Child-proofing a home is an important job ... and a business for one entrepreneur. STEVE STEIN STAFF WRITER Above: Shoshana Wolf is safe and sound in her home. Right: Aaron Ozrovitr is president of the Child Safety Company. hoshana Wolf is a typical 2-year-old. Curious. Mischievous. Quicker than a blink of her mother's eye. That's why her parents, Phillip and Cindy Wolf, have taken many mea- sures to child-proof their 2,300-square- foot West Bloomfield colonial with its four bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths and finished base- ment. One of the steps they took just after moving into the house in August was to hire Aaron Ozrovitz, president of the Child Safety Company, a home-based Southfield business. Mr. Ozrovitz checks both new and lived-in homes for possible child safety problems and recommends solutions. • Many of his ideas are common sense and can be done by a family without costing a penny. Some need the installation of devices, which Mr. Ozrovitz will do if needed. Mr. Ozrovitz generally charges $50 for a two- hour safety inspection plus $20 for each addi- tional hour. Those fees are taken off the labor costs if Mr. Ozrovitz does work at the home. In the Wolf household, gates prevent Shoshana from getting into the living/dining room area and stop her from climbing up and down stairs. When she is allowed on the stairs going to the second floor, she can hang onto her own, child- sized railing. A Plexiglass bannister guard stops her from getting her head caught in the "adult" railing. Door jambs prevent Shoshana from slamming her hand. Boards are in place between the wash- er and dryer and the laundry room wall. Window blinds are short, and the chains are far from the ground. Valuables are out of reach. Electrical out- lets are protected as are kitchen drawers, toilets, floor vents and the VCR. The VCR? "A couple of years ago, a young boy who lives in the Detroit area got his hand caught inside a VCR. When he tried to get it out, he accidental- ly turned on the play button and he ended up los- ing part of his finger," Mr. Ozrovitz said. Also in the Wolf home, a bookcase in the family room is bolted to the wall. "Shoshana is a climber," Mrs. Wolf explained as her daughter Shaina, 14, nodded in agreement. There are carbon dioxide and smoke detectors in the Wolf house and the water has been tested for chlorine and lead. Even though the Wolf home doesn't have one, Mr. Ozrovitz offers a hearth guard for a fireplace. "Without the safety devices in our home, I would be a nervous wreck," Ms. Wolf admitted. "When I go to friends' houses which aren't child- proofed, I get nervous." Mr. Ozrovitz, 31, who is single, has been run- ning the Child Safety Company for four years. He was involved in his family's Fairlane Drugs chain before it was sold in 1990. A Southfield-Lathrup High School and East- ern Michigan University graduate, Mr. Ozrovitz said he began the Child Safety Company after a friend said he couldn't find professional help to child-proof his home. Mr. Ozrovitz claims he is the first company in the state to offer child-proof- ing. These days, Mr. Ozrovitz is calling on four to five homes a week. He does much public speak- ing on child safety and he has been interviewed several times by radio and television reporters. He is a member of the Michigan Association of Home Builders and the National SAFE KIDS Campaign. Among the cost-free safety measures Mr. Ozrovitz recommends parents undertake are re- moving mobiles from a crib after a child is 6 months old; making sure the hot water temper- ature in the house doesn't go higher than 120 de- grees; checking to make sure toys aren't broken or cracked; removing tags from garments; using only plastic tube hangers; keeping buttons and keys out of reach; tying plastic bags in knots when throwing them out; making sure used disposable razors, Q-tips and cotton balls are not accessible to children; storing soaps and shampoos out of reach in the bathroom; and not giving a child ac- cess to house plants, many of which are toxic. ❑