Simple Safety Tips to Keep Your Kids Safe While Trick-or-Treating
Credit: Free Images/Kimberly Appelcline
While Halloween is an exciting time for kids, it can be a nerve-racking time for parents, with safety being their top priority. Gone are the days of turning your children loose in the neighborhood to go door-to-door without a safety plan in place.
While Out and About…
- Make sure you know the neighborhood and who lives there. You can do a quick search on BeenVerified.com to see if your new neighbors have any skeletons in their closet.
- The most popular times to trick-or-treat are 5:30-9:30pm. There is safety in numbers, so it is best to stick to these times when canvasing the neighborhood. Remember, if the porch light isn’t on, don’t knock…this house is not participating in the festivities.
- Spooky decorations and the lure of candy can be very enticing. However, remind your children to never enter a stranger’s home while out trick-or-treating.
- Children under the age of 12 should never be turned loose to go door-to-door without adult supervision. It’s always best to go out in groups and stay in the neighborhoods you are most familiar with using the sidewalk and remaining on well lit streets as you navigate the neighborhood.
- Kids should carry flashlights with fresh batteries or glow sticks so they are visible to cars and motorcycles. Include reflector tape on the bottoms of shoes for added protection.
- Beware of dogs you don’t know and advise kids not to pet dogs you meet along the trick-or-treat route. Dogs can be nervous around little kids, especially ones dressed like ghouls and goblins.
- As always, kids should never talk to strangers, especially adults dressed in scary clown costumes. Kids should also be instructed never to take money from adults they don’t know. If approached by an inappropriate adult, they should report it to parents immediately.
- If your kids feel uncomfortable with an adult in the group, give them permission to exit with confidence. Just because someone isn’t dressed like a villain doesn’t mean they are safe to be around. Let your child follow his or her intuition.
- It’s always good to prepare for the worst case scenario. Should your child be grabbed, instruct him to kick, bite and scream for help. Teach them to say things like, “You’re not my parents…I don’t know you!” In most cases, the ruckus will cause the perpetrator to flee the scene.
- If parents are still concerned about safety, they can also consider hosting a well-supervised Halloween party instead of trick-or-treating.
Costume Concerns…
- You should decorate your kids’ costumes and candy bags with reflective tape to make them more visible on the dark streets.
- Make sure your children’s costumes fit properly so they can maneuver easily and prevent trips and falls.
- Purchase costumes and accessories that are flame resistant.
By having a trick-or-treat plan in place, you are sure to have a memorable and safe night haunting the neighborhood!
Bio for Justin Lavelle
Justin Lavelle is Communications Director at BeenVerified.com where he often writes about the topic of family safety. BeenVerified is the easy way to search for people. It gives you fast, affordable, and easy access to public records. Find out ages, addresses, email addresses, phone numbers, driving records, criminal records, and so much more! All the records you need in one simple report.
6 Comments
Kate Sarsfield
What a difference a couple of years has made. No public Halloween celebrations at all this year.
KATE SARSFIELD
We live in a tiny village in the middle of nowhere so the adults & children gather in the local community hall for a party instead of traipsing around the countryside. Everyone knows each other, particularly if they have children in the village school or attend church, so it’s very safe compared to some scenarios.
Sarah L
For costumes you also need to think about layers to keep kids warm.
Tamra Phelps
It’s kind of depressing how times have changed. Yes, back in the 70s when I was a kid, we heard the horror stories of razor blades in candy but I never knew anyone that happened to. Today, when my niece & nephews go out, I do know people who have found harmful stuff in their candy, & my family only lets the kids go around our neighborhood, where we know everyone, or to trunk-or-treat candy giveaways, usually connected to local churches.
Christy Peeples DuBois
These are great tips to follow. Even though I know these tips for the most part it does not hurt to refresh my memory. Where children are concerned we can never be too careful.
michele
These are all great tips.. wish I had some of them when I took my children.. but my grandchildren will benefit from them.. Thanks Connie