Make a Plan
Make a Plan
Make a plan today. Your family may not be together if an emergency or disaster strikes, so it is important to know which types of hazards could affect your area. Know how you’ll contact one another and reconnect if separated. Establish a family meeting place that’s familiar and easy to find. Put in place a guardian/emergency contact if you may not be able to get your children at school. As you prepare your plan tailor your plans and supplies to your specific daily living needs and responsibilities.
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Checklists
The best way to help in your community is to be prepared. In case you have to immediately evacuate your home, prepare a "go bag" for each person and your pets. If you are in Washington State, have at least two weeks' supplies of food, water, medications, and basic needs in case you are cut off from services and asked to remain in your home. Have a plan. Do your family members know your meet up locations? Do you have an out-of-area contact that everyone knows to check-in with in the event of a major disaster? Do you have a well-stocked first-aid kit in your home and vehicle? Plan today for your possible needs of tomorrow. It is always better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it. Make an emergency plan today.
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Consider
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Talking with your family
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How will you reunite with family?
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Where is your meeting location outside your home?
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Where is your meeting location far away from home?
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What are alternative routes to home, work, or other important locations?
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Know your children’s/families routes – so you can backtrack.
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Parents can sit down with their children and discuss the possibility that they could be separated in the event of a disaster or emergency.
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What are your work, school or day care emergency plans?
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Who is your out-of-area contact?
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What if you have no electricity?
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What if you have no water services?
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What phone numbers should you have written down or memorized?
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Have Cash, Documents, Insurance
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Know your immediate evacuation route
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Remember to plan for family members that might need extra help with walking, seeing, or hearing
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Include your pets in the plan
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Visit Floodsmart.gov to learn more about flood insurance and how to protect your home or business
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Complete an Emergency Financial First Aid Kit (EFFAK)
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Have a shelter plan
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Download and fill out a family Emergency Plan for Parents
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Once families have a plan in place: practice, practice, practice! Send your child to school with the confidence that they're prepared for disaster!
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Packing a Go Bag is vital to you and each person in your family. You can visit Ready.gov for more info but here are some tips to help you get started. Each person (and pet) in the family needs a backpack or duffel bag
Communication Plan
Keeping everyone connected when disaster strikes is key. How would you make sure everyone is safe? To avoid trouble with land lines, establish a pre-arranged contact out of state. 2 Weeks Ready - Communications If someone is trying to call home in the disaster zone, the call may not go through. Use text messages. Family communication plan contact template for kids. Here is more information about my family/household communication plan
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Important and Valuable Documents
Take photos of all the rooms in your home and your valuables. Store them on a flash drive, hard copy etc. and keep them in your bag.
Scan your important documents onto a flash drive to keep it in your go bag.
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driver license
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deed to house
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Will
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insurance
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medical records/medication list
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passport
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Social Security Insurance (SSI) info
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birth certificate
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personal contacts
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your pets medical records
This is all very personal information so keep it as secure as you possibly can when you are storing your copies of these things. Never trust your information to be held by someone else. For more information click FEMA's Keep Your Important Documents Safe from a Disaster and Financial Preparedness
Financial Preparedness
Americans at all income levels have experienced the challenges of rebuilding their lives after a disaster or other emergency. In these stressful circumstances, having access to personal financial, insurance, medical, and other records is crucial for starting the recovery process quickly and efficiently. Click Here
Under The Bed
Be Ready to respond - day or night: Although rare, emergencies are likely to happen to all of us at some point. The last place you want to be during an emergency is caught unawares, especially if you are asleep. Set yourself up for defense by emergency-proofing your bedroom now. Then, you (and your bedroom) will be prepared to meet any kind of emergency.
Now, when an earthquake or other disaster happens in the middle of the night, you will have at your fingertips: shoes to protect your feet from glass and other sharp items, gloves to protect your hands, a flashlight to see your way out and a whistle to let everyone know where you are – either outside and safe (thank goodness) or still inside and need help (can you hear my WHISTLE?).
