Preparing
in Diverse Places
By Carolyn Nicolaysen
Recently someone living in earthquake
and firestorm prone Southern California asked where people should
move to avoid natural disasters. The answer is — there is
no such place. FEMA and local governments are recognizing this
fact, too, and waking up to the job of urging citizens to prepare
on their own.
Family members and friends may not
be aware of the threats to family safety in their community. The
nation is all too aware of terrorism, but have we considered that
small towns and schools are now thought to be likely targets in
the future?
Last year we learned about the threat
of a pandemic, but it did not happen in 2007. The threat has not
passed, however. And then there are natural disasters.
It is no surprise that earthquakes
are a real possibility in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Seattle.
Did you know that in all three of these areas they are overdue?
I was raised in New Jersey, and we
never thought about an earthquake threat. However, Moorestown
and Riverton were shaken on January 26, 1921, by a magnitude 5
quake. On June 1, 1927, Asbury Park, Sandy Hook and Toms River
experienced a magnitude 7 earthquake. New York and all the Northeastern
states also face the possibility of a damaging earthquake. In
fact, scientists and government agencies are currently studying
the likely consequences of a quake in New York City.
Insurance agencies have stopped issuing
earthquake insurance in parts of Ohio, Missouri, Arkansas, Tennessee
and Kentucky. Why? Because the New Madrid fault is "due"
to move. The last time this happened, church bells rang in Boston
from the movement of the earth.
There are only two states that have
not experienced an earthquake greater than a magnitude 5 in recorded
history — Florida and North Dakota. The rest of us should
be preparing.
Southeastern Idaho and all of Utah
are also due for an earthquake. Yet, because earthquakes are not
a top-of-mind event in these areas, preparing for them may be
overlooked by the average citizen living in these areas or sending
their children to universities there.
I used to think ice storms happened
just in Canada and areas around the Great Lakes. I remember them
in New Jersey. Then, my daughter moved to North Carolina and spent
four days with her family in the dark and cold after an ice storm.
We all think differently now.
Dust storms? Do they really happen
in the USA? Yes, this year there were two major ones in Utah and
Southern California — although they can happen anywhere
there are drought conditions.
Winter power outages often spell
disaster and death in the Midwest and Eastern states. Summer power
outages cause urgent problems not only in our major cities, but
small town America as well. Deadly heat has also swept Europe,
New Zealand, Australia, Africa and South America in recent memory.
Forecasters recently predicted that
the 2008 hurricane season could produce seven or more major storms.
Experts warn of the potential for a deadly hurricane potential
in the Northeastern states including New York City.
A tsunami is predicted to someday
return to the Oregon and Washington coasts.
Boulder, Colorado, and Sacramento,
California, monitor a danger of severe flooding.
Austin, Texas, keeps an eye out for
wildfires of the magnitude that recently burned San Diego.
Dallas and St. Louis are overdue
for a deadly tornado.
Such "potential" should
not frighten us. Instead, they should only encourage us to prepare
and help our families to prepare.
Not Until Doomsday
Being prepared does not just mean
caching emergency supplies away until doomsday. There are so many
common and subtle reasons to break into your supplies.
Last Thursday we were traveling on
the freeway in a rainstorm. Our headlights struggled to illuminate
the roadway ahead, and as we rounded a bend, we came upon a disabled
vehicle that was inadequately lighted, and parked on the left
median shoulder. A man suddenly stepped out from behind the vehicle
into the fast lane of traffic. Quick thinking helped us avoid
him, but what a close call he had from simply not thinking, and
being unprepared!
My first thought was that they should
have put on something bright or reflective like the road workers
wear. My son-in-law and two of my grandchildren were on an LA
freeway when their engine quit, and they were broken down in a
similar spot on the center median. It was late at night and the
photo we saw of them with traffic racing around them is very frightening.
I took them some bright orange vests to carry in their trunk!
I also just replenished my daughter's
supply of mylar blankets because she had used the ones in her
72-hour and auto kits to hang on sliding glass doors in last summer's
heat wave. There are so many uses for these little blankets and
they are inexpensive to give. See my article The Amazing Mylar
Blanket at TotallyReady.com for more information.
During a power outage, a family I
know had their children wear the glow sticks from their 72-hour
kits around their necks. This provided enough light for them to
safely walk around — having fun, while being easy for parents
to find in the dark, and lighting their steps as they went. Glow
sticks are inexpensive gifts for kids and have so many uses if
you can keep some in a safe place for a "rainy day."
Then there was the mom who had two
small children whining that they were hungry while they waited
for their older siblings to get out of a class. Mom just got into
her auto emergency kit, pulled out an energy bar, and the crying
stopped. This is a good reason to purchase great tasting emergency
bars!
We need to stop thinking of our preparedness
supplies as useful only during a major disaster and use them when
all those smaller emergencies arise. And with so many potential
big problems that can trouble us wherever we live in this world
— being prepared can help turn the word "disaster"
into something more like "adventure."
If you are still looking for
Christmas gift ideas, why not preparedness? Review the Meridian
article The
Gift of Preparedness.