Thursday, December 24, 2009

Some Winter Safety Tips from USFA

Some Winter Safety Tips from USFA: "This is from the Family Preparedness Newsletter:

Winter is an especially dangerous time for home fires, as space heaters, holiday lights and candles get more use - it is no surprise that fires in the home are more common between December and February. The U.S. Fire Administration is part of the Department of Homeland Security, and their Web site has a wealth of information to help make this holiday season both warm and safe:

Fire Safety Tips: [ http://www.firesafety.gov/citizens/firesafety/index.shtm ]

Resources:

Also, we have posted about the hazards of dry trees in the past but if you decorate with a live tree, be sure to keep it watered -- here is a link to a video for how fast a dry tree can get engulfed in flames.

Cathleen
"

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Citizen Corps News: Citizen Corps Announces New Social Media Tools

Citizen Corps News: Citizen Corps Announces New Social Media Tools: "

Citizen Corps Widgets: www.citizencorps.gov/widgets/

Widgets are web tools that can be put on your webpage, blog, and social media sites. Citizen Corps' widgets are free and display information provided by FEMA's Community Preparedness Division through continually updated data feeds. Citizen Corps widgets are easily placed on your web page by copying the code of the widget and placing it within the html code of your web site's editor. CitizenCorps.gov currently offers three widgets in several sizes:

  • Citizen Corps Logo Widget
    • This widget provides quick links to Citizencorps.gov and FEMA's email updates during disasters webpage.
  • Community Preparedness News Widget
    • This widget provides regularly updated community preparedness news from FEMA's Community Preparedness Division.
  • Are You Ready? Widget
    • This widget enables users to search for Citizen Corps Councils and partners close to them.

Citizen Corps Web Banners: www.citizencorps.gov/councils/banners.shtm

Web banners are graphic files that can be used by individuals to link from their website to CitizenCorps.gov. These banners are free and are available in several styles and sizes.

Citizen Corps RSS Feeds: www.citizencorps.gov/rss/

RSS feeds provide subscribers with automated updated information through user-defined applications without having to continually visit CitizenCorps.gov. These RSS feeds can be imported into self-made widgets and many other social media sites. CitizenCorps.gov currently offers two RSS feeds:

  • National Community Preparedness News Feed
    • This RSS feed provides users with the latest Community Preparedness news and events from various departments of the Federal Government and our National Citizen Corps Partners and Affiliates. The goal of this feed is to provide our users with one National-level feed to receive up-to-date information on individual and community preparedness issues, events, and best practices.
  • Local Citizen Corps in the News Feed
    • This RSS feed provides users with information on activities and events of Citizen Corps Councils, Partners, and Affiliates from across the nation. The goal of this feed is to share community preparedness and Citizen Corps best practices and lessons learned.

Citizen Corps Twitter: www.twitter.com/citizen_corps

Twitter is a Microblog that gives FEMA's Community Preparedness Division the opportunity to provide users with specific community preparedness information in a timely manner. Current followers of the Citizen Corps account include Citizen Corps Councils and partners, the emergency management community, and the general public.

Citizen Corps News Emails: www.citizencorps.gov/subscribe.shtm

Citizen Corps also promotes transparent communication and collaboration through using an email subscription service that allows any visitor to the CitizenCorps.gov website to register to receive Citizen Corps News updates and to receive updates during disasters in their local area.

FEMA FaceBook: www.facebook.com/fema

Citizen Corps regularly contributes to the FEMA Facebook page to provide disaster preparedness information to the general public and information on how citizens can get involved in preparing their communities.

Sincerely,

The National Office of Citizen Corps
FEMA Community Preparedness Division

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Disposable soft Go Stretcher for just $19 - that's right under twenty dollars!




The GO Stretcher can be used in the following ways:

As a Disposable Emergency Stretcher for everyday use.

As a Disposable Emergency Stretcher for Mass Causality and Disaster Preparedness.

As a Disposable Backboard cover and Strapping Support System

As a Disposable Patient Transfer System to move the patient from the backboard to the hospital gurney.

