STORY BY
Karen Krakower
It’s been nearly three years since Hurricane Katrina sunk one city and Hurricane Rita chased another out of town. Those who have survived flooded homes, sunken cars and 28-hour road trips to escape storms are black-belted Ninja hurricane veterans who carry loaded duct tape—and know how to use it.
"Print this out and keep it handy. It is the combined wisdom of those whom have weathered true weather, “says Dr. Robert "Safety Bob" Emery, assistant vice president of Environmental Health and Safety at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.
Before you see
the funny-looking weather maps
Disability 911!
www.disability911.com
For persons with disabilities, the term “natural disaster” rings a whole new set of alarm bells. The UT Houston professor Lex Frieden uses a wheel chair and remembers all too well the swirling, waist-deep waters that flooded his home in 2001 during Tropical Storm Allison.
The launch of the new website www.disability911.com provides essential information to persons with disabilities before, during and after a hurricane, flood or other large-scale event.
Packed with information on disaster preparedness, links to resources, services and life-saving tips, www.disability911.com is a must-review for persons with disabilities, caregivers, and emergency planning and response officials.
The new website is supported by The University of Texas School of Health Information Sciences at Houston, Memorial Hermann|TIRR and Baylor College of Medicine.
Long before the weather reports start crawling along the bottom of your TV screen, have these items on hand in your home:
- Gallon of water per day per person (about three days’ worth.)
- Three-day supply of all daily medications. (Seven days for persons with disabilities: see Disability911
- First-aid kit (and check for expired contents.)
- Readily consumable food that doesn’t require cooking.
- Handheld can opener.
- Thick-soled shoes, preferably rubber-soled or rubber boots.
- Rain gear and sturdy work gloves.
- Fresh batteries and flashlights.
- Fresh batteries and portable radio.
- Charged cell phone and charger for both car and home.
- Duct tape, duct tape and perhaps duct tape.
- A reasonably full gas tank during hurricane months.
- Fire extinguisher that actually has been recently tested.
- A recently checked insurance policy if you are concerned about “rising water.” Most homeowner/renter policies do not cover rising water damage. They do however cover “driving rain”, hail and wind damage, including water damage from roof leaks. Only federal flood insurance, offered by FEMA covers flood damage.
Leaving a paper trail
- Cash, Traveler’s Checks and some money in coins. In case of a serious power outage, bank computers may be off line.
- Take valuable original documents to a safe deposit box.
- Put copies of valuable papers in freezer bags and put them IN the freezer (that’s right--it’s fairly fire, flood and wind-proof.)
- Make copies of your prescriptions or place empty medication bottles in the freezer, too.
- Extra toilet paper (don’t laugh—it’s the one item you’ll wish you had.)
Who ya’ gonna call ?…
- Add to your “freezer file cabinet” phone numbers of family members/friends located in another geographic area in case phones are out and you need a point of contact (Alert friends and family that if you can’t be reached by phone, they are to call your out-of-area contact. Use this number as a check-in station.)
- Know your area’s evacuation routes, shelters and emergency numbers, including FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
- Have your insurance agent’s numbers handy.
Planning ahead for that rainy day
- Know how to turn off your electricity, water and gas. Remember that you’ll need a professional to turn on your gas after the storm.
- If you’re at work, have back-up plans to retrieve kids from camp/school/day care.
- Arrangements for pets—they need food and water stockpiles, too.
- Keep a backpack loaded with extras: medications, hidden cash and coins, personal hygiene supplies, change of clothes, sweater, comfortable shoes, extra socks, packaged snacks, bottled water, deck of cards, notepad and pen.
- Make a mental note to move to high ground any cardboard boxes sitting on the closet floor or under your bed. Items “out of sight” are often forgotten. (In other words, your baseball card collection is worthless once it is sopping pulp.)
When the TV reporter is soaking wet
and windblown:
Once the National Weather Service has issued a warning and your area must evacuate:
- Grab cell phone and chargers for car and electrical outlet.
- Grab your map of evacuation routes and contra flow routes.
- “Freezer file cabinet.”
- Emergency backpack.
- Bed roll if you have room in your car, in case shelter runs out of mats.
- If you’re evacuating by car, move items like flashlights and emergency flares from the trunk to the back seat before you start driving.
- Towels.
- Pets, pet food and water and pet leash.
‘Fleeing in place’
Lessons learned from Rita
If you are one of the million-plus Houstonians who found themselves going nowhere fast during Hurricane Rita, you know what “fleeing in place” means.
It means confidence is high that you will sit in a steaming car in gridlock traffic longer than you had planned if your major city must mass-evacuate. Add these items to your list:
-
Plastic misting bottles: not only will a mist of water cool you down if your car’s air conditioning must be turned off to conserve gas, you’ll also save the life of your pet and the health of elderly passengers. Pets, particularly cats, might not drink in a moving car or when nervous. Spraying them down will make them lick their fur. Ill or very elderly passengers may only be able to take in fluid through a misting spray.
- Dignity takes a back seat to a 26-hour traffic jam. If you are concerned about restrooms, learn from your children—or childhood: take along diapers.
- Gasoline is safe to carry in your trunk if it is in a certified gasoline container. Check with your hardware store before hurricane season.
- Restock on vehicle road emergency kits: canned tire patches, coolant, tire jacks, flashlights, center punches (for breaking windows in rising water.)
- Above all else, know your gas mileage before you evacuate. If you can’t get to your chosen destination on one tank, you’ll need an alternative plan.
- Make sure you have hats, sunscreen and good walking shoes in case you need to leave your car.
- Don’t depend on your car’s radio: take your battery-operated weather radio in the car.
When the TV reporter is blowing sideways:
If your area has been advised to shelter in place and/or your neighborhood streets are already flooded or winds make it too dangerous to leave your home:
- If you still have electricity, stay tuned to weather coverage and charge your cell phone.
