Here are some helpful tips to get you ready this hurricane season.
Before a Hurricane threatens
- Look over your insurance policy to insure it provides adequate coverage.
- Check the storm surge history and elevation of your area.
- Make an inventory of possessions.
- Photograph your house and all the rooms inside for insurance purposes.
- Make sure your roofing is properly fastened and secure. make all necessary repairs.
- Obtain lumber, plywood, and concrete nails for battening up.
- Know your evacuation route.
- Organize a place to meet with your family should you become separated during the storm.
- Clear your yard and drains of debris.
- Prune trees limbs that are close to your house. They can cause damage to your home or utility wires during a storm.
- Find a place to move your boat in an emergency
- If your home is at risk, plan in advanced where you will stay. Call the ODPEM Disaster Co-ordinator for the location of the nearest shelter.
- If you need transportation to a public shelter due to special needs -- such as age, physical disability, or mental disorders; register in advance with the nearest Parish Council Office and the Office of Disaster Preparedness.
When a hurricane threatens
- Turn refrigerator and freezer to the coldest level. Freeze water in plastic containers.
- Sanitize bath tubs and fill with water.
- Tie down or bring in all outdoor objects (such as awnings, patio furniture, garbage cans).
- Secure or remove satellite dishes, TV or radio antennae from roofs.
- Pick fruits such as coconuts, mangoes etc., from trees. Clear your yard and drains of debris.
- Remove all pictures, clocks, books, figurines, tools, office equipment, appliances and important papers (passports, birth certificates etc.); wrap them in plastic or in waterproof containers; and store in a safe room.
- Turn off electricity at the main switch and remove TV and radio antennae from roofs.
- Stock up on water and non-perishable foods. Refill prescriptions needed.
- Fill your car with gas to avoid long lines after the hurricane. Also fill containers for portable generators.
- Park your car in a place that is safest from falling trees and utility poles.
- If you are in a high-rise, know the location of the nearest stairways. Don't use the elevator.
- Batten down windows and doors with shutters or lumber. Wedge sliding glass doors with a bar.
- Turn off electricity from main switch 24 hours before the storm is expected to hit.
- Unplug major appliances.
During the hurricane
- Be calm! Your ability to act logically is very important.
- Stay inside. Do not go outside unless it is absolutely necessary
- Stay away from windows and doors even if they are covered. A windowless or interior room or hallway is usually the safest.
Listen to the radio for information - If you are in a two-storey house, stay on the first floor.
- If you are in a multiple-storey building, take refuge on the first or second floors. Interior stairwells and areas around elevator shafts are usually the strongest part of a building.
- If your house shows signs of breaking up, stay under a table or stand under a door frame.
- Do not go outside during the calm when the eye of the hurricane is passing.
After the storm
- Wait until you hear on the radio or television that the dangerous winds are definitely out of your area.
- Do not go sight-seeing
- Do not go outside barefooted. Avoid wearing open shoes and watch out for sharp debris
- Do not use phones or CB radios unless vital. Keep lines clear for emergency calls.
- Bury all dead animals as soon as possible.
- Beware of downed power lines, weakened bridges and washed-out roads, and weakened trees.
- Purify drinking water by boiling or by adding bleach, 2 drops of bleach per litre of water, 4 drops if the water is cloudy. Do not purify all your water at once.
- After adding bleach, let water stand for 30 minutes before drinking
- Use perishable food first , then non- perishable foods and staples after.
- Do not cook more than is needed for one meal
- Be alert to prevent fires
- Report broken sewer or water mains to local authorities
- Be sure to check your house for structural damage before moving back in.
Emergency Supply Basic List
- Water, enough to last 2 weeks
- Foods that do not require cooking:
- Canned or salted fish and meat
- Packaged oats
- Biscuits and crackers
- Condensed or powdered milk
- Canned soups and vegetables
- Juices
- Cereals
- Coffee, Tea.
- Flour, Rice, Cornmeal, Sugar and Salt
- Infant formula
- Bread
Emergency Supply Extended List
- Battery-operated radio
- Flashlight
- Extra batteries
- Matches and candles, Hurricane lamps
- Bleach and other cleaners
- First Aid Kit: petroleum jelly, aspirin, eye wash, bandages, cotton, diarrhoea medication, antacid , laxative
- Tissue, soap, sanitary napkins
- Disposable cups, plates, utensils
- Can opener
- Large plastic trash bags
- Containers for water and fuel storage
- Coal or oil stove, barbeque grill
- Cooking utensils
- Portable cooler
- 100 feet of rope, Tape
- Needle and thread, scissors
- Blankets and towels
- Mosquito repellent
- Tarpailin (canvas or plastic)
Storage tips for water and food
- Store enough water to last 2 weeks for each person in your household. A normal active person requires a minimum of 1 litre of water per day for drinking and food preparation.
- Water should be stored in clean, well covered containers.
- Label the containers with the current date and renew your drinking supply each month.
- Store emergency food in waterproof containers.
- Arrange items so that those stored first will be used first.
- Observe expiration dates on packaged foods.
- Wrap bread, cookies and crackers, dry good in plastic bags and keep in tight containers.
- Your storage area should be dry, cool and free from contamination by insects, poisons and other chemicals.
- Several utility poles were uprooted and their wires and equipment left dangling on the roads after Hurricane Gilbert.
Evacuation and shelters
A shelter provides temporary housing for persons unable to continue their living arrangements in separate family units, as a result of an emergency incident such as flood, earthquake or hurricane.
It is advised to evacuate your home if:
- In an area that continually floods, near the coastline or a stream likely to overflow, in a low-lying area,
- you feel that your home will not offer adequate protection
- advised by authorities
- Take your own supplies to the shelter including food, change of clothes, medicine, sanitary need, battery-operated radio and flashlight important papers.
Do not take alcoholic beverages, weapons or pets to shelters.
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