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Are You Prepared? by Darrin Lythgoe Idea List: • Obtain informational pamphlets on dealing with disasters from your local fire department or Red Cross. Review these with your family and organize an action plan for a variety of disasters. • Help your family organize a 72-hour kit, including clothes, nonperishable food, a flashlight, medicine, water, a radio, blankets, and other essentials. • Keep a flashlight with fresh batteries near your bed. • Help coordinate and rotate your family’s food storage. Make sure necessary items are well stocked. • Know where your home’s gas, water, and electricity controls are. Have your parents show you how to turn them off in an emergency, and keep any needed tools nearby. • With your parents’ supervision, test your smoke alarms and make sure all batteries are strong. • Learn the signals your community uses to warn of potential disasters. Know where to tune your radio for instructions when the signals are given. • Assemble a first-aid kit and learn how to use it properly. • Know basic fire safety rules, including how to extinguish fires and avoid smoke. • Make a priority list of items to bring with you if you need to leave home in a hurry. Necessities and things that can’t easily be replaced, such as photos and scrapbooks, should come first. Remember, however, that you and your family are more important than any objects. • Memorize the phone numbers of your local police and fire departments, as well as those of friends and relatives you can count on for help. • If you hear of a disaster elsewhere, ask yourself, “What would I have done in that situation?”
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