Can-Do Cleaning Strategies for Busy People
While you dream of having a maid (to go with the cook and chauffer), this simplified cleaning routine can keep your real-world home tidy
Houzz Contributor. You can also find me on Lolalina (http://www.lolalina.com/), my blog devoted to all of the things that make a house a home - decorating from the heart, living with intention, and savoring life's simple pleasures.
Houzz Contributor. You can also find me on Lolalina (http://www.lolalina.com/),... More »
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Some housekeeping books read like a lovely daydream. Imagine having the time to dust under the furniture, rotate mattresses like clockwork and clean the refrigerator coils! To be quite honest, I can't recall the last time I did any of those things, and I refuse to feel bad about it. When your days are fully scheduled, it makes zero sense to hold yourself to professional housekeeping standards. That's not to say, though, that keeping a home clean and orderly is something that cannot be attained by those with busy lives. Having some sort of regular cleaning and straightening routine helps give a satisfying order to our lives, and it ensures that things don't get so far out of hand that you must spend all day cleaning just to bring them back to normal.
Here are some simple, fast ways to keep your home fresh and clean every day.
Here are some simple, fast ways to keep your home fresh and clean every day.
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| Set Up a Routine: Morning, Evening and Extras By sneaking in mini cleaning tasks during your normal morning and evening routine (see specific tips below), you should be able stay on top of basic housekeeping in minutes a day. When time is really short, this is all I do. But keeping your home feeling really great (even company ready) doesn't take much more effort. Look at your schedule and decide when you can fit in a handful of extra chores. Depending on the week, you might want to do them all in one go on a weekend morning (with music and plenty of coffee) or fit in an extra chore each weekday. |
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| Morning Make the bed while you are in it. This sounds silly, but it works. Before you get up, stretch out in bed as if you are making snow angels, straightening out the sheets and blankets as you go. Voilà! You've done most of the work of creating a smooth bed with almost no effort. Tip: Have trouble keeping your cleaning routines on track? Try an app. The HomeRoutines app helps you schedule cleaning by zone. |
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| Empty the dishwasher while waiting for your first cup of coffee or tea. Do you usually stare at the coffeemaker or kettle, willing it to work faster? Use the time instead to clear out the clean dishes from the dishwasher or draining rack, so it will be ready to go for the day. Do all of your dishes after breakfast (and every meal). It's so much easier to quickly rinse off a few plates and cups than deal with a sinkful at the end of the day. This is a habit that may feel burdensome at first but quickly becomes second nature. |
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Start a load of laundry first thing (and it can be in the dryer before you go to work). If you throw in a load of wash right away when you wake up, you should be able to at least toss it in the dryer before leaving for work.
Will dress shirts wrinkle if you don't fold them promptly? Sure. If you know you can't stick around to fold and put away clothes, just choose hardy items such as towels and T-shirts; you'll still have less to do later.
Will dress shirts wrinkle if you don't fold them promptly? Sure. If you know you can't stick around to fold and put away clothes, just choose hardy items such as towels and T-shirts; you'll still have less to do later.
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Use shower steam to your advantage. Take a few seconds to wipe the sink and mirror in the morning after your shower, and the warm steam will help things along. A quick swipe with a microfiber cloth is all it should take for things to look sparkling fresh.
Tip: Keep a mini cleaning kit in the bathroom so you don't have to scramble to find the supplies you need.
Tip: Keep a mini cleaning kit in the bathroom so you don't have to scramble to find the supplies you need.
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Evening
Tidy your entry. Instead of flinging your things down anywhere, take a moment to put everything in its proper place when you come into the house. Line up your shoes, hang up the coats, stuff all the mittens and things into a basket or tote, and sort the mail. Slowing down as you cross the threshold into your home is also a great way to shed the stress of the day.
Tidy your entry. Instead of flinging your things down anywhere, take a moment to put everything in its proper place when you come into the house. Line up your shoes, hang up the coats, stuff all the mittens and things into a basket or tote, and sort the mail. Slowing down as you cross the threshold into your home is also a great way to shed the stress of the day.