As a Disposable Gurney Sheet.

As a Search and Rescue Gurney.

As a Disposable Patient Transfer System to move the patient from the bed to a chair and back.

As a Seated Patient Evacuation System


Product Specifications:

Will hold over 500-lb load capacity.

Features (10) large hand holds which allow for easy patient handling and ease of product use.

Lowest cost Emergency Stretcher available today.

Water resistant coated woven polyethylene provides strength and durability.

Latex free.

Stretcher size with handles is 35" x71 "

Individually packaged and labeled, comes (50) units per case or sold individually.

Here's a link to the webpage. http://www.lifemedicalsupplier.com/disposable-soft-go-stretcher-ref-305100ds-p-366.html

CERT National Newsletter is now available

The CERT National Program Office is pleased to announce that Volume 2, Issue 3 of the CERT National Newsletter is now posted on the CERT National website. Click on the following link to access the new edition: http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/newsletter.shtm {editor's note: this issue includes the Palomar Mountain, AMGEN Tour of California bike race where our San Diego County CERT's helped out}.


We hope you enjoy this issue of the newsletter and the stories about how CERT programs around the country are engaging in drills and exercises to maintain and enhance CERT members’ skills. From regional CERT Olympics in Texas and a regional CERT rodeo in Oregon and Washington State, to the AMGEN Tour of California bicycle race, to search and rescue exercises in Ohio and Virginia, and more, CERTs around the country are finding innovative and interesting ways to train.

The issue also features a request for CERT programs to submit their own drills and exercises for inclusion in upcoming publications from the CERT National Program Office.

If you know of others who would be interested in receiving CERT news and updates, please have them subscribe at the following website: http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/subscribe.shtm. Thank you.



Sincerely,
CERT National Program Office
Community Preparedness Division
Federal Emergency Management Agency

Saturday, October 10, 2009

New Product: GlovePaq™

Here is the link to a product called GlovePaq which I found at the Mira Mesa Home Depot for under six dollars!
GlovePaq™


It allows you to clip 5 pairs of Nitrile Gloves to your belt, Go-Bag, vest or even put in a pocket so that they are always handy. They dispense one glove at a time, cuff first and are made of medical grade Nitrile which are tougher that latex gloves. The dispenser comes with a refill pack, so you actually get 10 pairs of gloves for one low price.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Good videos on the S.T.A.R.T. system for triage


Previously posted on Mira Mesa CERT blog.

(Click title link below to go there.)


Simple Triage And Rapid Treatment Training



Here is a great website with detailed instructions in using the START system.  http://www.citmt.org/start/default.htm

If you just want to see videos of the various phases of START, click the following links in order. http://www.citmt.org/start/video/resp.wmv
http://www.citmt.org/start/video/perfus.wmv
http://www.citmt.org/start/video/mental.wmv 

Friday, September 25, 2009

Safety in the After Disaster Environment

Safety in the After Disaster Environment: "






Department of Homeland Security US Fire Academy prepnet (EENET) DVD Library CERT Training - "Safety in the After Disaster Environment" Air Date: February 15, 2006. This broadcast prepares Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT) members for the types of hazards encountered after a disaster and discusses safety while working in the disaster affected area. E202

Views:
351


2
ratings
Time:
31:48
More in
Education
"

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Scanning documents for your Emergency Survival Kit

Scanning documents for your Emergency Survival Kit: "

As we’ve mentioned here before, September is National Preparedness Month, a nationwide effort to increase awareness as well as encourage individuals, families, businesses and communities to take action and prepare for emergencies. One of the most crucial aspects of preparation for an emergency is having the right supplies – an Emergency Survival Kit.

The Ready America website encourages everyone to prepare an emergency survival kit with basics such as fresh water, food, a dust mask, and medical supplies. Also included on the survival kit checklist is a collection of important documents such as copies of insurance policies, personal identification, bank account records. In the event of an emergency or natural disaster, would you be able to quickly locate and pack all of these documents without putting yourself or your family at greater risk?

