Communication In Emergency
An Emergency Preparedness Kit for the Workplace
Hardly a week passes without news of a natural or man-made disaster somewhere in the United States or around the world. Floods, tornadoes, earthquakes, ice storms… the list goes on. One thing is certain. If you get through a single year without so much as a power outage, you've had a great year.
In my area of suburban Connecticut we've had three weather-related power outages so far this year, and it's only July. The worst outage, during a windstorm in March, knocked out power for five days for some homeowners. That's not just an inconvenience. That's a serious, sometimes dangerous, situation.
While many people keep emergency preparedness kits at home, they often overlook the workplace. That doesn't really make sense. Your chances of getting caught in an emergency at work are significant. Yet few of us who work outside the home have made any preparations for the unthinkable. It's as if we think the office manager has got all that stuff covered. And that's not smart.
Here’s the scenario: You are at work. Out of the blue, a disaster hits. It doesn't really matter what causes it. Let's say it brings:
- Power outages|
- Lights and heat out
- Landline phones down
- Major transportation disrupted
- Blizzard weather conditions
- Water shut off
And you're stuck at work. Perhaps overnight. It's your worst nightmare.
Unless, that is, you had the foresight to put together your very own Work Emergency Preparedness Kit. If you'd had such foresight, here's what it might include:
• Contact info and directions for the 3 closest hotels/motels
• Black & Decker "Storm Station" to keep cell phone charged
• Flashlight and extra batteries
• Battery-powered lantern
• Emergency blanket
• Extra toothbrush and toothpaste
• Backup personal hygiene items
• A sleeping bag (in case you can't get to the motel)
• Some extra cash
• Emergency phone numbers – family, friends, neighbors
• A good book that you haven't read
• Some canned or freeze-dried food
• A gallon jug of fresh water
• A manual can opener
• A deck of cards
• A battery-powered radio
• Some comfortable clothes, such as sweats
• A good sense of humor (you can't store it, but you can develop it for a rainy day)
Those items may not sound like they'll bring you much comfort, but imagine for a second if you have none of the above in your workplace work when disaster hits. You'd be left without any options at all, other than spending some cold, dark hours curled up in your office chair, sipping the remnants of your cold coffee from breakfast.
You can adjust the contents of the kit to suit your particular needs, storage space available to you, climate, and so on. An emergency work preparedness kit isn't meant to replicate a 4-star hotel. But it is meant to give you a modicum of comfort and safety, in circumstances that you hope will never arise. But if they do, you'll want to be ready.
http://www.jobacle.com/blog/2010/7/29/an-emergency-preparedness-kit-for-the-workplace.html
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Showing posts with label communications. Show all posts
Showing posts with label communications. Show all posts
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Emergency Communication & Emergency Preparedness Kit For The Workplace.
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Vodafone Hijacked By Egypt
3 February 2011 Last updated at 09:15 ET
Mobile phones have played a big part in the Egyptian protests
Vodafone network 'hijacked' by Egypt
Mobile phone firm Vodafone has accused the Egyptian authorities of using its network to send unattributed text messages supporting the government.
Vodafone was told to switch off services last week when protests against President Hosni Mubarak began.
But the authorities then ordered Vodafone to switch the network back on, in order to send messages under Egypt's emergency laws, the firm said.
In a statement, Vodafone described the messages as "unacceptable".
"These messages are not scripted by any of the mobile network operators and we do not have the ability to respond to the authorities on their content."
Likely cost
The Paris-based Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development says that the government clampdown on internet services may have cost the Egyptian economy as much as $18m (£11m) a day or $90m in total.
The impact of the communications block could be even greater, as it would be "much more difficult in the future to attract foreign companies and assure them that the networks will remain reliable", said the OECD in a statement.
In another development, the credit ratings agency Fitch has downgraded the Egypt's debt grade by one notch to BB from BB+, citing the consequences of the continuing political unrest on the economy.
The country's debt grade has already been downgraded by two other ratings agencies, Moody's and Standard & Poor's.
read more here...http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12357694
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