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| Do a quick postdinner cleanup. Even if you are exhausted, be sure to run the dishwasher, wipe the counters and stove top, and give the kitchen floor a quick sweep. Take out the trash and recycling, or at least bundle it by the door, where you will remember to take it out in the morning. |
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Clear clutter hot spots. You know the spots I'm talking about: the places clutter just seems to appear through no fault of your own. So, before heading off to bed, take a few minutes to walk through the house, putting things back in their places, paying special attention to those clutter hot spots. Tidy the living room, clear the dining room table and hang up the clothes piled on the chair in your bedroom.
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| Extra Tasks When making your list of extra chores, go easy on yourself! Choose only what makes sense for your lifestyle, home and available time. My list of extras looks like this:
Tell us: What is your best quick cleaning tip? |
Ideabook published on Jan. 23, 2013.
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My final time saver is the electric hard floor vacuum I purchased. My Electrolux Ergorapido is cordless, low profile, lightweight enough for my kindergartner to use and has a built in hand vac. It gets up most of the trash on our tile floor and when I get to the kitchen counter or table I can easily remove the hand vac to pick up debris on the counter or table. It's faster and stirs up less dust than sweeping. I tried a Scooba but it wasn't able to pick up trash from our wide and deep tile grout lines.
"If, every time you leave a room, you do a quick scan and pick up one thing that belongs where you’re going, picking up the house becomes less of a problem. If everyone in your house does it, just think of how much easier it will be to clean the house, and how much more free time you’ll all have."
I could even train my husband to consider most of my 'rules' and after a while he committed that they do indeed, by and large, make life easier. Woohoo! ;-)
Also, EVERY child in our house is responsible for their own room, as well as helping with the chores. Age appropriate of corse, but like tcufrog mentioned children as young as 3 or 4 even, are more than capable of helping out. Our play room has labels on EVERYTHING, with pictures so even the younger kids that can't read know where to put things at clean up time. Which is by the way fifteen minutes everyday before bed. That way when kids are in bed I can actually sit down with my husband, without worrying about what needs to be picked up.
Cleaning the dish washer while waiting for coffee? 8/10 (not 10/10 because being awake in the morning is mildly annoying.)
Fixing the bed WHILE IN BED?!?! 10/10
Tidy the entrance in the evening? 10/10. I always forget that the Love-seat, recliner and general entry way is NOT a pants drawer & coat rack.
Clear clutter hot spots? 10/10. The clutter is the problem. It starts with one paper plate, then someone gets asked for chocolate without specifying which kind and suddenly there's a plastic bag from Ralph's full of Reese's, Snickers and generic milk chocolate.
Thank you Laura!
My trick for unexpected guests is to present them with this:
One thing that I do is keep a spray bottle with cleaner and a cloth under the kitchen sink so that I can quickly wipe up spills on the kitchen floor as they happen. This increases the time between necessary full-floor mopping. When that is necessary I use a sponge mop and water over a five foot deep section of the floor, then immediately dry-mop that section with a terry-cloth covered shmopp; repeat on the next section of the floor. This results in no streaks and I can do the whole kitchen floor in five minutes.
I also keep four laundry baskets in a closet next to my washer and dryer: whites; light colors; dark colors and red; and cloths used for cleaning, grubby gardening clothes including gloves, and general work or cooking clothes that have stains or might stain other items. My trip from the bedroom to the kitchen to make breakfast is interrupted by depositing yesterday's dirty clothes in the appropriate basket. If one is full it can be started while the oatmeal microwaves.
A lazy help--we have cleaners who come every two weeks. It doesn't take much to get rid of the last vestiges of clutter the evening before they come so that the whole place looks amazing when we come home after they have been here. Somehow this bi-weekly reminder to take out the old newspapers, to finally file those last papers, or to part with a forlorn flower arrangement works for us. I could comment that part of the reason that the house looks so good after they have been here is that, in addition to real cleaning and polishing, they also straighten all the throws and chairs that got misaligned, plump the pillows, and arrange the objects on the tables neatly; these are little things that one can overlook but when fixed make a big difference.
- Break big jobs up into parts which don't overwhelm: Sweep the kitchen floor and consolidate the dirties / put away clean dishes & load dishwasher / clean sink, stove, appliances / wash up hand-washables / wipe counters and consider yourself done. Take significant breaks between all parts.
