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Home security checklist: 9 tips to keep your house safe from intruders

You don't even have to spend money to improve your home's security.

Erin Gobler April 7, 2021 5:00 a.m. PT

Lock your doors and windows

Locking your doors and windows is the first and easiest defense against home intruders, but how many of us are doing it consistently? Burglars are often looking for easy targets, and an unlocked door or window is just that. Even when you're home, it's good practice to keep them locked. And when you're leaving the house, double-check doors and first-floor windows to make sure they're all secured.

Some devices can also help you keep track of your entryways: door/window sensors can track whether a door or window has been left ajar, and smart locks can be scheduled to lock automatically at certain times. Which brings us to our next tip.

Upgrade your door locks

Locking your doors and windows may not be enough if you don't have high-quality locks. First, make sure all exterior doors have a deadbolt, making it more difficult for intruders to break in. While you're at it, make sure your door frames and hinges are strong enough to endure an attempted break-in -- older doors or exposed hinges can pose an unnecessary risk. Finally, as mentioned before, you can upgrade to smart locks, which you can engage remotely.

Invest in a home security system

Installing a home security system is one of the most effective ways to prevent intruders from entering and alert you if there's been a break-in. First, data shows that a home without a security system is roughly three times more likely to be broken into. If an intruder spots a security camera or a sign indicating you have a security system, they'll likely keep moving.

A home security system can also alert you when someone has broken into your home. Security cameras will alert you if there's movement in your yard or on your front porch, and door/window sensors will let you know if someone has entered your home. Depending on your security company, they may also alert law enforcement on your behalf.

Security systems also don't have to be expensive. There are plenty of great DIY security systems, in addition to stand-alone devices, out there you can install yourself on a budget.

Don't leave your valuables exposed

Some burglars may scope out potential targets ahead of time, ensuring they hit houses where they can get their hands on valuables. As a result, it's best to avoid keeping your expensive items where intruders can easily see them as they pass by. For example, avoid leaving expensive tools or bikes out in the open, and don't leave expensive electronics, purses, jewelry, etc. in front of open windows.

Light up your outdoor space

Burglars don't want to feel like they're on display when breaking into a home, and outdoor lights can help to do just that. Since these crimes are often ones of opportunity, outdoor lights may encourage the intruder to keep moving. Rather than keeping your outdoor light on all the time, consider investing in motion-sensor lights that light up the yard when they detect movement. The light will catch an intruder off-guard and potentially scare them off.

Secure your garage

People put a lot of effort into securing their homes but often forget entirely about their garages. Unfortunately, that can be an easy way to gain entrance into your home. First, be sure any regular doors and windows to your garage are locked. Next, consider keeping your garage door opener in the house rather than in your car where someone could steal it. Finally, you should also keep the interior door from your garage to your home locked. That way, if someone does gain entry into your garage, they still can't get into your home. 

As with door locks, buying a retrofit smart garage door opener is an option: these devices allow you to check the status of your garage while you're away, control it remotely and schedule it to shut at certain times.

Rethink your hidden spare key

If you have a hidden key under your doormat or flowerpot, it's time to rethink it. Intruders know these popular hiding places for spare keys, and those are the first places they'll look. If you must have a spare key outside your home, look for safer alternatives such as a concealed combination lockbox -- or at least a discreet location far from your doorway.

Make it look like someone is home

Most burglars don't want to enter your home when you're there. They'd rather find an empty home and be in and out as quickly as possible. Therefore, one of the best ways to prevent intruders is to make it look like someone is home at all times.

During the workday, this might include leaving an interior light or the TV on. When you're gone for a longer period of time such as a vacation, make sure to have a neighbor or family member collect your mail, since mail piling up can be a giveaway that the homeowner is gone for a while.

Smart lights can create an even more convincing effect: Many can be programmed to turn on and off periodically to simulate a person being home.