Digitize and secure your important family documents. In addition to having all of your paper documents stored in a safe place, you could also have a portable, digital library of your family’s important information, in the event of an emergency such as a fire or flood. Imagine having your entire family’s birth certificates, medical records, insurance policies, and financial information all archived onto a tiny portable USB drive, packed in your Survival Kit and ready to go at a moment’s notice.

Visit the Ready.gov website to learn more about creating an Emergency Survival Kit for your family.


"

Sunday, September 20, 2009

“Information Trickles Up” Article On How Communication Flows In Disasters

I found this on the "In Case of Emergency" blog and recommend this article to anyone interested in disaster communications.  Here is the blog article with excerpts of the report:

“Information Trickles Up” Article On How Communication Flows In Disasters: "
An interesting and comprehensive piece on the changing paradigm of disaster communications, “Information Trickles Up,” by Jerry Brito and Daniel M. Rothschild was recently posted on the Local Knowledge project site of the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. The authors write:

The traditional view of disaster communications holds that in an emergency, information and instructions must flow from an informed federal government, down to local communities and individuals. This view is dangerous and potentially harmful because it fails to distinguish sharing information from centrally controlling decision making. Traditional post-disaster communication centers on issuing orders rather than sharing information; it tells individuals what to do rather than empowering them to make their own decisions.

This experts-know-best mentality can be especially dangerous during and immediately after disasters. Because disasters are unplanned, attempting to conform them to normative prescriptions can create immense harm. Encouraging widespread dissemination of timely information, by contrast, does not make assumptions about what will happen in the future.

However, using a number of case studies from recent emergencies (including from Mercatus’ own extensive work in the Gulf Coast post-Katrina), the authors outline a new view of disaster communications. They conclude:

Information is only useful in context; knowing that the Earth revolves around the sun matters for the study of the cosmos, but it does not make much of a difference to our daily lives. During and after disasters, the context-the situation on the ground-is constantly changing, and information adjusts with it. Information is most useful when it is timely, accurate, and intelligible; that is, when it helps people make informed decisions about how to best deal with and recover from disasters. And that information is best produced and disseminated on a local level.

The traditional model of how information is produced and disseminated during and after disasters is based on old and disproven assumptions: that a central planner knows best and can disseminate orders to the masses, who must follow these directives. This model was churlish before the widespread democratization of information and communication technologies; today it is positively antiquated. As we have seen in the aftermath of disasters both natural and man-made, information travels in a variety of directions and through a variety of means. Attempts to control the spread of information will only be counterproductive, as people want information on which they can make informed decisions, not orders about what to do.

Because during and after a disaster everyone knows something — and nobody knows everything — the goal should be to aggregate and disseminate accurate information in a timely way. And the best way to do that is to respect that everyday citizens are producers and disseminators, and not just consumers, of all-critical information.
If you would like to read the full report, follow this Link and look for the "Information Trickles Up" article about midway down the blog page.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Intro to CERT Training Video

Good general introduction to what CERT does.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyLj7ZehJyI

"Are You Ready?"

United States Fire Academy "Are You Ready?" Air Date: January 18, 2006.
Included in this program are 3 20-minute segments:
1) one family's story on preparedness including building 3-day kits
2) an instructional video explaining proper protocol in setting up a portable generator while minimizing the risk of fire and eliminating carbon monoxide fumes
3) information regarding flash floods

I haven't watched the entire video yet but the intro looked very professional and easy to understand for anyone. Here's the link to this 58 minute movie.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XaG7ii_tSTU

Fire Fighting "grenade"

Here's a neat idea, a throwable device for house fires!  TV report on the YouTube link below.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XrNfECLpJhw

Friday, September 4, 2009

Texting after a disaster

Texting after a disaster: "

Here is a link to an article discussing communication options during an emergency. Normal phone lines may be jammed but cellular and web-based phones would still work.


Go to the Safe America link (on the right hand side) for additional information. They have a tutorial on the use of texting for emergency communications.


