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Are You Ready?

Thursday, April 03, 2008

John Solomon at WNYC John Solomon is writing a book about emergency preparedness, and in the process has trained and certified himself to be a member of New York City’s Community Emergency Response Team (CERT). He joins us every Thursday in April to discuss how to best prepare for the unexpected.

Solomon's Blog - "In Case of Emergency: Read Blog"
New York City Community Emergency Response Team (CERT)


Comments

  • [1] Scott from park slope April 03, 2008 - 08:33AM

    How do I plan to keep my cat and dog safe? Like if I have to evacuate? In New Orleans, people couldn't bring their pets on the buses and so some people just stayed home.


  • [2] naomi dagen bloom from harlem April 03, 2008 - 09:58AM

    i'm curious about what john solomon has to say re residential EP in high rise buildings. just spent 2 frustratinf years trying to raise awareness in a 1,000-apartment co-op in manhattan. found OEM completely unavailable; something has to change!


  • [3] Robert from NYC April 03, 2008 - 10:33AM

    This is like the republican fear tactics around election time. I checked out that page and freaked out. I mean really, what exactly are Mr. Solomon and all those fear mongering folk think is going to happen! Yeah, we should prepare ourselves but we shouldn't become paranoid over it and spend every minute thinking about it because we don't know what EXACTLY is coming or when and what will be left after!!!


  • [4] Saka from Glendale April 03, 2008 - 10:44AM

    I hope you talk about the necessity of arming yourself to defend against looters and misprobates who always manage to show themselves after natural disasters.


  • [5] Sue from North Salem, NY April 03, 2008 - 10:45AM

    Tell me about it, Robert: I still have canned/dried goods and gallons of water stockpiled from Y2K!


  • [6] Glenn from Manhattan April 03, 2008 - 10:47AM

    I kept a dry bag full of some essentials which could be inflated and used as a floatation device, and a wet suit near my front door after 9/11. This in case I had to jump in the Hudson River and swim (float) to NJ (with the tide).


  • [7] michael winslow from INWOOD April 03, 2008 - 10:49AM

    Anyone who is this prepared is paranoid.

    If this area has to be evacuated like Katrina it just couldn't happen.

    It's impossible to evacuate 10 million plus people. NO WAY.

    What ever comes comes and who survives great.

    Darwin. :)


  • [8] Raychel from NYC 10016 April 03, 2008 - 10:50AM

    I'm Business Continuity Manager in a large corp. and this feature is so timely as I'm on a misson to best prepare every assocaite as we have done with our business. Starting wiht the Go Bag it's very simple. Thank you


  • [9] Lorenzo from Jersey City April 03, 2008 - 10:51AM

    Sounds like a senile boy scout to me. Do we need more people carrying flashlights around?

    Why not spend one's free time "doing" rather than "preparing", there's lots of help needed every day.


  • [10] chestinee from Midtown April 03, 2008 - 10:52AM

    Oh come on! It is hopeless to even dream of evacuating NYC - All I do is keep bottles (glass) of water.

    After katrina I heard that NYC will allow pets on public transportation - if they don't, i stay home!

    And as for go bags - how ridiculous is that - who on earth is going to be home when it's time to go?


  • [11] Marty from Queens, NY April 03, 2008 - 10:53AM

    NYC government failed completely during the Great Northeast Power Blackout of Aug 14, 2003.

    Why should we think anything has changed since then?


  • [12] Mike from NYC April 03, 2008 - 10:53AM

    Scott -

    If you're looking for info on how to take care of your pets during an emergency, look at the links below:

    http://www.prepare.org/animal/animal.htm

    http://www.fema.gov/individual/animals.shtm

    The first is from Red Cross, the second from FEMA


  • [13] Craig from Brooklyn April 03, 2008 - 10:54AM

    I'm sorry to say that it's this kind of behavior that causes a lot of the world to think Americans are nuts!

    (I'm not saying American ARE nuts but this guy doesn't help..)

    I can't avoid the feeling that this guy's heightened personal sense of 'alertness' has been used as a bit of a business opportunity.

