Posts tagged neighborhood

5-Minute Message: Outdoor Activities

Spring is upon us, so you’ll be seeing many more outdoor events and festivals. These outdoor activities provide a great opportunity to flex several preparedness skills and actions.

  • Refine your neighborhood resources map – be sure to note open spaces, partner locations, vacant offices, hazards or danger zones.
  • Set up a booth – if the event has booths for partners, give as many staff, volunteers and consumers the opportunity to be known in the community.
  • Get exercise – help your team to be healthier by encouraging walking, stretching, cheering, clapping and simply breathing deeply at outdoor events.
  • Encourage and support outdoor events happening in your community – they can help speed up safety improvements, build community and attract dollars.

A healthy, united, vibrant, funded community is a safer, more prepared community!

Tip: Check out the Oakland Running Festival, March 27 & 28, 2010 for an example of a positive event that will provide all of the above opportunities!

5-Minute Message: Open Space

One often-overlooked resource your neighborhood might have is simple open space.  Parks, parking lots, golf courses, fields and similar areas provide a place to gather during evacuations or for longer-term sheltering.   Take note of all open spaces near you, and mark them on your Local Area Map.  You can use maps to look up new locations, but this is a great opportunity for staff and volunteers who know the neighborhood to contribute to agency preparedness.

Visit these sites, so you know exactly what you can expect.  Make a point of talking to the owners, caretakers or managers of any space you include in your planning.  There may be other planned uses for the space, safety hazards to consider, fees to pay, or additional resources they can share. Remember: other groups may also be planning on using the space.

5-Minute Message: Open Space

One often-overlooked resource your neighborhood might have is simple open space.  Parks, parking lots, golf courses, fields and similar areas provide a place to gather during evacuations or for longer-term sheltering.   Take note of all open spaces near you, and mark them on your local area map.  You can use maps to look up new locations, but this is a great opportunity for staff and volunteers who know the neighborhood to contribute to agency preparedness.

Visit these sites, so you know exactly what you can expect.  Make a point of talking to the owners, caretakers or managers of any space you include in your planning.  There may be other planned uses for the space, safety hazards to consider, fees to pay, or additional resources they can share. Remember: other groups may also be planning on using the space.

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