©
2006 Door & Access Systems
Publish Date: Winter 2006
Author: Tom Wadsworth
Page 74
CLIPPINGS
Garage Doors and Openers in the Media
CO Poisoning and Garage Doors
A DEATH IN VIRGINIA
Source: Mary Kay Mallonee, “Woman’s death a painful
reminder about safe operation of generators,” WAVY-TV
(Portsmouth, Va.), Sept. 5, 2006.
An 83-year-old Newport News, Va., woman died after Hurricane
Ernesto raked through the area in September 2006. But Ernesto
didn’t kill her. She died of carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning
from a generator running in her garage during a power outage.
Firemen said the CO reading in the house was “off the
charts.” She went to bed with the garage door closed.
She left a side window open, but it wasn’t enough ventilation.
The story says firefighters encourage homeowners to buy carbon
monoxide detectors.
A MISSION IN FLORIDA
Source: Tere Figueras Negrete, “Grief inspires a mission:
making carbon monoxide detectors mandatory,” Miami Herald,
Nov. 28, 2006.
“I want people to get mad,” says Maria Marquez.
Marquez is on a mission to make carbon monoxide detectors
mandatory in Florida. On Aug. 27, 2006, Marquez found her
mother, only sister, brother-in-law, and two young nephews
dead in a West Miami-Dade home.
Marquez’s sister was found in a vehicle that was left
running inside a closed garage. Police think she committed
suicide, and the CO deaths of the others in the house were
accidental.
A NEW LAW IN ILLINOIS
Source: “New carbon monoxide law aims to save lives,”
Salem (Ill.) Times Commoner, Nov. 24, 2006.
On Jan. 1, 2007, a new law took effect in Illinois requiring
any residence with an attached garage or with fossil fuel-burning
appliances to install a carbon monoxide alarm within 15' of
all sleeping areas.
According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), carbon monoxide poisoning is responsible for about
500 unintentionally deaths annually in the United States and
forces 15,000 Americans to seek medical attention. Most deaths
occur during the winter heating season.
The story says to never let a car run in the garage, even
if the garage door is open. Severe poisonings can cause convulsions,
unconsciousness, brain damage, and death.
Editor’s Note: Garage doors are often mentioned in
carbon monoxide stories. Dealers may find it useful to include
carbon monoxide alarms in your product offering. As a public
service, offer customers a safety information sheet about
the dangers of carbon monoxide poisoning. For the facts, go
to www.cdc.gov/co.
Garage Makeovers Hit the Big Time
Source: Coeli Carr, “Pimp My Garage,” Time magazine,
Oct. 1, 2006.
Door & Access Systems has been talking about garage makeovers
since 2002. Now, Time magazine has covered this hot topic.
“Even as the housing market cools, one segment of it
appears to be bucking the trend: garage remodeling,”
writes reporter Carr. According to Harvard statistics for
2003, homeowners spent $2.4 billion on replacing or improving
their garages, twice the average.
Garage organization franchises are expanding, and Home Depot
now offers garage-organization and remodeling services in
700 of its 1,840 U.S. stores. The fastest growth is reported
to come from projects in the $8,000-10,000 range.
Some say that a lagging housing market is good for the garage,
as more people pour more money into upgrading the space in
their existing homes.
Editor’s Note: As Americans see greater value in their
garages, they will see greater value in their garage doors.
This trend can only be good for our industry.
Glass Garage Doors Get Glamorized
Source: Mary Thurman Yuhas, “Open Up With Glass Garage
Doors,” USA Today, Nov. 2, 2006.
“Glass-paneled garage doors, used in place of windows
and walls, are opening up living spaces like never before.”
That’s how this USA Today feature story begins.
Reporter Yuhas cites architects who have found the appeal
of aluminum/glass residential garage doors such as those offered
by Clopay and Overhead Door.
An HGTV editor says he sees more higher-end homes using garage
doors as a “very economical” removable wall that
opens to a deck or patio. A Sacramento homeowner, who had
two of the doors installed for $1,500, says that a set of
French doors would have cost twice that.
Editor’s Note: When this reporter called me, she was
ecstatic about these doors. Our industry benefits when the
mainstream media are fascinated with our products, their aesthetic
appeal, and their economical value.
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