- Beds need airing! Turn the covers down completely and move the pillows when you get up. After coffee/breakfast, shake bottom sheet from one corner, shake and pull up duvet, fluff and place pillows. Takes about one minute.
- Agree completely with taking one item to its proper place pretty much every time you move through the house. Works miracles.
- Favorite housekeeping tool? A manual (not re-chargeable) carpet sweeper. Astounding what it picks up, is no more effort than a broom, keeps carpets tidy-looking between vacuums.
And one more. Ignore the fridge coils at your peril. You will pay for it in shorter life of the appliance, and higher energy bills. It isn't a big deal to yank it out for a vacuuming every few months, and you won't believe what it back there.
I am fortunate that I have my office at home so it's easier to fit in a lot of chores in between work, unless I have outside appointments. I have found that if I can dedicate at least 30 minutes each day to thoroughly clean one room, the house will get a thorough regular cleaning every week, and then apply the tips in your article to keep everything tidy.
Went to a mattress seminar once and learnt that your mattress will last a lot longer if you turn it regularly... HOW TO REMEMBER???? I wrote on the corners = one has Jan/Feb/Marc then the opposite corner has April/May June then on the other side has the other six months. REALLY EASY NOW When I change the sheets close to the beginning of the "moving month" I just turn the mattress....
Get your hubby to pitch in! Who says you have to do it all if both is working?
Cleaning doesn't have to be boring. My husband does his bit of the 'women' chores. We put on some good music and then we clean for about an hour on the week ends. We dance with the vacuum, mop and each other, clean, hug, clean,.... downside is having to make the bed twice.
And everything is clean. Sofas vacuumed, floors mopped (under furniture's too), behind and under stove and fridge (we hate roaches!).
As we go in the week:
Bathroom: After shower, do a quick rinse off walls and floors before turning off the water. As we like clean things the towel gets used once, us-walls-floors (tub)-bin.
Same with the finger towel by the sink. That leaves the toilet...a 20 sec. job.
Bed: last one out pulls sheets and duvet and shakes it on the balcony (30 sec.) First one makes coffee (strong) and loads the washer. One showers, one makes the bed and straighten the sofa. The other one shower while the first takes a quick mop to the floor (dogs). Eat breakfast together, one tidy kitchen the other walks the dogs and feeds the cats. This takes us less then 45 min in the morning and we come home to a nice tidy and fresh home after long day. Feels good. Doing all this together bonds us, to each other and our home. Very often, when we are done, we look at each other and say: "You know what? We did good!"
On bed making, yes straighten sheets etc while still in bed but then roll back carefully as far as will go, plump pillows and leave to air - open window- then later just roll back up.
I always keep additional cleaning stuff in bathroom and upstairs, so close by for a quick clean.
Best tip is that a tidy room looks cleaner than an untidy one, so just cleaning up the clutter, folding clothes, plumping cushions, will make the room look cleaner and make you feel better.
And white, light furniture and carpets do not show up dust as much as dark ones.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/4181629.stm
But not making the bed up immediately after you get out (or while still in it -- I still say ewwww) makes good sense. You need to air it for an hour or so to make sure it's dry before you shake the bedding (getting rid of mites and what they feed on). It smells better, feels better, looks better. For you, not just your company.
Sad to say, very FEW people do the tidy as you go thing. If you don't believe that, ask a professional house cleaner. They will lament the difficulty in actually cleaning a home for the clutter and surface messes, and failure to do a single thing between cleanings.. My sister is a pro, I feed her clients from my design business. But I often feel like I am setting her up for torture. She has one home, where she ROUTINELY does ten loads of wash in their double sets of wash/dry, and often can not get to a large chunk of the first floor at all. She never catches up, despite being there weekly. She offers "specials" on deep clean for a specific room every season, and few take the bait. It drives her insane, because a house being cleaned weekly, without a pause for attention to deep clean every six months, ends up being a surface clean home over time. Some will not believe that, but try six hours with no lunch in a 6000 sq foot house....trust me, you need special days for specific deep clean tasks where you can skip the rest.