Keep valuables in a safe

In a perfect world, intruders would never make it into your home, and so you'd never have to worry about your valuables being stolen. Unfortunately, even the best-laid plans can go astray. And on the off-chance that an intruder does make it into your home, you want to make sure they can steal as little as possible.

First, consider buying a safe or lockbox where you can keep things like cash, jewelry, important documents, and other items you wouldn't want a thief to walk away with. As far as bigger items such as electronics, you can make them more difficult to steal by putting them in a concealed place when you aren't using them. Thieves want to be in and out of your home as quickly as possible, so even the smallest deterrent can help.

The bottom line

No one wants to become the victim of a home intrusion. Implementing the tips on this checklist will help discourage and prevent burglars and keep your family and belongings safe. You can start small and pick just a couple of things on this list to focus on. Once you've got those down, you can move onto other items on the checklist. Each small improvement you make will ensure your home is that much more secure.

https://www.cnet.com/home/security/home-security-checklist-9-tips-to-keep-your-house-safe-from-intruders/

Bus trip to Whistler among recent travel-related COVID-19 exposure warnings posted in B.C.

Alyse Kotyk Reporter, CTVNewsVancouver.ca 
@AlyseKotyk Contact
Published Tuesday, February 9, 2021 12:50PM PST

Travellers at Vancouver International Airport are seen on Oct. 1, 2020.

Travellers at Vancouver International Airport are seen on Oct. 1, 2020.

VANCOUVER -- Several more flights have been added to the B.C. Centre for Disease Control's COVID-19 exposure warning list, along with one bus trip in the Lower Mainland.

Details about six flights and the bus trip were posted by the B.C. Centre for Disease Control on Sunday and Monday.

The bus, operated by Epic Rides Bus Line, departed from Vancouver for Whistler on Jan. 29.

The resort town has recently experienced a spike in COVID-19 cases, with 547 cases of the disease recorded between Jan. 1 and Feb. 2. That's more than double the 271 cases recorded in the municipality throughout all of 2020.

In addition, the flights in and out of B.C. most recently added to the exposure warning list are:

  • Feb. 1: Lufthansa flight 492/Air Canada flight 9101 from Frankfurt to Vancouver

  • Feb. 1: Air Canada flight 223 from Calgary to Vancouver

  • Feb. 2: Air Canada flight 554 from Vancouver to Los Angeles

  • Feb. 3: AerioMexico flight 696 from Mexico City to Vancouver

  • Feb. 4: Air Canada flight 115 from Toronto to Vancouver

  • Feb. 6: KLM flight 681 from Amsterdam to Vancouver

Domestic travellers are not required to quarantine in B.C., but health officials have advised against non-essential travel within Canada for months.

Anyone arriving internationally, however, must quarantine for 14 days upon arrival. They're also required to present proof of a negative COVID-19 test before boarding their flight, but that test can be taken up to 72 hours before they take off.

Anyone who was on one of the affected flights should self-monitor for symptoms of COVID-19, seeking testing and self-isolating if any develop.

B.C. health officials do not directly contact everyone who was on a flight with a confirmed case of COVID-19. Instead, public notifications are posted on the BCCDC's website. 

Man allegedly chased people with knife in New Westminster; assault charges laid

Alyse Kotyk Reporter, CTVNewsVancouver.ca 
@AlyseKotyk Contact
Published Monday, February 1, 2021 11:46AM PST

New Westminster police. (New Westminster Police/Facebook)

New Westminster police. (New Westminster Police/Facebook)

NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. -- A man has been charged after allegedly chasing two people in New Westminster with a knife late last month, police say.

According to the New Westminster Police Department, officers were called at about 7:30 p.m. on Jan. 21. A man and his friend were walking along 8th Street, when another man they didn't know allegedly began chasing them with a knife.

Officers arrived on scene and found the man "by following the sounds of screaming," the department said.

Police say when they found him, the man was carrying a 10-inch knife. They told the man to drop the weapon and he was arrested without incident.

