IEMA Highlights
Preparedness for people with access and functional needs
in May
Ready Illinois website offers
emergency preparedness tips for people with functional
needs and their caregivers
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[May 06, 2016]
SPRINGFIELD – The minutes and hours
following a disaster can be scary and stressful for anyone. Emergency
preparedness, such as a home emergency supply kit and a plan for how
family members will communicate in a disaster, can ease post-disaster
stress. For households with members who have disabilities, functional
needs or may need assistance during an emergency, disaster preparedness
can be a matter of life or death.
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Throughout May, the Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) and
local emergency management agencies will highlight the importance of
disaster preparedness for people with functional and access needs.
“Illinois is susceptible to many types of hazards, such as
tornadoes, severe thunderstorms, floods, and ice storms, that can
create dangerous situations, particularly for those who may need
some type of assistance,” said IEMA Director James K. Joseph. “We
have information that can help people and their caregivers take
actions to help them stay safe during and after a disaster.”
Joseph said the Ready Illinois website offers a guidebook with
preparedness tips for people with visual, cognitive or mobility
impairments; people who are deaf or hard of hearing; those who
utilize service animals or life support systems; and senior
citizens. The guide, Emergency Preparedness Tips for Those with
Functional Needs, is available at www.Ready.Illinois.gov.
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For each functional need, the guidebook provides a list of supplemental items
for a disaster kit, tips on developing an emergency plan, suggestions on how to
be better informed about community emergency planning and a checklist of
preparedness activities.
The Ready Illinois website also offers more than two dozen preparedness videos
in American Sign Language on such topics as what to do before, during and after
tornadoes, severe thunderstorms and flooding, how to build an emergency supply
kit, and what to do if you’re instructed to evacuate.
The videos were developed in collaboration with the Illinois Deaf and Hard of
Hearing Commission.
[Illinois Emergency Management
Agency]
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