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I am amazed by the number of people who think that a perfectly acceptable response to an emergency is disruptive, individual flight. I can think of a number of positive responses to emergencies, but this is an entirely negative one. Roads jammed with uncoordinated traffic
and hotels overwhelmed in the absence of coordination; people
struggling alone to cope with traumatic decisions — what a gray joke.
A few positive alternatives:
- Individually : stay and
prepare when at all possible. Start preparing at the first sign
of possible trouble — at the neighborhood level — if you’re one of
those people who thinks this is possible. If you are trained for
emergency response, make sure the local response offices know how to
reach you. The well-prepared New Orleans residents on high ground
who insisted on staying long after the whole city was evacuated —
there should be more such people, not fewer. This requires education and preparation ahead of time; teaching citizens how to preserve themselves and their things through a tornado, hurricane, earthquake, flood, drought, heat wave, mud slide, or electrical/oil/water/food shortage.
Teaching citizens how to help their neighborhood in these events; what
organizations to contact and how during the aftermath; how to identify
and shelter affected survivors. It would be worth a great deal
for one family in each small neighborhood to be well and truly prepared
to ride out a disaster.And this business of stores and people ‘running out’ of key supplies in
the run-up to every disaster gets old fast. In the first place,
each neighborhood should maintain a decent supply of these
staples. In the second, if Wal*Mart can figure out how to alert
their suppliers to up production every time there’s a sale, surely
cities can find a way to alert the usual suspects every time there’s an
impending disaster-alert.
- Gathering together for shared action;
by block, neighborhood, or district. Thursday and Friday are days
off? Great. Have a local neighborhood meeting Wednesday
night to discuss plans and options. Where are the nearby bunkers
and reinforced buildings? Where would there be food, water, and
shade for a week-long holdout? Where can people bring cars and
belongings that need better protection from the elements than their own
rooms afford? Oh, you don’t have a way to contact everyone in the
neighborhod on short notice… noone responsible for maintaining
contact numbers for everyone and organizing such meetings? Better get on that then. - Gathering together for shared flight. Tell everyone to share vehicles; at least three to a car and six to a van. Give direction,
train citizens how to respond quickly and effectively. Make
contact with all neighbors; don’t bring more than two bags with you for
safe-keeping — leave them with a protected depot, or secure them at
home, depending on where you live. Coordinate the use of large
trucks, buses, and vans; reimburse owners for transporting
people. Promote central message-boards for ride-shares and shared
floor-space in nearby cities. Open nearby halls and other
facilities for short-term emergency occupants. Encourage people
to stay as close-by as possible. Expecting
people to take refuge in hotels and find transport via rental cars and
scheduled buslines in times of disaster is a disaster in itself. - Helpful city responses. Recruit
a few thousand short-term staff from the ranks of the trained
citizens. Don’t have enough of those whom you trust? Start
a national emergency reserve program asap. Offer safe, guarded repositories
for belongings. Provide guards for such repositories, and for
sensitive or priceless areas such as hospitals and museums and those
reinforced hotels/halls being used as shelters. Do not double-book these guards; this
is a full-time job. Are people starved for food or water?
Set up ration lines. This is one of your primary duties while
people remain in the area. Are half-destroyed stores and
pharmacies vulnerable to looting? Gather key goods in an orderly
fashion, to distribute or preserve them. Are there armed people
wandering the streets? Give them something useful to do, a
partner, and proper gear. No spare gear for such
situations? Better get on that, then.
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