"

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Radio Ojai Interview on Ojai OK Drill

This might be a good idea to build public awareness and readiness!

-------------------------------------------------------

Radio Ojai Interview on Ojai OK Drill: "Last year, I was interviewed by Matt Haag for Radio Ojai (http://www.radioojai.com). The topic covered Personal Preparedness and the September 17th, 2008 Ojai OK Drill.

Please spend about 8 minutes reviewing the information:

http://radioojai.com/2008/09/16/matts-office-paul-garth-of-cert.aspx
"

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

SD CERT Team Leaders - recruit & public relations opportunity

What could be better than a bunch of neighbors getting together in one place?  How about a chance to let them know about CERT?  Well, there is a new volunteer group which organizes block parties around San Diego who is willing to work with us on this.

I’ve met with Hang who is the volunteer organizer for this brand-new group and when she described what their goals are, I realized that local CERT teams would benefit by being at the block party and meeting the people who live in that neighborhood.

Hang agreed that CERT can hand out flyers, emergency info like the 3-day kit flyers, etc. It’s kind of like a mini-street fair but concentrated on a single neighborhood and avoiding all of the “commercialism” of bigger events which can interfere with talking to people.

The next block party is tentatively scheduled for September 20th from 3pm to 6pm on Trojan Ave between 52nd and 53rd Street (City Heights Area).

Leave me a comment or email me for more information!

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Government Reevaluating Ready.Gov Preparedness Recommendations For Public: “Get A Plan” Getting More Emphasis, “Get A Kit” Getting Less, “Get Trained” Getting New Attention

Government Reevaluating Ready.Gov Preparedness Recommendations For Public: “Get A Plan” Getting More Emphasis, “Get A Kit” Getting Less, “Get Trained” Getting New Attention: "

U.S. officials are reevaluating the government’s original post-9/11 Ready.Gov citizen preparedness recommendations and in public statements are already reprioritizing what they are urging Americans to do to prepare for disasters.


It means that Ready.Gov’s “Get A Kit, Make A Plan, Be Informed” framework — which has been used by many federal, state and local preparedness sites since its launch six years ago — will likely get an overhaul. “We are taking a look at the website content,” Ready’s Acting Director Rebecca Marquis said last week.


Though changes have yet to be made on the Ready.Gov site, FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate has already been altering the Ready citizen preparedness message in a number of recent appearances. He has been urging people to “make a plan”, but has been omitting mention of a getting a (supply) kit. An example is the video (below) shot in the new Los Angeles Emergency Operations Center from FEMA’s website earlier this month in which he urges Americans to “get a plan, get trained.”



FEMA HEAD CRAIG FUGATE TALKS ABOUT PREPAREDNESS IN LOS ANGELES EOC EARLIER THIS MONTH (ABOVE)


The changes come as many in the preparedness community have expressed concern that asking Americans to create a 72-hour supply kit may be too difficult financially and logistically. By contrast making a family plan, Fugate has said, doesn’t cost anything.


The current “Get A Kit, Make A Plan, Be Informed” approach came out of an effort in the years after 9/11 to standardize and simplify the preparedness message to the public. While the Ready.Gov messaging has definitely made some awareness inroads with the public, I have found a general consensus in the preparedness field area that revising and augmenting the approach would be helpful. FEMA will be working with the Red Cross and other partners in developing the changes.


I think it is a great idea to take a new look at Ready.Gov and other preparedness messaging. My major suggestion, as I have written on the blog, is that any communications overhaul be done as part of an overall strengthening of the government’s citizen preparedness effort, because there is a limit to what even the most effective information campaign alone can do in changing public behavior.


"

Sunday, August 23, 2009

New Survey Says 64% Of Americans Would Take A 20-Hour Training Course To Help Their Community Recover From Disasters; Citizen Corps Study Also Shows Many People Expecting Too Much Of Responders In Major Emergency

New Survey Says 64% Of Americans Would Take A 20-Hour Training Course To Help Their Community Recover From Disasters; Citizen Corps Study Also Shows Many People Expecting Too Much Of Responders In Major Emergency: "

Almost two-thirds (64%) of Americans say they would be willing to take a 20-hour training class to assist their community recover from disasters, according to a new survey released by the U.S. Citizen Corps. Initial results of “Personal Preparedness In America, were announced by Citizen Corps Director Karen Marsh at the National Conference on Community Preparedness this week in Arlington, Virginia.


