‘Carbon monoxide alarms saved my family’: Prince Albert resident and government highlight CO safety
“It’s the silent killer. We were sleeping and could have just passed away. Thank goodness that detector went off. It literally saved our lives.”
Garth Kalin didn’t know his carbon monoxide (CO) detector was going off. He thought the beeping that woke up he and his wife at 3 a.m. one winter morning in Prince Albert was because of the battery dying in their detector. Then they noticed a light flashing by the CO sign.
“I go, well that’s carbon monoxide. So, we did what everybody would probably do and we started sniffing. But, its an odourless gas unlike natural gas or propane,” said Kalin.
Better to be safe than sorry, they called for help. The fire department and SaskEnergy showed up at their house and determined they had a defective furnace. The heat exchanger was cracked and allowing the gases to go into the house instead of up the chimney.