- Alert your friends/family list that a hurricane is headed your way and you might lose contact by land line.
- If you’ve lost electricity, turn on your battery-powered radio.
- Tape your windows in an “x” to mitigate glass breakage and shards from wind, hail and driving rain.
- Secure patio furniture, sun umbrellas—anything that can be picked up by strong winds and turned into a missile.
- Duct tape window edges at the sills and sides if you believe driving rain has a point of entry there.
- Watch for downed power lines in your yard.
- Have an interior room/hallway/bathtub cleared in case you need tornado coverage.
- Make a list of items by priority that must be moved higher should your home begin to flood, such as computers, valuable documents, photos, electronics.
- Put candles and matches in a high dry place.
- Do not slosh through your flooding neighborhood streets: fire ants, roaches and snakes are also looking for things to cling to, like a sloshing leg.
- Before evacuating, leave no wooden or other water-swelling drawers containing anything in place in the dresser. Move the drawer ANYWHERE, but don’t leave it in the dresser! When the water rises and the wooden dresser and drawer are soaked, the drawer frequently can not be opened. If the contents are clothes or paper, mildew and mold will take over before anything dries out and the drawer can be opened. A soaked drawer sitting on a flood soaked carpet is better than a soaked drawer captured in a dresser.
Driving in high water
According to the Red Cross, the NOAA, and FEMA, vehicles are involved in half of all flood-related deaths.
One simple physics equation is all you need to remind yourself of how dangerous it is to attempt to drive or stay with your car in high water:
- When you are submerged deeply enough, the weight of the volume of water that you’re displacing is equal to your own weight. You become buoyant.
- So, when the weight of the water that is displaced by the submerged part of your car becomes equal to the weight of your car, your CAR becomes buoyant.
Most cars will float in two feet of water.
What to do while driving
- If you are driving through forceful winds or hail, get to a covered area, such as a parking garage if possible.
- If you are driving through water: assume that at some point during your journey, there will be impassable water. Consider pulling off to a gas station or parking lot that sits higher than the street until the rains slow or stop.
- If you are driving through streets flooded to curb height, keep your speed low and your foot on the accelerator to avoid water back-flowing into the exhaust pipe, which will stall you. If you drive a truck or SUV, curb your confidence and slow down so that you do not displace enough water to flood smaller cars. Then pull into a higher area off the street as soon as possible.
- If you approach an area that looks too deep, it probably is. Do NOT attempt to cross it. Look up the road so that you do not have to stop at the impasse and attempt to turn around which not only raises your chance of flooding, but also creates traffic chaos.
- If you do find yourself in increasingly deeper water, immediately roll down your window in case you need to swim out of it. If your windows are electric, they will fail if the car stalls.
- If your car stalls in high water, abandon the car immediately. Two feet of water can sweep a car or SUV away. Climb to higher ground.
When you see Dorothy grabbing Toto…
Tornado tips and clues
Already in 2008, 110 people have died as a result of tornado damage. January roared in with 84 tornados; February with a staggering 148. National weather centers are still confirming the total number of tornados for the remainder of 2008.
Most people are injured or killed not by the tornado itself, but by flying debris.
Besides an obvious twisted funnel of wrath, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) lists the following signs and symptoms to look and listen for:
- Strong, persistent rotation in the cloud base.
- Whirling dust or debris on the ground under a cloud base -- tornadoes sometimes have no funnel!
- Hail or heavy rain followed by either dead calm or a fast, intense wind shift. Many tornadoes are wrapped in heavy precipitation and can't be seen.
- Day or night: Loud, continuous roar or rumble which doesn't fade in a few seconds like thunder.
- Night: Small, bright, blue-green to white flashes at ground level near a thunderstorm (as opposed to silvery lightning up in the clouds). These mean power lines are being snapped by very strong wind, maybe a tornado.
- Night: Persistent lowering from the cloud base, illuminated or silhouetted by lightning, especially if it is on the ground or there is a blue-green-white power flash underneath.
If you are in your home (and do not have a basement):
-
In a house with no basement, a dorm, or an apartment:
Avoid windows. Go to the lowest floor, small center room (like a bathroom or closet), under a stairwell, or in an interior hallway with no windows.
-
Crouch as low as possible to the floor, facing down; and cover your head with your hands. A bath tub may offer a shell of partial protection.
- Even in an interior room, you should cover yourself with some sort of thick padding (mattress, blankets, etc.), to protect against falling debris in case the roof and ceiling fail.
- Myth: according to NOAA, it is a myth that you should open two windows to avoid a negative-pressure build-up (and house implosion.) They advise that you keep windows closed to avoid debris. They also say that most “explosions” occur from large debris crashing into structures.
In an office building, hospital, nursing home or skyscraper:
- Go directly to an enclosed, windowless area in the center of the building away from glass. Then, crouch down and cover your head.
- Interior stairwells are usually good places to take shelter, and if not crowded, allow you to get to a lower level quickly.
- Stay off the elevators; you could be trapped in them if the power is lost.
If you are in your car:
- Vehicles are extremely dangerous in a tornado. If the tornado is visible, far away, and the traffic is light, you may be able to drive out of its path by moving at right angles to the tornado.
- Otherwise, park the car as quickly and safely as possible, out of the traffic lanes. Get out and seek shelter in a sturdy building.
- As difficult as it may seem, leave your car if you are in the open country. Run to low ground away from any cars (which may roll over on you). Lie flat and face down, protecting the back of your head with your arms.
- Avoid seeking shelter under bridges which can create deadly traffic hazards while offering little protection from flying debris.
UPDATED: 06-03-2008
Reader Comments:
Comments do not necessarily reflect the opinion or approval of HealthLeader or The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