The 64% figure was striking to me, because it points out an interest of many Americans to become more knowledgeable in emergency preparedness/response (and it is a question that isn’t often polled). Twenty hours is the standard amount of training to become qualified as a member of a Community Emergency Response Team (CERT). That’s not to say that two-thirds of the population want to join the CERT program, but it does seem to indicate that a lot of Americans would be amenable to some sort of disaster education/training — maybe held in their workplace, house of worship, social club, etc.


Another interesting finding in the study is that a major impediment for people getting prepared is that they believe emergency responders will take care of them in a disaster (despite the warnings of the responders themselves that they can’t handle everyone, particularly in the first 72 hours). According to the survey:


From a list of possible reasons why individuals had not prepared, 30 percent of individuals indicated that a primary reason they had not prepared was because they believed that emergency personnel would help them in the event of a disaster. Further, 61 percent of participants indicated they expected to rely on emergency responders in the first 72 hours following a disaster.


The Citizen Corps, which is part of the FEMA’s Community Preparedness Division, has been measuring the public’s knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors on preparedness since 2003. I previously wrote about the 2007 survey which was released earlier this year. This updated report includes surveying fielded in the Spring; some of the initial results were released at the Conference. The rest of the data and further analysis will be presented at a later date. (n.b. the “training” question and 64% result is not in the report issued this week but was part of the presentation at the conference)


The survey is comprehensive and worth looking through for those interested in citizen preparedness research. Below are the “Summary And Recommendations”:


* Individuals’ high expectations of assistance from emergency responders may inhibit individual preparedness. Communicating more realistic expectations and personal responsibilities is critical.


* Too few people had stocked disaster supplies, and most supplies were incomplete. More emphasis is needed on the importance of stocking disaster supplies in multiple locations, and more specificity is needed on critical items to include, such as flashlights, radios, batteries, first aid kits, and personal documents.


* Greater appreciation for the importance of household plans and knowledge of local community emergency procedures and response resources is needed. Individuals who reported being prepared lacked critical plans and information.


* Practicing response protocols is critical for effective execution. Greater emphasis on drills and exercises is needed.


* An awareness of vulnerabilities to natural disasters motivates individuals to prepare. Most individuals, however, did not believe their communities will ever be affected by any type of disaster.


* Perceptions of the utility of preparedness and confidence in ability to respond varied significantly by type of hazard. Because all-hazards messaging may dilute critical differences in preparedness and response protocols, preparedness and response education should include a focus on hazard-specific actions appropriate for each community.


* Social networks, such as households, neighborhoods, the workplace, schools, and faith-based communities, and the concepts of mutual support should be emphasized


* Focusing on individuals in the contemplation and preparation stages for personal preparedness may yield greater results. Messaging and community outreach efforts should be designed to support those already considering taking action. Individuals’ strong interest in attending training courses and volunteering should be harnessed through social networks. Training and volunteer service should be linked with a responsibility for educating and encouraging others to prepare.


* Specific sociodemographic characteristics correlated with attitudes toward and actions for preparedness. Insights into these differences offer the ability to tailor outreach efforts to targeted audiences.


* Individuals believed they had a personal responsibility to report suspicious behavior but greater collaboration between citizens and law enforcement is needed.


The survey was conducted by ICF Macro’s Carol S. Freeman who has done the previous Citizen Corps research and is a (if not the) leading opinion researcher in the area of citizen preparedness.


At the Citizens Corps conference, I had an opportunity to talk to some local emergency officials about the 64% finding. Below is a brief interview I did with San Francisco Fire Department Lt. Erica Arteseros, who coordinates the city’s Neighborhood Emergency Response Team program (CERT is called NERT in SF). In the video, she says government need to capitalize on the interest expressed in the poll.



