The Des Moines Register

Your guide to emergency kits, plans to have for Iowa disasters

It’s Severe Weather Awareness Week; is your family prepared?

- Paris Barraza

Living in Iowa means dealing with severe weather such as tornadoes, floods and extreme temperatur­es

You knew that already?

Well, that's vital informatio­n in emergency preparedne­ss, said Ryan Lowry-Lee, community preparedne­ss officer with the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

When people are more informed about what kinds of disasters and hazards can impact them, the more likely they are to prepare for them, Lowry-Lee said of one finding in a recent FEMA national household survey on preparedne­ss.

Awareness is the first step, but what else can you do?

Severe Weather Awareness Week is March 2529, and the Des Moines Register spoke with LowryLee and Allie Bright of the Iowa Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management on how to plan for a natural disaster and what items you should have in your emergency kit.

Here are five things you should know to be prepared for an emergency.

1. Have a plan and build a network of support before an emergency

Have conversati­ons with family, friends, neighbors, church members and so on about what to do in an emergency, Lowry-Lee said. These people also become a network of support that can be especially helpful in these situations and can be especially important for older adults and people with physical, cognitive and behavioral disabiliti­es, he said.

Identify the specific needs of older adults and people with disabiliti­es in your life. Do they utilize medical equipment that requires power, and what can be done in the event of a power outage? Do they require medication that they'd need a supply of in an emergency? Those are conversati­ons people can

also have with their doctors and insurance to see, for example, if it’s possible to have an extra, several-day supply of their medication, Bright said.

Some other topics to discuss as you make plans with loved ones include:

⬤ How can we stay in contact if we’re separated from each other? One suggestion is to designate someone to contact outside of where you live, Bright said. That way, if you are separated from your loved ones in an emergency and have difficulti­es contacting each other in your affected area, your out-of-town contact can pass along messages.

⬤ Do we have a meeting place?

⬤ Do we have the contact informatio­n of our loved ones?

2. Build your emergency supply kit, and don’t forget your pets

Build a kit with three to five days’ worth of supplies. That includes a suggested one gallon of water per person per day (so a household of five would need 25 gallons of water for five days).

Oh, and don’t forget pets need about a half-gallon to a gallon of water, too, Bright added.

Items you’ll need include non-perishable foods — and a can opener for all the canned food you may have — flashlight­s, batteries, a pair of sneaks, socks and a jacket, pet food, Lowry-Lee said. Include your entire household in the emergency kit making. Households with young children might want to include items that will help keep their minds off whatever emergency they are facing, he said.

3. What supplies am I forgetting? Documentat­ion, for one

Insurance contact informatio­n, contact informatio­n for your doctor and medical records are among the important documents that you’ll want to have. Keep digital copies, perhaps stored on a flash drive, said Bright, or have documents stored in a fireproof safe, suggested Lowry-Lee.

4. Stay informed: Alert Iowa and local media can help during a disaster

Alert Iowa is a statewide emergency communicat­ion system that 92 counties use. Visit homelandse­curity.iowa.gov/alert-iowa to see if your county utilizes the system and sign up for alerts, which include weather alerts to local alerts that may include informatio­n on evacuation shelters, if you’re under a boil order and more, Bright explained.

Tuning into local media is another way to stay informed about what’s going on in your community, Bright said.

FEMA also has an app that you can put in up to five ZIP codes to get emergency alerts for those areas.

Alerts on your phone can be especially helpful in case of an emergency in the middle of the night to wake you and get you informed.

5. Feeling overwhelme­d? Here are some tips

Time, resources and money are barriers for some in being prepared for an emergency, Lowry-Lee said. His suggestion is to start with what costs nothing: being informed and signing up for emergency alerts for where you live.

When it comes to building your kit, start with water, Bright suggested. Other tips for building your emergency kit and getting prepared for an emergency from Bright and Lowry-Lee include:

⬤ Hold on to your old shoes and put them in your emergency kit.

⬤ Visit ready.iowa.gov to find checklists for your emergency kits and visit ready.gov to find specific informatio­n on how to prepare for different severe weather events, tips for older adults, an emergency supply list and more.

⬤ Reach out to your local emergency management before an emergency, Lowry-Lee said. Learn from them what resources at the local level can be provided to help you be prepared. Polk County Emergency Management can be reached at 515-286-2107.

⬤ Take advantage of free classes on disaster preparedne­ss and trainings.

⬤ Remember: You don’t need to build your emergency kit all at once. It takes time, and that’s OK.

 ?? JOSEPH CRESS/IOWA CITY PRESS-CITIZEN ?? People stand amongst storm damaged buildings after a tornado warning in Johnson County on March 31 in Hills.
JOSEPH CRESS/IOWA CITY PRESS-CITIZEN People stand amongst storm damaged buildings after a tornado warning in Johnson County on March 31 in Hills.

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