"These men did the right thing in calling 911," said Sgt. Sanjay Kumar in a news release.

"If you see someone with what you believe to be a weapon and their behaviour is making you fear for your safety, call us right away."

A 31-year-old New Westminster resident, Aaron Smith, was charged with two counts of assault with a weapon.

Anyone with more information on the incident is asked to call NWPD at 604-525-5411. 

Richmond shooting: 'Exchange of gunfire' between 2 vehicles; witnesses sought

Kendra Mangione Producer, CTVNewsVancouver.ca
@kendramangione Contact
Published Monday, February 1, 2021 1:18PM PST

RCMP (File - Sean Amato/CTV News)

RCMP (File - Sean Amato/CTV News)

VANCOUVER -- Police are looking for witnesses following an early-morning shooting in Richmond.

In a statement Monday morning, the Richmond RCMP said officers were called to a residential area in the east at 12:30 a.m.

According to Mounties, reports suggest there was an "exchange of gunfire between the occupants of two separate vehicles" on Chaldecott Drive near Rathburn Drive.

The drivers and any passengers of the vehicles sped off as police arrived, the RCMP said.

It is early in the investigation, but so far there have been no reports of injuries.

In the RCMP statement, Cpl. Ian Henderson said officers will be in the area Monday speaking to those who live near the scene.

"Police are asking witnesses to come forward. Residents in the area are also encouraged to check their home surveillance and vehicle dash cams to see if they may have captured the incident on video," Henderson said.

Those with more information are asked to call police or Crime Stoppers. The file number is 2021-2939.

Vancouver police shut down private party with 100 attendees on New Year's Eve


Ian Holliday
Reporter, CTVNewsVancouver.ca @Ian_Holliday Contact
Published Friday, January 1, 2021 4:15PM PST
Last Updated Saturday, January 2, 2021 10:07AM PST

VANCOUVER -- Police in Vancouver say they found about 100 people at a private party at a downtown restaurant Thursday night, one of 34 calls for alleged violations of the provincial ban on gatherings officers responded to on New Year's Eve.

Vancouver police were called to the party near the intersection of Granville and Davie streets around 11 p.m., according to a news release from the Vancouver Police Department.

Officers broke up the closed-door event and issued a $2,300 ticket to the organizer for violating B.C.'s public health order banning gatherings.

The ticket was one of four police issued to event organizers for allegedly breaking the province's COVID-19 rules Thursday night.

Extra police officers were deployed to entertainment districts and to look out for impaired driving on New Year's Eve, police said.

In addition to the 34 calls about potential public health order violations, officers also dealt with a pair of assaults and arrested a woman at a protest at the Vancouver Art Gallery after she allegedly bit an officer. 

The first assault occurred around 6 p.m. near Granville and Helmcken streets, police said.

According to police, the suspect walked up to the victim, who he did not know, and slashed them in the face with a machete. The victim was taken to hospital for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries, and the suspect was arrested, police said.

The second assault was reported about an hour later, around 7 p.m.

In that incident, which happened near Granville and Davie streets, "the suspect put a metal object to the victim's neck and said, 'You are my enemy,'" police said.

The suspect and the victim were not known to each other, and officers were unable to locate the suspect, police said.

Finally, around 11:30 p.m., police were called to the art gallery because a protester was climbing on top of one of the statues there.

"While police were escorting her off the property, she bit one of the officers," police said in their release. "The woman was charged for assaulting a police officer."

Police did not attempt to break up the protest at the art gallery, a decision they said was based on the need for officers to "weigh a citizen’s right to peacefully protest with the current potential harm of gatherings."

“Mass arrests are not possible or desirable," the Vancouver Police Department said in a statement to CTV News. "Ticketing and arrests could escalate an already passionate situation, and when there are larger groups of people, the risk of injury to both protesters and police officers rises.” 

