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To be used as a reference to answer
questions regarding Public Act 094-0741, Carbon Monoxide Alarm
Detector Act, signed into law on May 8, 2006. Compliance Date:
January 1, 2007 1. Every
dwelling unit shall be equipped with at least one approved carbon
monoxide alarm in an operating condition within 15 feet of every
room used for sleeping purposes. A "dwellling unit" means a
room or suite of rooms used for human habitation, and includes
single family residences, multiple family residences and mixed use
buildings.
2. The CO alarm can be combined
with smoke detecting devices, provided each unit has a distinct
alarm that differentiates the hazard.
3. Every structure that
contains more than one dwelling unit shall contain at least one CO
alarm within 15 feet of each sleeping area.
4. The owner of the property
must supply and install all required alarms.
5. In non-owner occupied
dwelllings:
The owner must provide the tenant
with written information regarding testing and maintenance and must
make sure the batteries in the CO alarm are in operating condition
when the tenant takes possession of the dwelling unit.
The tenant must take responsibility
to test and provide general maintenance for the alarms; notify the
owner or owner's agent in writing of any deficiencies the tenant can
not correct and allow the owner or the owner's agent access to the
dwelling unit to correct any deficiencies in the carbon monoxide
alarm reported in writing to the owner or agent.
6. The carbon monoxide alarms
required under this Act may be:
a) battery powered
b) plug-in with battery back-up; or
c) wired into the structures AC power
line with battery back-up
7. Failure to install or
maintain any alarm is a Class B misdemeanor
8. Tampering with, removing,
destroying, disconnecting, or removing the batteries from any
installed CO alarm is a Class A misdemeanor in the case of the first
conviction and a Class 4 felony in the case of a second subsequent
conviction.
9. Exemptions - a residential
unit in a building that:
a) does not rely on combustion of
fossil fuel for heat, ventilation or hot water;
b) is not connected in any way to a
garage; and
c) is not sufficiently close to any
ventilated source of carbon monoxide, as determined by the local
building commissioner. |