    Well intended and, even useful, or not, the thought of him sitting there in his gear promoting his book is a darkly comical sign of the times.


  • [14] James from New York April 03, 2008 - 10:55AM

    I can think of at least 30 - 50 different types of "emergencies" ranging from a fire in my building to Category 5 hurricane, nuclear attact, Tsunami, biological-chemical warfare attack etc. So, are we to spend time studying all of the MANY terrible possibilities & preparing for them? Is that realistic or useful?


  • [15] naomi dagen bloom from harlem April 03, 2008 - 10:56AM

    mr. solomon did not respond to my comment. brian, please, i've done all he suggests and OEM in NOT responsive. -naomi


  • [16] Robert from NYC April 03, 2008 - 10:57AM

    Dont' inflate it until you get it out of the house.


  • [17] emily from brooklyn April 03, 2008 - 10:57AM

    It's funny, the one place where I have been handed a brochure about preparedness was at my veterinarian's office. It was a publication by the City of NY that tells you what to do with pets whether you take them with you or need to leave them at home. I believe it was published right after Katrina.


  • [18] Anne Riney from Midtown Manhattan April 03, 2008 - 10:58AM

    Go bags should be in Backpacks since A lot of walkng might be necesary


  • [19] James from New York April 03, 2008 - 10:59AM

    The 'boat' sums it up succinctly. The caller is right - in certain disaster scenarios, having a boat would be useful. But useless in others. How are we supposed to prepare for all possible scenarios without going completely bonkers????


  • [20] Mike from NYC April 04, 2008 - 10:22AM

    There's no need to go bonkers by getting prepared. Mainly, get ready for events that are more likely to happen. In this city that means hurricanes, blizzards, etc. If you take steps to be ready for one event, you're more than likely ready for the others.

    If you'd like more information on how to create a personal preparedness plan, including how to determine what you should prepare for, take the following course:

    http://www.ualbanycphp.org/learning/registration/tab.cfm?course=pep&s=Overview

    Its from the University at Albany, its free of charge and walks you step by step through the process.


  • [21] Geegee from Bklyn April 04, 2008 - 11:55AM

    Yep, I'm with Robert. It is all fear tactics DON'T BELIEVE THE HYPE! This is crazy! Like Chestinee brought up HOW DO YOU KNOW WHERE YOU ARE GOING TO BE? Where were you during 911, during the crane collapse, during the street the blew up, during the OTHER plane that hit the apartment building. My friend was on a train during the black out he had to walk through a subway in his sandals, I was at work during 911 and during the blackout (why do I live here?-ha!) I had to walk home from MIDtown over the B-bridge and through BKLYN, if I would have had a bag at home, a lot of good that would have done. Look at the "homeland" security website, its been at HIGH since then. Which brings me to another point. What about the guys in the subways, the ARMY, with their automatic rifles, what happens when some kid that is stirring up trouble? Is that ARMY guy have enough sense to hold off or does he start shooting first, ask questions later? Robert is right: It is Fear Mongering, to keep YOU where they want YOU.


  • [22] Mira Leibstein, BS, CPDT from Oceanside, NY April 10, 2008 - 11:05AM

    For information on emergency preparedness if you have pets please visit

    www.petsafecoalition.org

    Pet Safe Coalition is the Nassau County Animal Evacuation Response Team.

    They need volunteers to educate pet owners and the public on what to do in emergency.

    You must have a plan and "go bag" for animals! You cannot go to a shelter with a pet, and you cannot leave them behind.


  • [23] Joe from Bergen County, NJ April 14, 2008 - 08:25AM

    One of my biggest concerns is communication. I haven't heard people talk about how cell phones will not be reliable in a time of crisis due to either towers being down or all circuits being busy.


  • [24] Paul Purcell from Atlanta, GA April 28, 2008 - 01:13PM

    There is already a glut of individual and family preparedness material. In fact, our own preparedness manual "Disaster Prep 101" sits on the shelf of the Citizen Corps directors who are in charge of creating the CERT manuals. More info on what is already done can be found at www.disasterprep101.com.

    It's the foundation for a few homeland secrutiy publications as well.


This thread is closed.


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