Hazard Hunt
All of Washington State has the potential of being impacted by a major earthquake. Earthquakes strike suddenly and without warning. When they occur, they cause the ground to undulate and shake, perhaps violently. Buildings – and their contents – are vulnerable to this rocking and rolling. Fortunately, experts teach how to secure homes to their foundations, and contents to wall studs. Here are recommendations for reducing earthquake hazards in your home.
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Fit gas appliances with flexible connections and/or a breakaway gas shut-off device, or install a main gas shut-off device.
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Secure water heater(s) to walls.
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Anchor bookcases and filing cabinets to walls.
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Install latches on drawers and cabinet doors to keep contents from spilling out.
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Install ledge barriers on shelves, place heavy items on lower shelves, and secure large, heavy items and breakables directly to shelves.
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Attach computers and small appliances to desks, tables or countertops.
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Secure ceiling lights, suspended ceilings and other hanging items such as chandeliers and plants to the permanent structure of your house.
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Apply safety film to windows and glass doors.
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Anchor large appliances to walls using safety cables or straps. Lock the rollers of any large appliances or pieces of furniture.
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Prepare children
Many thanks to Dan Good, Snohomish County Emergency Management. He suggests parents of elementary age children put a small kit in every child's backpack, only to be opened during an emergency. It would include:
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A letter with photos's of mom, dad and siblings. (label only to be opened during an emergency)
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small amount of cash
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light stick
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emergency blanket (Mylar)
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a little bit of candy or something small to give comfort to the child.
Sample Comfort Letters:
Dear _____________, Since you are reading this letter, there must have been an emergency while you were at school. Emergencies can be scary. The good thing is that they usually don’t last very long. Things will get better. Please try to be brave, and even helpful if you can. We are trying to get to you as soon as we can. Please be patient and remember that we love you and are thinking of you. Love, _____________
Dear _____________, We love you very much and want you to know that this is a time to be brave and helpful. Please don’t worry about your family. We know that you will be safe at school. We will all be making the safest choices wherever we are, and someone will be there to pick you up as soon as possible. In the meantime, stay calm and follow the directions you are given. Love, ____________
You can also help by preparing a simple emergency card for your student in their backpack that includes: Their name, month/year of birth (for medication dispensing), address, parent’s name/phone (home/cell), allergies, medical conditions, and if he or she wears contact lenses. For the student’s own benefit, you may wish to include your cell and work phone numbers, as well as your family’s out-of-state contact person’s name and phone numbers.
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Girl Scouts
Girl Scouts of Western Washington wants to make Emergency Preparedness fun for girls and volunteers. It is the intent of this patch program to take the fear away and replace it with empowered Girl Scouts! Through this patch program, it is our hope to encourage Girl Scouts to engage in building resilience at the neighborhood level. Once completed, Girl Scouts will not only have taken charge of their learning but will be prepared and capable of taking a leadership role in their families and communities about preparedness. Many in government agencies are surprised to learn that all Girl Scout leaders are required to be First Aid/CPR/AED certified. They do not realize that through our badge and journey programs, most girls have earned their First Aid badge. Many of our older girls have earned Shelter Management and Wilderness First Aid Certificates. In a large-scale disaster, and even in a smaller event, Girl Scouts can play a role in resilience and recovery. The requirements for this patch program can be done individually, as a family, or as a troop. You do not need to do this on your own; however, there are lots of folks in your community who can help. Don’t be afraid to reach out to your County Department of Emergency Management, local Fire or Police Department, the American Red Cross, or even your local veterinarian.
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Boy Scouts of America(BSA)
From its beginning, the Scouting movement has taught young people to do their best, to do their duty to God and country, to help others, and to prepare themselves physically, mentally, and morally to meet these goals. The basic aims of Scouting include teaching young people to take care of themselves, to be helpful to others, and to develop courage, self-reliance, and the ability to be ready to serve in an emergency.
