Posts Tagged ‘Prepardness’

EVERY INDIVIDUAL, FAMILY, NEIGHBORHOOD, . . . .

Sunday, October 24th, 2010

EVERY INDIVIDUAL, FAMILY, NEIGHBORHOOD, OR COMMUNTITY NEEDS A DISASTER PLAN********

*(I have been ask why I want to store food. Beyond the fact that I like to eat, I like to eat no-matter how tough things may become, any number of things could happen, that could cause us to need our food storage, illness, unemployment or death of the breadwinner in the family.)

Winter Storm
Bomb Threat
Structural Failure
Wild land Fire
Transportation Failure
Earthquake
Utility Failure
Terrorism
Cold/Heat Wave
Hazardous Materials
Pandemic Influenza

FAMILY EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS GUIDE

(The following information comes from Southwest Utah Public Health Department
In partnership with Beaver, Garfield, Kane, Iron, and Washington
Emergency Management Department and is quoted in a serious of articles.)

YOUR FAMILY DISASTER PLAN

Disaster can strike quickly and without warning. It can force you to evacuate your neighborhood or confine you to your home. What would you do if basic services – water, gas, electricity or telephones – were cut off? Local officials and relief workers will be on the scene after a disaster, but they cannot reach everyone right away. Medical help may not arrive at all. 9-1-1 will be totally overwhelmed in a major disaster.
Families can – and do – cope with disaster by preparing in advance and working together as a team. Follow the steps listed in this article to create your family’s disaster plan. Knowing what to do is your best protection and your responsibility.
Where will your family be when disaster strikes? They could be anywhere – at work, at school or in the car.

How will you find each other? Will you know if your children are safe?

FOUR STEPS TO SAFETY

1. Find Out What Could Happen to You

Disasters that May Affect Your Family
Natural Human Technological
Winter Storm Bomb Threat Structural Failure
Wild land fire Fire Transportation Failure
Earthquake Utility Failure Terrorism
Cold/Heat Wave Hazardous Material Pandemic Influenza

2. Create a Disaster Plan
Meet with your family and discuss why you need to prepare for disaster. Explain the dangers of fire, severe weather and earthquakes to children. Plan to share responsibilities and work together as a team.
• Discuss the types of disasters that are most likely to happen. Explain what to do in each case.
• Pick two places to meet:

1. Right outside your home in case of a sudden emergency, like a fire.

2. Outside your neighborhood in case you can’t return home. Everyone must know the address and phone number.
• Ask an out-of-state friend or relative to be your “family contact.” After a disaster, it’s often easier to call long distance. Other family members should call this person and tell them where they are. Everyone must know your contact’s phone number.
• Discuss what to do in an evacuation. Plan how to take care of your pets.

3. Complete This Checklist
• Post emergency telephone number by phone (fire, police, ambulance, etc.).
• Teach children how and when to call 9-1-1 or your local Emergency Medical Services number for emergency help.
• Show each family member how and when to turn off the water, gas, and electricity at the main switches.
• Check if you have adequate insurance coverage.
• Teach each family member how to use the fire extinguisher (ABC type), and show them where it’s kept.
• Install smoke detectors on each level of your home, especially near bedrooms.
• Conduct a home hazard hunt.
• Stock emergency supplies and assemble a Disaster Supplies Kit.
• Take a Red Cross first aid and CPR class.
• Determine the best escape routes from your home. Find two ways out of each room.
• Find the safe spots in your home for each type of disaster.

4. Practice and Maintain Your Plan
• Quiz your children every six months so they remember what to do.
• Conduct fire and emergency evacuation drills.
• Replace stored water every three months and stored food every according to the recommended. (This recommendation is made by the Southwest Utah Public Health department in their Family Emergency Preparedness Department. Other publications state longer periods of time. I believe the length of time for storage of water varies depending on how you store your water. (*Bottled water purchased from at the grocery store will have a use by date. Water that you store yourself will vary in the safe length of time that it may be stored depending on your method of storage. Also water may be boiled to kill bacteria. There are treatments for water on the market to make water you are uncertain of safe. These can be found at sporting goods shops and other places catering to hunters, fisherman and campers. Always, boil water you are uncertain of. Water that is stale but, not contaminated may be refreshed by shaking it. This will restore oxygen into the water. We will talk more about water in other articles. )
• Test and recharge your fire extinguisher(s) according to manufacturer’s instructions.
• Test your smoke detectors monthly and charge the batteries at least once a year. Every six months is even better.

*Comments made by blogger will be covered in depth in later articles.

September is National Preparedness Month.

Friday, August 13th, 2010

September is National Preparedness Month.

https://acrobat.com/#d=YM8xDvyUbT6w8anPpA9ajA

Click on the above link and you will be able to read the September 2010 National Preparedness Ready document.

This is a very useful document prepared for our use by the United States Government, to help us to be prepared for any emergency. We who have been blessed to have been born and raised here in the United States of American should truly be thankful for all our blessings and share these blessing with the less fortunate of the world. I truly believe that those of us who have been blessed to be born here in the United States of American have obligations to help the rest of the world and to share our abundance with the less fortunate.

In order to help others we must first be strong enough to do so. Work hard, take care of our own family, friends and neighbors. If we are not strong enough to take care of ourselves we will never be strong enough to take care of others.

Download the National Preparedness Council Toolkit, read it, put it in to practice in our everyday lives and then help others to do the same thing.