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All Sask. homes must have CO and smoke alarms by July 1, 2022

Between 2018 and 2020, an average of 1,200 CO incidents were reported annually to SaskEnergy
carbon monoxide alarm
Carbon monoxide (CO) and smoke alarms will need to be installed in all residential buildings in Saskatchewan, regardless of the building's age.

All Saskatchewan residential buildings will require working carbon monoxide and smoke alarms by July 1, 2022

Friday, Government Relations Minister Don McMorris announced amendments to The Uniform Building and Accessibility Standards Regulations (the UBAS Regulations). The amendments require carbon monoxide (CO) and smoke alarms be installed in all residential buildings in Saskatchewan, regardless of the building's age. Prior to this amendment, smoke alarms and carbon monoxide alarms were only required in new residential construction that were built since 1988 and 2009 respectively.

Carbon monoxide is an invisible, odourless, poisonous gas that is often produced when fuel-burning appliances like furnaces, stoves, water heaters and fireplaces malfunction. Carbon monoxide incidents happen frequently; between 2018 and 2020, an average of 1,200 CO incidents were reported annually to SaskEnergy. If there isn't a working CO alarm to alert you to its presence in your home, continued CO exposure can lead to confusion, drowsiness, loss of consciousness, brain damage and death.

Smoke from residential fires spread quickly. Since residential fires can become life-threatening in less than two minutes, a working smoke alarm can alert you and your family to escape before a fire spreads. In their 2020-21 annual report, the Saskatchewan Public Safety Agency noted that of all fires reported to the agency during that period, 36 per cent (440 fires) impacted residential structures.

To allow property owners enough time to purchase and install these alarms, compliance with this new requirement will not be enforced until July 1, 2022. For more information about this UBAS Regulation amendment, the approved alarm models or where you should install these alarms in your home, please visit Carbon Monoxide Alarms and Smoke Alarms.