| Published
March 17, 2009 |
Volume
17, Number 3
|
LPFD’s ‘Together We
Prepare’ Program Strives for a Disaster-Resilient Community
A new term has entered the emergency-preparedness lexicon: disaster
resilience. We all know about the eventual Big One. Prevention is not
much of an option, but the focus on recovery in the aftermath of a
major earthquake continues to sharpen. The latest fine-tuning is
incorporated in the “Together We Prepare” (TWP) program which Genevieve
Pastor-Cohen, Emergency Preparedness Manager for the Livermore-
Pleasanton Fire Department (LPFD), is currently coordinating.
Pastor-Cohen has special expertise in this area, having instituted the
preparation program, developed by the American Red Cross, in a former
position with the city of Alameda.
“Research reveals
that communities that work together and plan ahead for a crisis are the
most resilient in bouncing back to everyday life in the wake of a real
disaster,” Pastor-Cohen observes. There is actually a formal standard
to assess disaster resilience in a community. According to the American
Red Cross, communities become disaster resilient when at least 25
percent of their residents are trained in personal emergency
preparedness, and an additional three to five percent have completed
Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) training.
“There
are three actions at the heart of TWP: assemble the emergency kit; make
a plan—for yourself, your family, and at work; and get informed and
involved—give blood, sign up for a neighborhood watch group or CERT
team,” Pastor-Cohen relates.
The LPFD initiative will ripple
through the community, starting with one-hour presentations on
emergency preparedness to local clubs, business and faith-based
organizations, and schools. Even before the presentations, however,
there must be presenters, beyond Pastor-Cohen herself. A one-day
train-the-trainer session prepares volunteers to deliver the
preparedness message to groups within their own sphere of influence, or
they can be matched with requests that come in to the LPFD.
Pastor-Cohen conducted the first train-the-trainer class in mid-March,
with plans for two more, in the summer and fall, this year.
Her
goal is to have 16,750 Pleasanton residents prepared according to TWP
emergency guidelines by fall 2010. That means one in four people will
know what to do, but it’s only the bare minimum, she points out.
Alameda’s program ultimately trained over 30,000 people, almost half
the city’s population of 72,000 at the time. “I think if we start
rolling this out in Pleasanton’s faith-based, senior, and special-needs
organizations and school districts, we can reach our 2010 goal,” she
comments.
Pastor-Cohen also recommends the free, LPFD-sponsored
Emergency Survival Expo at the Livermore Community Center on Saturday,
April 25. One of the new resources attendees can learn about is Noah’s
Wish, a group that rescues and shelters animals during disasters—a
reminder to include the family pets in any preparedness plan.
For
those who find it too easy to postpone attending to their own disaster
resilience, Pastor-Cohen suggests a look at the “shake map” at www.abag.ca.gov/bayarea/eqmaps/pickcity.html.
The Northern Calaveras Fault, which runs under I-680, is a black zone,
subject to the most violent shaking, and “you never know about Mother
Nature,” she reminds us. The TWP one-hour emergency preparedness
training sessions are available free for groups of 20 or more people by
calling Pastor-Cohen at (925) 454-2361.
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