Sunday, July 31, 2011

EP - Your Guide to Personal & Family Preparedness

The "Be Ready Utah" website has a printable brochure that covers preparedness topics.  Follow the link below:

http://bereadyutah.gov/family/documents/9.2008%20Brochure.pdf

EP - Will There Be A Food Crisis?

Will There Be A Food Crisis?
Article published at TheReadyStore.com

Our debt ceiling is looking to rise again.   Our stock market is acting like an emotional 6 year old.  The people are not willing to spend their hard earned money in the stock market.  Food prices and inflation is going up like a hot air balloon.  In short the world is starting to face what could turn into one of the worst food crises in decades.

While America has typically been the land of plenty, we’ll start to feel the burden along with others all over the world.   The increases in food prices have already taken affect and are not likely to improve in the near future.  In 2011, the United States Department of Agriculture expects food price to rise between 2 and 3 percent.  As of February 2011, the price of wheat has increased 83% and the price of corn has doubled since one year earlier.

Dairy and cattle farmers are concerned for the industry.  Land values are dropping. Fuel, fertilizer, and seed costs are going up. The cost of beef products is expected to increase by almost 40%, leading to much higher prices for any meat eaters.   Grocery shoppers can expect to pay higher prices on items like eggs, fruits and vegetables, since they’re more vulnerable to changes in farm prices than processed foods.

The prices of our commodities such as oil, cotton, wheat and corn are on the rise and no sign of stopping.  In a time of a bad economy when a lot of people don’t have jobs, it’s going to be really tough for them.  Americans cannot afford higher prices on food and clothing when their incomes are not moving up.

Anyone remember when a can of coffee was actually 48 oz.?  Or when a can of tuna was 7.25 oz.?  A can of vegetables used to weigh 16oz, a pack of gum contained 20 sticks, and salad dressing was a quart, and so on and so on.  Suppliers have been able to sneak in a reduction of product with every change in packaging.  It tricks the people because the prices haven’t been changed.  But we have been paying more for quite some time. The food crisis may seem very depressing, but it is not the end of the world.  There are some things we can do to offset the rising cost of food, and events.

Grow your own food.  Even if you live in the city or the suburbs, you can still benefit from a small home garden.  If you live in an area where you can grow your own food or raise small game, you may consider doing so.  This will not only save you money, but will also contribute to a healthier diet.

Stock up on dry foods and emergency foods.  It is a good idea to purchase a lot of nonperishable foods now.  You will want to look into instant milk, freeze dried eggs, meats, fruits and veggies.

Build up your emergency fund.  Start saving more now so that if you ever need to dig deeper into your savings, you won’t have to take on any debt. The last think you want is to have to make major sacrifices that will hurt the quality of life for you and your family.

Increases in food prices will continue to have a huge impact on our economy and our lives.  While it is impossible to project just how long these increases will last and how deep of an effect they will have on the economy, we need to be prepared to protect ourselves against these heightened price levels.

CERT


Community Emergency Response Team, CERT, is a training program that prepares you to help yourself, family, and neighbors in the even of a disaster.  As a member of a CERT team, you can respond to disasters, participate in drills and exercises, and take additional training.

Under the direction of the local emergency responders, CERT teams help provide critical support by giving immediate assistance to victims, providing damage assessment information, and organizing other volunteers at a disaster site. They also offer a potential workforce for performing duties such as shelter support, crowd control, and evacuation until trained emergency personnel arrive.

The CERT program builds strong working relationships between emergency responders and the people they serve as well as helping the community year-round by assisting with community emergency plans, neighborhood exercise, preparedness outreach, fire safety education, and workplace safety.

CERT training takes about 20 hours to complete. Participants learn how to: identify and anticipate hazards, reduce hazards in the home and work place, extinguish small fires, conduct light search and rescue, set up a medical technique and help reduce survivor stress.

Who should take CERT training?  People interested in taking an active role in hometown preparedness. For more information on classes scheduled in Salt Lake City, visit the following links:


Sunday, June 12, 2011

Natural disaster refugees more than doubled

Natural disaster refugees more than doubled to 42 million

About 42 million people were forced to flee their homes because of natural disasters around the world in 2010, more than double the number during the previous year, experts said Monday.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43295013/ns/world_news-world_environment/t/natural-disaster-refugees-more-doubled-million/from/toolbar

Saturday, May 7, 2011

HAM - Hams Worry About Spectrum Plan

Below is an article posted by NPR:

April 30, 2011
Across Alabama, emergency communications systems fell silent this week when tornadoes knocked down antennas and cell phone towers. Amateur radio operators are helping to restore emergency communication in some of the areas hardest hit by the storms. But those volunteers say their ability to provide that help is threatened by a new bill in Congress.

