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- Resolutions to keep everyone healthy.
- Homeowners can take a number of steps to improve air quality and create a healthier living environment.
- 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?
- Box it up; move it out.
- A cleaning tool that needs regular cleaning.
- Break spring cleaning tasks into just one hour a week.
- Give a good spring cleaning to your kitchen, including refrigerators and freezers, to prevent foodborne illness.
- How to delegate the spring cleaning chores to family members of all ages and get things done fast.
- Simplify your annual chore day.
- While spring cleaning is not the necessary evil it once was, now is still a good time to do those annual or semi-annual chores.
- Act Quickly! Ninety percent of the spots on carpet and upholstery can be removed completely if they are absorbed, blotted and flushed within two or three minutes.
- Understanding spot ‘make-up’ is key to removal.
- Raise your own cleaning crew.
- Studies have revealed that static electricity does not become a problem with most people until the relative humidity drops below 40 percent.
- Thinking something has got to change and making it change are often two different things. It doesn’t have to be that way. You can indeed resolve to get more organized and make it happen.
- The following information is submitted by The Clean Trust as a public service to those who have suffered water-related losses due to storm damage (e.g., hurricane, tornado).
- Safe food handling steps are the key to making your cookout safe and healthy.
- Some dyes and dye methods help vibrant color to endure long exposure to UV rays.
- Swine flu presents a real and present danger to public health. The IEHA is pleased to provide this information from the CDC.
- Hidden contributors to 'sick buildings', allergies, asthma - plus how to avoid 'couch potato asthma.'