As to the dirty jobs.... they aren't nearly as "dirty" when done every six months. There is no "easy" just dig in!!! ?? Remove clutter, wash, dust, polish etc...lol
http://www.imperfecthomemaking.com/p/thorough-spring-cleaning-checklist.html
PLEASE DO NOT SHOOT THE MESSENGER LADIES...!!!!!
Give the writer( Laura) a break huh? This is hardly "new" stuff. It is clean/pick up/tidy as you go and make the mess. and a lot of it is nothing more than USE YER NOGGIN! Do the task while the task is small. Don't save up for later, as later is harder, and inclined not to ever come. It isn't rocket science, it mimics the cycle of a day of life in a home, whether tent, trailer, or mansion... with all due respect to flying ladies : ) of course.
I am getting my taxes ready for the accountant while I see hear the "ping" on the mac : ) I am a multi tasker to the max.... I have laundrygoing as we speak, the next "ding" will be the DRYER LOL
Sorry I try not to be negative here but this one is important. It may not necessary be the machines fault. Clothes can over heat too and then combust. Best to ring your fire dept if your queering this.
@JanMoyer – Your sister may be a better cleaner, than a businesswoman! Her clients may just be cheap .. and if she continues to try squeezing in all the cleaning AND laundry, and as you say, “never catching up” .. her clients will continue to overload her to get (more than) their money’s worth! If she knows that doing a thorough cleaning of a home takes all day, she shouldn’t try to include laundry with the “package”, but say that takes extra time at additional cost .. and at least she'd be able to finish the routine house cleaning.
@Susanh316 – I think my fairly new dryer has a sensor that tells you the “filter’s clogged”, unless you take it out before the next load. Once or twice I didn’t take it out, and got the warning .. but the filter was clean because the last load had almost no lint, so I’m guessing that’s a safety system to remind people to clean the lint filter every time it’s used!
give them a 15 minute WARNING, they need to pick up and put away everything of "thiers" before I do the laundry basket... ( If mom puts it in the laundry basket, it STAYS THEIR UNTIL SUNDAY NIGHT!).... so, if you are missing homework, school book, gym shoes.... OH well, YOU explain it to the teacher/coach.... and guess what( the kids don't FORGET AGAIN!!)
My son, lost every pair of shoes, and a history book in one week..... after having to wear gym shoes for the rest of the week full time, and explain to teacher where his book was, he didn't lose them again :)
One last thing - the personal feud via Houzz has taken what should have been a light hearted and helpful column into a cat fight and that's a waste of time.
Keep small garbage bags, a roll of paper towels, and a pack of Windex wipes in every bathroom.
If you are remodeling, install electric plugs INSIDE bathroom riser cabinets and in the cabinet under the sink. Keep a DustBuster type hand vac under the sink. Electric razors, toothbrushes, etc will stay hidden inside cabinets. It keeps your countertop free of messy items and makes it easier to wipe everything down quickly. The handvac gets hair off the bathroom floor quickly.
Buy a high end vacuum with a wood floor setting. It's much easier and quicker than sweeping and works great for areas containing cat litter.
Never buy more than one extra of everything you need unless you have massive amounts of storage or a huge family. Costco sized quantities sit around collecting dust and cluttering space. It's easier to buy a replacement supply as you get close to running out than it is to have things tumbling out of messy cabinets every time you open them.
Buy an extra carafe or two for your coffee maker so that you always have a clean one on hand instead of having to wash the one you used that morning as you're rushing out to work. The used one can go straight into the dishwasher until you're ready to run it.
Now we have children, they contribute to the hour of power by tidying their bedrooms and the playroom. IN winter we tend to alternate stripping the beds ours one week, kids beds the next...in summer it becomes hour and half of power cause we try to do all the beds every week and then there is more laundry as well!!!
And now we go to swimming lessons, choir and football instead of breakfast!!! Sometimes we'll skip the whole routine and go for an early breakfast as a family or one of us will go with one of the children for some one-on-one time....after all family is much more important than the home and you have to live life :)
We've added "5 minutes of power" to each morning before we walk out the door and each evening before they hop into bed. I doesn't always go to plan, but it makes life with 3 children in a small home much more manageable and the adults get the rest in the evenings after the kids are in bed :)
It keeps me from getting bored with cleaning or spending lots of time moving things from room to room and getting sidetracked. If I get interrupted and cannot finish everything, all the rooms have received some attention and the whole house looks better.
