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Hurricane and Flood: Before-and-After Handbook 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:

Leaving a paper trail

Who ya’ gonna call ?…

Planning ahead for that rainy day

Part II

Noah's Ark:
When Your House
Becomes A House Boat

Resources

Hurricane Evacuation Map
(Brazoria / Galveston / Harris County)

Hurricane Evacuation Contraflow Plan
(Houston)

When the TV reporter is soaking wet and windblown:

Once the National Weather Service has issued a warning and your area must evacuate:

‘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:

comments Share your thoughts:

 

What is your best storm survival tip?

Read what other's have to say...

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:

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:

Most cars will float in two feet of water.

What to do while driving

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:

If you are in your home (and do not have a basement):

In an office building, hospital, nursing home or skyscraper:

If you are in your car:

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.

reader commentpencil 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.

 

reader commentpencil 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!

 

 

reader commentpencil (A reader) wrote:

Great and useful job!!
Clever of you to think of baseball cards.
Valuable papers in the freezer - frozen assets??

 

 

reader commentpencil 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.

 

 

reader commentpencil 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.

 

 

reader commentpencil Caroline wrote:

What a practical article for hurricane season. Thanks so much!