Are you prepared for a hurricane or natural disaster? Follow these tips to get prepared for the worst. Disaster can strike at any time! September is National Preparedness Month so I’ve put together these tips to help you prepare.
I’ve teamed up with Bloggin’ Mamas and the Ad Council to put together this informative post just in time for National Preparedness month. Now is the time to get prepared, if you haven’t already. The task might seem daunting at first, but there are some great resources out there to help you get started and be ready when disaster strikes.
Maybe you have been in a potentially disastrous situation before, or maybe you haven’t. Either way, there is nothing more important than being prepared. It’s important to make a plan now so that you will know where to meet, how to find each other following a disaster, and how to communicate in an emergency that works for your family’s specific communication needs. If being without access to medications, help, or other services you need to maintain your health, safety and independence for even a couple of hours or days could be devastating, and you need to be prepared more than ever. Many people who are elderly or have some type of disability are at even more of a disadvantage when disaster strikes.
Your ability to recover from an emergency tomorrow may depend on the planning and preparation you do today. It is SO important to advocate including people with disabilities and others with access and functional needs into emergency planning in your community. They may need help from you and from the community not only to plan but to put their plan into action should disaster strike. This guide provides tips which individuals with disabilities and others with access and functional needs, and the people who assist and support them, can take to prepare for emergencies before they happen.
Think about you, your family, and what your needs might be. As you are planning, also consider anyone you might know, friends, family, or someone in your community who might have a disability and need your assistance in planning and executing a disaster plan. This list will give you some ideas on how you can help.
Ready.Gov has a full page of information on how to prepare for a hurricane, what to do during a hurricane, and how to handle the devastation once the hurricane has passed. This is a perfect place to begin preparing your family for impending disaster. Even if the hurricane didn’t create a big disaster, wouldn’t it be a relief to have been prepared anyway?
Prepare an emergency preparedness kit
Everyone needs a disaster kit!
Here is what we have in ours:
- 3 days worth of water in big jugs as opposed to small bottles (more cost effective)
- We also fill up the bathtub with water just in case we need it
- 3 days worth of canned goods and other non-perishables (we do black beans, crackers, and peanut butter)
- Flashlights and extra batteries
- Crank radio
- Candles and lighter
- First aid kit
- Manual can opener
- Trash bags
- Duck tape
- Took kit
Be Informed
First, you need to be informed about potential emergencies and disasters where you live, work, or visit. Then, you can go about making a plan that fits you and your loved ones.
Make a Plan
Making a family emergency communication plan with your friends and family before a disaster occurs is important. Why? Because it will help you answer questions: how will you get in touch with each other? How will your family get to a safe place? It’s important to make a plan now so that you will know where to meet, how to find each other following a disaster, and how to communicate in an emergency that works for your family’s specific communication needs.
Get Involved
People with disabilities are encouraged to take a seat at their community and local government- level planning tables. Planning for emergencies and disasters with people who have disabilities and others with access and functional needs rather than planning for them will allow us to understand and address the needs of the whole community in a disaster.
For a full list of help with making your plan, what you might need, and ideas to get you started, visit the Ready.Gov Make A Plan page. They have a huge list of resources, many of them are things you would probably never think you might need in a disaster situation.
Parents can even get the kids in on the disaster planning fun!
Disasters affect everyone. So it takes everyone – youth, parents and community members – to help prepare. Ready.Gov has some great resources to help get your kids involved!
Now you are ready! Grab up the family and get started on your emergency and disaster plan! To get more information on how to make a family emergency communication plan, build a disaster supply kit or to learn how to get involved in community preparedness, please visit Ready.gov/MyPlan.
Thanks, Hannah. I’ve lived in Florida for 25 years but I didn’t bother putting a kit together the past few years. We do have most of those items at home already but I’ll be going to the stores tomorrow to get more batteries, bottled water, canned foods, etc (we’d been eating down our pantry!). We’re also going to get a generator this year. Watching Erika, if it remains as a tropical storm we’ll order a generator online so we’re ready for the next one. If it looks like it strengthened overnight, we’ll see about buying one from Home Depot or Lowe’s. I did the research in-store yesterday but the choices are very limited :(
Good luck to you! It looks like we’re both right in the path of it as of 2 p.m. today. Our school district will decide this weekend whether they’ll cancel school or not (they might need the schools as shelters).
Good luck to you too! A generator will be nice. I might have to put that on my list too.
Great tips! I was actually thinking about this last night. I was thinking in an emergency Eric would get jack and Sam (my dog) and I would get Lorelai and dean (my other dog). Essentially he gets the two heavy ones ad I get the light ones. I was thinking we definitely need a practice run cause who knows how that would even work! Now I have to make an emergency kit! Glasses is a great idea, Eric wears glasses regularly and he’d be lost without them.
Throwing two kids in the mix makes it a little more difficult these days!
A few years ago we had a bad storm and I realized I was totally unprepared! Now I have the essentials and peace of mind!
Peace of mind is everything!