Yeah, it's kind of my little mind game - just do whatever works for you.
But when I went to bed last night I dreamed that I was whirling through the house with micropore slippers on my feet, mitts on my hands, a duster in my teeth, and a swiffer ready to go...washing machine rumbling away in the background. I woke up exhausted. Incidentally, those micropore slippers can be dangerous. Don't wear both together unless you are a champion skater... dusting the floor with one foot is a good leg exercise, as my physio pointed out when she found me at work. But if you are elderly, have something to hold onto which you do this.
At almost 70, I am not going to make a fetish of an immaculate house. I deep clean one room a month. I don't have a dishwasher so dishes get washed up meal by meal. Clothes dry outside the kitchen window. Dusting gets done daily on a surface basis, once a week totally. I vacuum my books every couple of months. My husband does the ironing, sets the table, makes tea and helps to make the bed as I can't bend. I cook, he brings the groceries.
Now can we start a new thread on ways to simplify housework for the elderly?
Or for the handicapped? I'd love to hear suggestions for both.
I don’t know how my mother did it. She worked full time with raising three kids and the house was always Martha clean with not a lot of clutter. In hindsight, I do know that we all sucked at contributing to the upkeep, (memories of her banging the vacuum on my closed bedroom door on Saturdays,) but I do think younger generations are getting better at it. Or at least I hope so.
Simplifying housework for the elderly?? - I am simplifying the house, ignoring trends, simple easy clean surfaces and furniture with extra height - I have have even just installed two extra high toilets - drawers instead of cupboards or I use baskets on low shelves to easily access things. Paring down accessories, less to dust and clean and minimising everything to create more space and so family won't have a big job when I am gone. Oh, and I am installing soft touch closing doors and drawers - even the toilet seat and lid - for a deaf husband who doesn't realise how much noise he makes.
But yes, higher counters, fewer places to dump things, a place for everything. I look for ways to minimise the work, so now most of my books are now behind glass. I use a dustpan on a long handle to pick up things I have dropped as well as collecting dust! (it gets cleaned first). Long handles on almost everything, come to think of it. I put the shelves under the kitchen counter on runners so i can pull them out to clean and retrieve pans and dishes. And like you said, drawers, not shelves. Less dust, easier to get at.
I sit on a stool to access low shelves and drawers. I use a library stool to access high shelves. And the knick knack collection of 45 years is slowly being given away to anybody that says, I like!
My husband still works full time, so he can't share all of the chores, but he wakes me with a cup of tea, and makes salad when he comes home. He does all the ironing and the shopping... Takes out the trash, sets the table and helps to clear it. At night he removes and folds the bedcover. He does what he can to help, and I think that's great.
What doesn't make sense, then, is that it becomes a thoughtless phobia ("never!"). If you have a well-maintained, quality dryer which you're using correctly (not trying to dry things which will emit flammable fumes), I can't see where it's such an issue to let it run when you're out.
Some of us live in cities where the cost of electricity varies depending upon the time of day. Weekends tend to be off-peak, so I save my laundry for then. We all have a minimum of five pairs of undies each to get us through to then. :-)
Also, steam or no steam, good microfiber cloths never leave lint on your mirror. You only need a spritz of water to do the bulk of your cleaning, saving the need for chemicals.
My own routine with three kids and two pets is to do a task a day; in a two-week period you can cycle through the list with minimum effort. There is nothing more depressing than the self-imposed guilt that comes from avoiding a monumental cleaning project - you end up sitting at the computer instead and blaming Houzz for distracting you with the pornography of perfect-looking-other-people's houses!
And believe me if anyone would like to knock a load off their chore list, it would be me. I do an average of 3 loads DAILY...if not more. But remembertThere is always some other...safe time.
