausts can clog with the winter climate and cause carbon monoxide to remain in the house. (Ted Deller/CBC News)

The Regina Fire Department received nearly twice as many calls about carbon monoxide in December 2021 asit did the same month theyear prior and is already beginning 2022 with a busy month, likely because of the cold weather.

In December 2020, Regina Fire responded to13 carbon monoxide calls, compared with 24 in December 2021.In January, it has already received seven calls.

Neil Sundeen, Regina Fire Department deputy fire chief, said the department always sees in an increase in calls for carbon monoxide in stints of cold weather.

The entire province of Saskatchewan remains under an extreme cold warning. In Regina, it was 37 C with a windchill nearing 50 on Thursday. The average temperature over the past five days has been 22 C.

Cold weather in Regina, Sask., has caused the exhaust in some homes to clog and cause furnace and potentially carbon monoxide issues. (Ted Deller/CBC News)

Some of the calls the fire departmentreceives are normal mechanical issues with water heaters and furnaces, "butin the cold weather there certainly becomes an issue with the venting and sometimes the venting plugs up and you get it back up into the housing,"Sundeensaid.

When that happens, exhaust fumes can remain in the house and cause people to feel nauseous, dizzy or develop a headache. In more serious cases, people can experience vision problems, seizures and even death.

From 2015 to 2019, there were a total of 16 deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning in the province.

"It is a silent killer, it has no odour, there's no way to know until somebody gets sick or they have us come and check it," Sundeen said.

Newer homes require carbon monoxide alarms, but Sundeen recommends people install a carbon monoxide alarm in any homeif there isn't one already.

"If there's even a thought that you might be having a problem, that somebody's not feeling well ... by all means call our department, we'll send a truck out," Sundeen said.

"We would rather check out 100 that aren't [carbon monoxide issues]then have one that doesn't get checked out and have people injured or killed."