May 17, 2012

Home Emergency Plan

This topic has 3 voices, contains 2 replies, and was last updated by  Lindarx 163 days ago.

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November 25, 2011 at 1:14 pm #1341

Jim Wilbanks

Emergency preparedness starts at home. You should have a personal/family disaster plan, and it should be written down and practiced.

Some things (probably not all) that need to be in your plan:

• Be prepared to exist for at least 3 days without outside help.
• Prepare your home—secure all outside accessories—they can become missiles.
• Prepare for electricity outages
• Videotape or take pictures of the contents of your home, and store them off-site.
• If you are told to leave your home, plan beforehand where you will go.
• Have a week’s supply of non-perishable foods for your family and pets.
• Prepare 2-liter bottles for an emergency supply of water.
• Make sure you have a flood-insurance rider to your homeowner’s policy.
• Determine where the safest place in your home is for wind and water emergencies.
• For fire emergencies, have a rally point where everyone in the house reports as they exit the house.
• Make sure you have at least a 30-day supply of prescription drugs, ask your physician for nonperishable prescriptions for necessary drugs.
• Stock plenty of batteries for your flashlights, radios, cameras, phone and the like.
• As a situation develops, charge all cell phones and the like.
• Be sure you have a battery powered or crank weather radio for warnings.
• Locate valuable papers and put them in a safe, off-site location, or secure them in a watertight envelop to take them with you.
• Equip you home with working smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors.
• If your bedrooms are on a higher floor, make sure you have emergency ladders and know how to use them.
• Determine environmental factors, such as trees overhanging your home that need to be addressed before disaster.

Having a plan is only the beginning. Family discussions and practice are needed. Some disasters are slow moving and give time to get ready. A fire in your home at 2AM is a catastrophe in the making, giving little time to act to save yourself and your family. Prepare your own plan, and have a fire drill some dark night. It might save your life.

November 29, 2011 at 9:52 am #1393

Webmaster

I would also like to have at least 6 months worth of food (eFoods Direct) and an unlimited supply of clean water (Berkey). I love those eFoods Nutriversal meals, plus they’re great to store for emergencies. In fact I liked them so much I became a distributor! Definitely we should all be prepared. Emergencies can happen any time anywhere.

December 6, 2011 at 10:54 am #1408

Lindarx

This is a great post.I will have to do a list and plan something ahead.Thanks for the tips and let’s hope that emergencies never happen,but at least we will be prepared for them.

Funny

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