When Hurricane Katrina came ashore in 2005, it destroyed cell phone towers and electrical infrastructure. That left law enforcement and relief agencies without a viable way to communicate — until amateur radio operators stepped in.

Hundreds of amateur radio operators – or hams, as they call themselves – poured into Louisiana and Mississippi from all over the country, bringing their own portable antennas and amplifiers to temporarily replace what the storm had wiped out.
"They set up communications for the agencies, both governmental and relief agencies that were trying to help people there," says Kay Craigie is the president of the American Radio Relay League, an advocacy group that represents hams . "And they stayed there for weeks under very, very difficult conditions."

Craigie says Hurricane Katrina is just one example of how volunteer ham operators have responded to emergencies all over the country. But she says their ability to provide that help is being inadvertently threatened – in the name of improved emergency communication.

Peter King is a Republican congressman from New York, and the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee. At a hearing in March, King lamented that police, firefighters and other first responders have trouble talking to each other during emergencies.

"As we approach the 10th anniversary of September 11th, public safety must be allocated sufficient spectrum so that a national, interoperable public safety wireless broadband network can finally be built," he said.

King is sponsoring a bill called the Broadband for First Responders Act of 2011. The measure would take some of the broadcast spectrum that was freed up by the transition to digital television and set it aside to build a new emergency communications system. That idea has wide support in both parties, and both houses of Congress. To pay for it, King's bill proposes auctioning off another band of broadcast frequencies that are sometimes used by first responders. The problem is, those same frequencies are used by ham radio operators, too.

Joseph Taylor lives in Princeton, N.J. His house isn't hard to find: It's the only one on the block with a giant radio tower in the backyard.

"Ham radio operators have a long history of being very useful in emergency situations," Taylor says. "The training of amateurs has been a national resource for many decades now."

Taylor says his early radio training led him to a career in physics, and eventually, a Nobel Prize. There are other frequencies besides those targeted by the House bill that hams can use. But amateur radio advocates worry that this bill could be just the first step.

"They start taking these frequencies away now, and then down they take a few more. And pretty quick, it becomes a major problem instead of just a minor issue," says Vince Kolar, the emergency manager for Cascade County, Montana. He says hams routinely help the county with traffic control, and with its emergency response in case of wildfires and severe weather.

"Those people are all volunteers," he says. "They all volunteer their time and their equipment, mostly. If it makes it harder for them to do what they need to do, then I'm certainly opposed to it."
Across the country in Virginia, state emergency coordinator Michael Cline doesn't dispute the importance of hams. But he thinks the House bill can be changed.

"They really are an integral part of emergency management and public safety," Cline says. "But I think now that a lot of folks are realizing that there is a potential harm to the amateurs that we'll be able to make accommodations for them."

King, the author of the House bill, declined requests for an interview. In a written statement, King says he's working to address the concerns of the amateur radio community, while still moving forward with a new public safety network. And when a future disaster knocks that network offline, hams hope they'll still be in a position to help.

Friday, May 6, 2011

Disaster Training Opportunities

The following is from the FEMA website:


The Community Preparedness Webinar Series presents..

Disaster Training Opportunities Available to the Public

Join us Tuesday, May 10, 2011 at 2 p.m. EDT/1 CDT/12 MDT/11 PST


In times of disaster, a trained and informed public is better prepared to protect themselves, their families, their workplace and their neighbors. This webinar will showcase several disaster training resources that are available in communities across the nation. FEMA recognizes that it takes a “whole community” approach to meet the needs of the public before, during and after a disaster. Learn how your community can train and educate its citizens to be better prepared and involved in your community’s disaster response and recovery efforts.

Join us for brief presentations by representatives from the American Red Cross, the Community Emergency Response Team program, ARRL National Association for Amateur Radio (Ham Radio operators), Medical Reserve Corps, Meals on Wheels, HandsOn Network, Fire Corps, USAonWatch Neighborhood Watch program, Volunteers in Police Service, SkyWarn and more! .

Sincerely,

The National Office of Citizen Corps

NOTE:  
This webinar is free to the public and will accommodate the first 500 visitors that enter the site. This webinar will last approximately one hour. In addition to airing live, the webinar will be recorded and viewable at a later date and linked from this web link. The live webinar will offer Closed Captioning and a transcript of the webinar will be posted with the recorded version of the webinar.