IEMA Urges People to Prepare for
Severe Weather
IEMA, IESMA Sponsor Online Weather Alert
Radio Contest in March
Send a link to a friend
[March 05, 2018]
SPRINGFIELD
As recent widespread flooding demonstrates, severe weather can
happen any time of the year. To help people prepare for weather
emergencies, IEMA and local emergency management agencies will be
promoting Severe Weather Preparedness Month throughout March.
“We want to make sure families have a plan in advance, just in case
they’re ever impacted by severe weather,” said IEMA Acting Director
Jennifer Ricker. “Throughout the month of March, we’ll help people
understand where they should take shelter, the importance of having
a family communications plan, and what should be included in their
preparedness kit.”
IEMA and the Illinois Emergency Services Management Association (IESMA)
are also sponsoring an online contest that offers Illinois residents
a chance to win a weather alert radio. The “Weather Alert Radios
Save Lives” contest will be available on the Ready Illinois website
at www.Ready.Illinois. gov
through March 31.
A total of 100 weather alert radios will be awarded to randomly
selected participants who register after reading information about
the radios and successfully completing a five-question quiz. Winners
will be notified in April. The radios were purchased by IESMA to
increase the use of the devices throughout Illinois.
[to top of second column] |
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather alert radios
can be programmed to sound an alarm and provide information when a weather
warning has been issued for your county. Other ways to receive severe weather
warnings include Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA), weather alert apps, TV and
radio broadcasts, the Internet, outdoor warning sirens and more.
“Standing among the ruins of their Saline County home, a man, woman and their
infant child told me they were thankful for the precious time their NOAA weather
alert radio gave them to take shelter,” said McHenry County Emergency Management
Director and IESMA Board Member David Christensen, referring to the Feb. 29,
2012, pre-dawn tornado that struck Saline County. “Those three lives saved
convinced me of the value of these radios.”
A Severe Weather Preparedness Guide, which provides tips on how to prepare for
weather emergencies is available on the Ready Illinois website.
"Please keep in mind, if there are flooded roads it is very simple, don't drive
through flood waters. Turn Around, Don't Drown,” said Chris Miller, warning
coordination meteorologist with the NWS office in Lincoln. “Nearly all of the
people who have died in floods across Illinois were in vehicles."
[Illinois Emergency Management
Agency] |