Suspicious fire behind Delta thrift store under police investigation

Alyse Kotyk Reporter, CTVNewsVancouver.ca 
@AlyseKotyk Contact
Published Monday, December 28, 2020 11:11AM PST

Police in Delta say they're investigating a fire from Dec. 27, 2020. (Heather Fuhrman/Submitted)

Police in Delta say they're investigating a fire from Dec. 27, 2020. (Heather Fuhrman/Submitted)

VANCOUVER -- Police in Delta say they're investigating a suspicious fire that damaged a thrift store.

Officers were called to Delta Street near 48 Avenue in Ladner at about 11 Sunday night after a fire was started in a dumpster behind a building. 

The rear wall and roof of the building eventually caught fire before it was extinguished. The thrift store was most significantly impacted, but other nearby units were also damaged by smoke.

"Fortunately there was no one who had to be evacuated from the property, and no one was reported injured during this incident," said Cris Leykauf, spokesperson for Delta police, in a news release. 

The cause of the fire is still under investigation, but police are calling the blaze suspicious. 

Anyone who was in the area and saw suspicious behaviour or anyone with dash cam video is asked to contact Delta police at 604-946-4411. 

Shoppers Drug Mart gauging interest in providing rapid COVID-19 testing to businesses

David MolkoSenior Reporter, CTV News Vancouver
@molkoreports Contact
Published Wednesday, December 16, 2020 1:35PM PST

Cypress Security Vancouver Security Company.jpg

VANCOUVER -- Pharmacy giant Shoppers Drug Mart has reached out to Canadian businesses to gauge interest in a COVID-19 rapid testing program that could launch as soon as January 2021.

The program, which the company’s “Health Solutions by Shoppers” division is exploring, is being pitched as a way for companies to bring employees back to work safely, according to a digital presentation slide obtained by CTV News Vancouver.

The slide, which says the program would be funded by employers with a minimum of a one-month commitment, promises COVID-19 results in 15 minutes, with positive results to be followed-up with PCR (laboratory) testing.

It indicates that Shoppers is considering using the Abbott COVID-19 Panbio Antigen test for the program, which Health Canada approved for use in October.

At the time, Ottawa signed a deal to obtain more than 20 million of the so-called “point-of-care” tests.

Catherine Thomas, senior director of external communications with parent company Loblaws, declined a CTV News request for an interview because, she said, the program is “not live.”

“Our health solutions team has been reaching out to some of our business partners to gauge their interest to understand if a program like this would be relevant to a broader group,” Thomas wrote in an email.

Thomas also explained the initial outreach was to a “few companies” and “at this point B.C. is not an area of focus.”

Infectious disease expert Dr. Brian Conway called the antigen test “very useful” and a “powerful tool to help us in the public health response,” indicating a similar test had been used as part of the NHL bubble.

Conway, who is the medical director of the Vancouver Infectious Diseases Centre, said the antigen test is analogous to the “gold-standard” PCR tests currently being performed in British Columbia, but doesn’t require a lab to process.

But, Conway cautioned, the rapid test appears to be less “sensitive,” meaning in people who don’t have symptoms but have COVID-19, the test may only detect the infection about 70 per cent of the time.

Conway said the rapid test could be useful for employers to quickly track chains of transmission and isolate individuals, once an individual has tested positive by standard lab testing, but that he would not recommend companies use it as a health-screening tool.

Conway also pointed out that the results of any point-of-care test would need to be used wisely.

“The danger of using this test more widely, especially in people who have no symptoms, is that it will be taken as a license to not follow current public health recommendations,” Conway said.

He added that everyone should continue to follow all public health guidelines until at least a majority of people have received a COVID-19 vaccine.

According to the manufacturer, Abbott, the test requires a nasal or nasopharyngeal swab, and a self-contained tube with a “break off” swab minimizes exposure risks.

Results appear in the form of lines on the display panel of a single-use cartridge within 15 minutes.