Peggy wrote:
WOW! What a great resource you and your staff have created for all of us on the Gulf Coast! I would like to pass it around intact to my customers and clients. Perhaps you will increase your readership, too.

Caroline wrote:
You always write such inspirational articles. Just wanted to let you know that I appreciate them and find them very informational. I especially liked the one regarding Hurricane Preparedness. I decided after reading your article to develop a family “Disaster Action & Recovery Plan”. I put your article and attachments in our folder as the beginnings of that plan. Thanks. You’re doing a great job!

(A reader) wrote:
Great and useful job!!
Clever of you to think of baseball cards.
Valuable papers in the freezer - frozen assets??

Dita wrote:
Great job! This is a very timely article with lots of important information. But you knew that already, didn’t you? Really, I’m writing to compliment you on the format, I was afraid the printout would have all the extraneous stuff on the side in the article –but it didn’t; I got a nice clean savable copy. Good work. I appreciate your continued efforts to keep everyone informed.

Jacqueline wrote:
Thanks for the great hurricane and flood guide. It’s the best one I’ve read so far. I’ve printed it out and will keep it in my cooler with emergency supplies.

Caroline wrote:
What a practical article for hurricane season. Thanks so much!
Dr. Robert Emery is executive director of Environmental Health and Safety at the UT Health Science Center and associate professor of occupational health at the Center for Biosecurity and Public Health Preparedness at the UT School of Public Health.
See Dr. Emery also at:
Health Tip:
Food Irradiation
and Safety
On August 22, 2008, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) published a final rule that allows the use of irradiation to make fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh spinach safer and last longer without spoiling.
Irradiating fresh iceberg lettuce and spinach will help protect consumers from disease-causing bacteria such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli O157:H7 (E. coli). Illnesses from these bacteria range from uncomfortable symptoms to life-threatening health problems.
The foods affected by the final rule are
- loose, fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh spinach
- bagged iceberg lettuce and spinach
Irradiation (also sometimes termed "ionizing radiation") is a process of treating products with a measured dose of radiation. Food irradiation is not new. FDA has conducted irradiation safety evaluations for more than 40 years and has determined the process to be safe for use on a variety of foods.
After studying the safety of irradiating fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh spinach, FDA has determined that these greens, when irradiated under the conditions specified in the final rule, retain their nutrient value and are safe to eat.
FDA considers irradiation a complement to, not a replacement for, proper food-handling by producers, processors, and consumers. Irradiation is just another tool to reduce the levels of disease-causing microorganisms on fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh pinach.
Irradiation does not take the place of washing. FDA continues to recommend that consumers wash fresh and bagged produce before eating unless the packaging specifically states that the product has been pre-washed.
For more information, go to: http://www.fda.gov)