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OCR Page 1 of 2HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
HOLD FOR RELEASE
May 5, 1947
166
CONFIDENTIAL The following address of the President, to be delivered at
the opening of the Fire Prevention Conference in the Departmental Auditorium,
Washington, D. C., MUST BE HELD IN CONFIDENCE UNTIL RELEASED.
Release is automatic at 11 o'clock A.M., E.S.T., Tuesday, May 6, 1947.
The same.hour of release applies to all newspapers, radio announcers and
news broadcasters.
PLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE PUBLICATION OR RADIO ANNOUNCEMENT.
CHARLES G. ROSS
Secretary to the President
The nation has been shocked by a long series of spectacular
fires in the last few years -- particularly in the last few months
which have resulted in such great loss of life and such widespread
misery. Just the other day, the Texas City disaster drove home anew
the lesson that we must find ways and means to. combat the ever-present
danger of fire and explosion. The great hotel fires of last year again
showed that we cannot afford to entrust our citizens' lives to unsafe
buildings.
But these fires which make the headlines are only a small
fraction of the total. Thousands of lives are lost annually and tens
of thousands of people are injured in the many less spectacular fires
NARA
which occur hour after hour, day after day, throughout the year.
This conference brings together for the first time the highest
officials of municipalities, states, the Federal government and national
groups interested in fire prevention and in saving lives from fires.
We are approaching the fire problem on a truly national basis.
Our first concern is for the lives of our people, especially
those of young people. Fire strikes hardest at youth. Two thousand
children, on the average, die every year from burns, and thousands of
others are scarred for life, This toll must be reduced.
Next in importance is the fact that we as a nation cannot
to ignore the staggering destruction of gods, natural
sources, buildings and other property by fire. During the last twelve
months fires destroyed more than $560,000,000 worth of our wealth. The
loss for 1947 will be more than three-quarters of a billion dollars
unless we can reduce the present rate.
No dollar value can ever be put on the irreplaceable things
which fire destroys. Who can count the value of a human life destroyed
by fire? Who can say what a fire costs when it destroys thousands of
tons of food sorely needed here and abroad? What is the value of a house
the burning of which makes a family homeless during this housing shortage?
Who can put a dollar value on a burning forest?
The fire loss, in lives and property, which occurs annually in
our forest and rural areas makes up a highly important part of the annual
toll. Such destruction of our precious natural resources is of concern
to each of us.
Who can say what fire costs the nation when a single fire in
one factory can result in lost jobs and lost wages for hundreds of workmen,
reduced savings and reduced volume of trade throughout a community?
These are some of the tragic consequences of the 830,000 fires
that occur annually in the United States. It is for this conference to
determine the causes of this destruction and map out a program of preventive
action. We must use all our experience, knowledge, and organizational
facilities to solve our fire problems.
Great advance has been made in the technical methods of prevention
and protection. The concerted effort of all our people is needed in order
losses where fire occurs.
to make effective the known methods of preventing fires and preventing large
A contributing factor in our fire death toll is our legacy of old
construction. Also, we have a comploxity of building laws and codes in some
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