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- Short steps to keeping your home safe.
- Choices, choices. With more than one variety ... which will get you and your family out of the house fastest?
- Carbon monoxide (CO) is a silent killer that can stalk any home with fuel-burning appliances. Within minutes, high concentrations of this odorless, colorless and invisible gas can become lethal. Here's advice from UL on how to protect your loved ones.
- Tips for keeping smoke and CO detectors on active duty.
- Wow guests for much less than the price of a remodel!
- It’s silent, colorless, odorless and tasteless, but it can be fatal.
- A growing number of homeowners are realizing that it's a good idea to prepare their home for cooler weather - just as they would their wardrobe and vehicles.
- Set yours goals and meet them.
- There is no foolproof way to protect your home against a break-in, as a determined thief will find a way, but certain steps will help deter it.
- Do smaller cleaning and repair jobs now to prevent big expenses down the road.
- The Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI) is the first organization within the soft floor covering sector to earn accreditation as a certification body for indoor air quality by the American National Standard Institute (ANSI).
- Be organized by creating a reference guide for your whole family.
- You can get a lot done in bite-sized chunks of time!
- Going green when choosing and installing new carpet.
- The Carpet & Rug Institute provides answers to commonly asked questions about carpets, asthma and allergies.
- Green carpet is more than a color.
- Do homemade green cleaners disinfect? Antimicrobial Test Labs (ATL) puts one recipe to the test.
- Damage to textiles from pet accidents only worsens as time goes by. Find out how to take the appropriate action early on.
- Home improvements and repairs can cost thousands of dollars and are the subject of frequent complaints. Here are helpful tips when selecting a contractor.
- Where there's fire, there's usually smoke. Although experts do their best to contain a fire, they are all but helpless in controlling the billowing clouds of smoke that fire creates. What can you do once the damage has been done?

