F
Fusilier
Guest
Oh!! Me too please!!
X Royal said:I am an Regional Emergency Management Coordinator for St. John Ambulance. I also sit on the Ontario committee for updating St. John Ambulance Emergency Planning for Ontario which is expected to form a basis for all of Canada, for St. John Ambulance. We are just one of many organizations which play a part in response to emergencies within Canada and at times world wide. Local, provincial & federal political committees, police, fire, public utilities, Canadian Red Cross & the Canadian Forces + other groups too many to list also play important roles.
What many people could do to help themselves before an emergency occurs is to prepare a kit to at least provide food, water, first aid supplies, heat & shelter for a minimum of 3 days. During a major disaster this could be a time span before assistance will be available. A kit providing an even longer supply is better. By visiting your local governments ( ie: city, county ect. ) web site you should be able to view their local emergency plan. This may help you be able to access how ready they are prepared to respond to an emergency within your area. Also you can express your views of these plans & possibly offer suggestions for improvements to your local representative.
GreyMatter said:Unfortunately, many local/municipal/regional emergency plans are inadequate to modern requirements.
As a further example, the city I live in (about 80,000 people) has NO efficient means of informing the general public if the city water supply becomes contaminated (which did happen and they failed to deal with to the satisfaction of the general public). If they cant handle a simple problem of bad water, how can they be expected to handle an actual disaster when every person in the city will need vital information on where the gather, and where key life resources can be found?
Their emergency plan is based on saying 'keep three days water and food stored.' It takes no account of the possibility of your house being destroyed by earth fire or flood; it takes no account of the segment of the population who live below the poverty line and who cannot afford to keep food and water lying about unused because they live from paycheck to paycheck, or are simply 'unskilled' in preparing for future emergencies (most people do not even have the presence of mind to keep a first aid kit in their vehicle); and it definately does not take into account the high number of homeless / unemployed / criminal elements who cannot be bothered (or dont know how, or dont care how) to plan for emergencies, and instead will prey on those who have planned for it.
TCBF said:Then there is BC - thousands of forestry workers out of work during the fires of 03. Does the BC gov't call them out on fire duty? Nope. we pull our Army into BC while the locals wave from the golf course.
X Royal said:GreyMatter have you thought of volunteering to serve on your local committee or at least attending one of their meetings to let your views be heard?
OldTanker said:As the Director of Emergency Preparedness for one of Canada's largest cities, let me add some comments.
OldTanker said:I am happy to field any questions or handle any comments either on this forum or by PM.
+1 on that. I have read the "11 Steps To Survival" and for now it is nearly useless. And now, with www.getprepared.ca, the information there is not so much in depth. But on regard with that, I think there should be a much more informative version, i.e. much more descriptive and with more diagrams like in '11 Steps To Survival'.TCBF said:- Well, "11 Steps To Survival" is do for an overhaul. Of course, it is no longer available, the toff's telling us that nuclear war is un-survivable. My questions is: What if India and Pakistan, or Israel and Iran have a Thirty Megaton Day? Our problem in Canada is not so much surviving direct hits (unless some rusty old Russian SLBMs are still targetted against our long-closed Pinetree Line sites) but recovering from a light dusting of irradiated Iranian (or Israeli, or Indian, or Pakistani, etc) remains.