San Francisco NERT coordinator Lt. Erica Arteseros talks about the Citizen Corps survey.


"

Saturday, August 22, 2009

Latest CERT National Newsletter Digest

In this issue of the CERT newsletter, Volume 2, Issue 2, you will read about the Hamden, CONN CERT training on public safety officer rehabilitation and on-scene victim care. Another story "CERT Programs: Rural and Urban" describes the similarities CERT members receive in both locations and also the challenges both communities are faced with. The article on Teen CERT is a compilation of five individuals from across the country who conduct Teen CERT in their local communities.

Here's the link: http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/newsletter.shtm

Thursday, April 30, 2009

CERT National Newsletter

Dear CERT Community,

The CERT National Program Office is pleased to announce the release of the April 2009 quarterly "CERT National Newsletter." This edition features stories on local CERT programs across the country and news and information from the CERT National Program Office. Click on the following link to read and download the newsletter: http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/newsletter.shtm.

We hope you enjoy this newsletter. If you know of others who would be interested in receiving CERT National newsletters or CERT updates, please have them subscribe at the following website: http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/subscribe.shtm.

Thank you.

Sincerely,
CERT National Program Office Community Preparedness Division
Federal Emergency Management Agency

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Welcome to the Back Channel CERT Network

If you are a CERT leader and would like be able to post messages on this blog, leave a comment with your details by clicking on the green link, just below this message, titled "Comments".

This blog is for local community's Community Emergency Response Team leaders. It has been created in order to promote direct communication between community team leaders in the spirit of "Let's get 'er done!" rather than waiting for someone, somewhere to...
  • Pass your message along
  • Filter/Edit/Standardize
  • Authorize
  • Approve with the Attorneys
  • Get the ______'s approval before... (pick your local stumbling block)
  • Or otherwise hold everything up until nothing gets done until too late!

Things that you are encouraged to post here:

  • Team Trainings which other team's members may also want to attend
  • CERT-oriented resources such as other CERT blogs or commercial websites
  • Direct communications procedures between teams, both emergency and non-emergency
  • Anything else that you think might help build CERT membership and readiness

Comments from anyone are always welcome but subject to moderation. The Posts themselves can only be made by Team Leaders after being added to the poster's list. Leaders who would like be able to post messages on this blog, leave a comment with your details by clicking on the green"Comments" link.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Team Meetings... Is there something better?

In the spirit of our motto, “Practice like you mean it!”, Mira Mesa CERT no longer has team meeting in the classic sense. We have done that for a couple of years and have found that attendance dwindles because volunteers really don’t want to spend time sitting around just talking. No matter what presentations were made or matters discussed, people had a hard time making meetings. We changed locations, days and times and have never been able to find a “sweet-spot” were a majority of members could (or would) attend.

So what we are doing now is have a “call-out drill” on the 10th of every month, regardless of which day it falls on. The exact time of day depends on the day of the week it falls upon with weekdays tending towards after work hours. That way, no matter what anyone’s schedule is – there will be several that they should be able to make each year.

Here is how it works…

I send both a cellular text message and email to Mira Mesa CERT members approximately two hours before the rally. Members meet at the rally point or other designated area and get checked in and assigned duties according to their arrival times. We then perform a part or parts of an actual call-out: Search, S.T.A.R.T., Rescue, Triage, Transport, Medical Treatment, etc. Each drill runs about an hour and a half with about an hour of briefing and actual drilling. The drill is followed by a half hour or more of debriefing, discussing issues and ideas. We have had a lot of “ah-haw” moments because the drills have been in the dark (how do I write on a Triage card and hold a flashlight too?), on cold days (I should have had a jacket), which have made our team better prepared.

Mira Mesa CERT is happy to have members of other CERTs join us either to observe or participate. Email the Mira Mesa Team Leader for more info: tjwalt@yahoo.com. Be sure to mention CERT in the title or I might miss your email.