Also, once a year get your vents, including dryer vent, cleaned, particularly if you have had any renovation. It is incredible how much dust gets recirculated through your central heating vac system, so no matter how often you dust, or despite it, you are losing the dust battle. Worse if you have wall to wall carpets, but if that is your preference or you are stuck with it, then vent cleaning will help.
We get the windows professionally washed once a year, and it makes a huge difference, everything loos so much brighter and neater.
Also, a floor steamer dies a great job, dual,y comes with attachments for showers, uses no chemicals and eaves a sparkling floor with zero residue. Every few years it is worth sending the money to get a pro steam clean of kitchen floors and showers. Unless you have mold (open the windows after a shower) it will make everything look new.
As for tidying.... I think that we are all largely trained as kids. I grew up with a tidy mom, my hubby did not. He can get the job done but rarely sees the point. I am trying to teach our little guy that at the end of the day you put away toys, dirty clothes in a laundry bin not on the floor, you hang everything at the door when you come in (he does it but his hat and mitts still get dumped occasionally on the bench or whatever). As for shoes in the house - absolutely not acceptable at our house. Sure, if we host a fancy dinner party then it's OK for guests, but they don't traipse through the entire house and it all gets cleaned the next day. I could never understand why anyone would want to go to their bedroom in shoes they wore through dirty city streets, or farm dust or whatever.
Finally, if you can afford it, get help for the big cleaning jobs and use the saved time to keep things tidy - no one but you can organize your fridge, pantry, closet or bookshelves. It can save your sanity to come home to a clean house, because no matter what anyone says, I really believe that living in a messy, dirty place does impact how you feel even if you are not aware of it.
I love this idea book. Love all the photos and ideas.
I'm in middle of a remodel, have been for 3 months, so this is hard to do, but the routine part is still doable and really helps with my sanity!
We have 5 kids and when more were at home, everyone was suppose to try to hang their towels in their rooms and use them at least twice. This didn't always work in the humid summers, but better in winter because the heated house dried out the towels.
Now that I have more time on my hands, it's not a chore to do laundry. I like the smell and feel of fresh towels as I fold them! :)
For the women who have husbands like I did who just toss their coat on any piece of furniture they like, you can do what I did and add a bit of humor. For one week I documented each of the locations my husband deposited his coat by taking a picture using my cell phone. Then after a week, I posted a humorous account of Facebook called "A day in the life of (husband's name) coat. I then attached all the pictures of where his coat had been all week. Let's just say my husband has a good sense of humor and since then he has made sure to put his coat away in the closet when he gets home. LOL
Vinyl fence
I decided to try something to see how it worked and it does work and it is easy.
I fill a spray bottle with half vinegar and half water and a few drops of bleach alternative clear joy dishwashing soap.
When I get out of the shower I spray it, the tub (from having bath night before, and the lavatory and any surface that needs it.
I have old washcloths for the purpose of wiping the tub out ready to go and then I wipe the handle on the shower (rail) because it is bronze and I don't like it to stay wet. Then I swipe the lavatory. It takes me about 3 minutes and the bathroom is clean.
I use this same mixture for the toilets and do them about 2 times a week.
I mix half bleach and half water and put it in a dishwashing container and squeeze it under the rim of the toiler and in it and let it set and just flush, and I only have to use the brush on it every few months.
I was surprised this works so well.
It is just my bathroom so this is not a busy bathroom. My husband takes showers in it but other than that it gets only my use. Maybe that is why it is easy to clean... might not work if it was a busy bathroom.
I deliberately didn't get glass doors on my shower because I like to have a white curtain that I can take down every so often and throw in with my white towels and bleach.
Using all white towels is easy for me because I don't have to worry about sorting colors.
I have loved these results and now use only vinegar and water to clean with.
I even use it on my cherry floors if they need it.
I save money on cleaning supplies.
Bleach and vinegar are my 2 cleaning friends.
In the laundry we installed an inexpensive hanging rail above the laundry tub so you can dry up to 20 shirts on clothes hangers there rather than trudging out to the clothes line, which makes me less inclined to run the dryer.
Regarding the clothes dryer safety issue - we installed a new fire alarm just outside the laundry door so I can sleep easier at night now when I run my dryer, as will get an early warning if there is a fire. Best $20 we ever spent.