The Emergency Preparedness BSA Award, first introduced in 2003 and updated in 2014, was designed with the aims mentioned above in mind. The award has been earned by tens of thousands of Scouts and Scouters individually, with their unit, or at a large event such as a jamboree. By developing these lifelong skills, Scouts have been instrumental in helping their communities recover from emergencies. Click here for more information
American Red Cross - Pillowcases for Emergencies
At the Pillowcase Project, kids, ages 8 to 11, decorated pillowcases for use in an emergency supplies kit. Parents were also encouraged to join the fun. The American Red Cross (ARC) hosts fun events like this to help kids prepare for disasters.
The Pillowcase Project was inspired by Loyola University students during Hurricane Katrina in 2005. A Red Cross official saw students carrying their things in pillowcases and came up with the idea for the project. Now sponsored by Walt Disney Co., Pillowcase Project resources are used in schools around the country.
Kett used games to act out disasters that might occur in the Washington State area. He first asked the students how they would respond in an emergency. He then helped them understand the right actions to take. The children also got an activity book to help them start a family emergency plan and build a personal emergency supplies kit.
It is easy to build an emergency supplies kit with a pillowcase. The American Red Cross suggests adding a flashlight, food that will not go bad, water, and a comforting item such as a stuffed animal. You can learn more about The Pillowcase Project and other preparedness tools here. If you have any questions about The Pillowcase Project, please contact your local Red Cross location. For more information on how to plan ahead for natural disasters, visit https://www.ready.gov/kids/make-a-plan. You can find the original article about the Pillowcase Project event here
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Student Reunification
Plan for Student Disaster Release - Reunification. Students will only be released to designated emergency contacts. Photo ID is absolutely required.
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Reduce traffic congestion – carpool or walk if possible
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Make sure roads are safe to travel on and do not rush
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You will receive communications from the District office. Please comply if a delayed pick up time is announced. The student release process will go faster if school staff has time to set up before parents arrive.
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Above all, remain patient. This process was designed with your child’s safety in mind.
SUGGESTION: Review procedures with your students and your designated guardians, emergency contacts. You may wish to give your school a longer list of emergency contacts authorized specifically for district-wide emergencies. For example, neighbors and parents of school friends. Be sure your contacts know how to reach you via phone, text, email. In the Northshore School District (NSD), Parentvue is used to keep all contact information and this will be used in the reunification process.
Register Yourself as “Safe and Well”
After a disaster, letting your family and friends know that you are safe and well can bring your loved ones great peace of mind. earch for Loved Ones
Concerned family and friends can search the list of those who have registered themselves as “safe and well” by clicking on the “Search Registrants” button. The results of a successful search will display a loved one’s first name, last name and a brief message.
This American Red Cross website is designed to help make that communication easier.
Animals and Pets
Some of the things you can do to prepare for the unexpected, such as assembling an animal emergency supply kit and developing a pet care buddy system, are the same for any emergency. Whether you decide to stay put in an emergency or evacuate to a safer location, you will need to make plans in advance for your pets. Keep in mind that what's best for you is typically what's best for your animals.
Our partners at the Federal Emergency Management Agency have developed several resources to help you care for your animals and prepare for a disaster.
Additional resources:
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Saving the Whole Family (AVMA)
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Special Consideration for Birds, Reptiles, and Small Animals (ASPCA)
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Ready.gov: Pets and Animals
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Preparing Your Pets for Emergencies Makes Sense. Get Ready Now(Ready.gov)
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Also available in Spanish
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Pets and Disaster Safety Checklist (American Red Cross)
Practice & Drills
Practice your plan with your family/household
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Sign up for alerts and warnings in your area
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Practice your fire escape plan by having a home fire drill at least twice a year with everyone in the home
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Do a communications drill with your out-of-area contact and circle of family and friends, both via text and call
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Practice evacuating in the car with your animals, so they’re more familiar if you need to evacuate in an emergency
Get the @fema app with weather alerts for up to 5 locations, plus disaster resources and safety tips: fema.gov/mobile-app