Burnt food triggers carbon monoxide alarm at home


Fire crews responded to a carbon monoxide alarm at a residence and found burnt food caused the alarm, with no fire or carbon monoxide hazard.
Audio|Source: Charlotte and Mecklenburg County Fire
00:44
Transcript:
00:00And you want to change them.00:04Do you want to go ahead.00:09Confirmed burnt food, you can show is clear.00:11That's four, show, zero, eight, six.00:32Carbon an oxide.00:3412,0816 David Jennings Avenue.00:37Honey, Echo[1].00:38Engine 34.00:39Carbon monoxide[2].00:4012,0816 David Jennings Avenue.00:43Honey, Echo[1].
00:00
And you want to change them.
00:04
Do you want to go ahead.
00:09
Confirmed burnt food, you can show is clear.
00:11
That's four, show, zero, eight, six.
00:32
Carbon an oxide.
00:34
12,0816 David Jennings Avenue.
00:37
Honey, Echo[1].
00:38
Engine 34.
00:39
Carbon monoxide[2].
00:40
12,0816 David Jennings Avenue.
00:43
Honey, Echo[1].
Police codes explained
The following codes appeared in the transcript and are explained below:
[1]
Echo: Emergency Medical Dispatch (high acuity, but in this context, likely fire/CO alarm severity code)
[2]
Carbon monoxide: Possible hazardous materials or alarm event
Disclaimer:
This was transcribed by AI and may contain errors. Please verify the information independently.
Location mentioned:
David Jennings Ave, Charlotte, NC 28213
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