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How to tighten up your emergency plan

Emergency kits can contain everyday household items, like blankets, non-perishable food and communication devices like radios.
Alan Sylvestre
Emergency kits can contain everyday household items, like blankets, non-perishable food and communication devices like radios.

Thousands of people across Oregon have been forced to evacuate this week as wildfires burned across hundreds of thousands of acres of land. Often there was little time between the Level 1, or “Get Ready,” notification, and Level 3, or “Go Now.”

That forced many people to make split-second decisions about what to bring, what to leave and where to go.

Making those decisions about what to do in an active evacuation scenario is almost impossibly difficult — even for those of us who cover wildfires and other natural disasters for a living.

This week’s fires are a reminder that very few of us are immune from the risk of wildfire in Oregon, even in a major city.

“If you have trees, brush or even grasslands anywhere around you, you can be at risk,” said Ed Jahn, executive editor for OPB’s science and environment team.

He produced “Unprepared,” an OPB special on earthquake preparedness, and many of those lessons can help us prepare for all kinds of emergency scenarios.

So what can we do ahead of time to get ready? A lot, it turns out.

Having a bag packed, ready to go and stashed in a closet is the No. 1 thing you can do to be ready when a sudden evacuation occurs. The best part is that a well-stocked “go bag” will work for any unexpected event, whether it’s a wildfire or an earthquake.

The kit should have enough supplies to last at least three days. You’re going to need clothes, rain gear, water bottles, snacks and other essentials. “Think about what you might need if you’re forced to camp out for a few nights in an emergency shelter or even at a friend’s house that might not have power or water,” Jahn said.

Multnomah County officials recommend that your go kit include:

In most evacuation scenarios, a car is going to be your ticket out of harm’s way. Jahn said it makes sense to load additional emergency supplies into the nooks and crannies of your vehicle that you might not normally use.

He recommends duplicates of emergency supplies such as gloves, blankets, rain gear and snacks.

“We even keep a small stash of cash in case you need to get out of town and the electricity’s down and you can only pay cash for gasoline,” Jahn said.

The American Red Cross also recommends that you always keep your vehicle filled with three-quarters of a tank of fuel in case you need to leave in an emergency

Jahn said the people who are going to be most important in an emergency are going to be the people who live closest to you, on your block. So it’s time to put on your mask, knock on some neighbors' doors and talk it out — with social distance, of course.

“Talk about who has what,” Jahn said. “Who has a chainsaw to clear a road. Who has extra water around, or water tanks even, or medical skills.”

It’s also important to let friends and families know your emergency plan well ahead of time. “If you’re at a Level 1 or 2 evacuation notice, that’s the time to let people know where you’re headed if you do evacuate,” he said.

And don’t expect cellphones to work when the actual crisis does hit, so over-communicating ahead of time is everything.

Jahn admits that even with the best preparations, a true evacuation situation can be an overwhelming, frightening time. But he sees a silver lining in what’s happening across the region right now:

“Oregonians and Washingtonians desire to help each other is really strong,” he said. “People are taking in others' pets, opening their homes to strangers, offering their yards up for horses and livestock.”

So if a crisis does strike, know that you’re not alone. Your neighbors, church and community are there to help. Don’t be afraid to lean on them.

You can find more tips from OPB’s “Unprepared” series here.

Copyright 2020 Oregon Public Broadcasting

John Notarianni