CRCOG encourages all citizens in the Hartford Capitol Region to get ready for all types of emergencies by being aware, planning, and preparedness. The following kits can be helpful in hazardous situations and may be able to help plan for an emergency you may go through with children, an elderly person, pets or livestock.
Hazard Checklists
Connecticut’s Capitol Region is at risk from a number of major natural and technological hazards. To learn more about each hazard, visit the Likely Hazards page of this website. To ensure you are prepared for potential hazards, click the links below to download, view, or print PDF versions of the Hazard Prep Checklists.
- Hurricanes (Before, During, After)
- Floods (Before, During, After)
- Severe Winter Storms (Before, During, After)
- Tornadoes (Before, During, After)
- Power Outages (Before, During, After)
- Heat Waves (Before, During)
- Nuclear Accidents (Before, During, After)
- Chemical Spills (Before, During, After)
- Pandemic Influenza (Before, During)
Kits for Residents with Functional Needs
If you or a loved can’t comfortably and safely function in the context of an emergency, we’re here to help. With functional needs populations in mind, we have put together a variety of emergency kits to ensure you have everything you need during a disaster.
Families with Children
For parents, a primary concern in the early minutes or hours of a disaster will be learning about the status of their children. CRCOG encourages families with children in the Hartford Capitol Region to get ready for all types of emergencies by following the be aware, plan, and prepare steps.
To ensure that your emergency plan accommodates any unique needs your family may have, consider what special equipment, goods, or services you might need in the event of a disaster. This includes items that would allow you to evacuate (if necessary), survive for three or more days on your own, shelter-in-place, and more.
Below we provide some special considerations for families with children to ensure your plan, Disaster Supply Kit, and Baby Emergency Kit accommodate all of your critical needs.
- Learn about school disaster communication plans and childcare emergency plans and ensure that you are able to receive any specific warning and update information issued by your child’s school.
- Be sure that the school has multiple ways to reach you or an alternate contact in the event that you cannot be reached. Schools may use their website, text messaging, phone trees, or other methods to communicate with parents.
- Identify alternative options for childcare if schools and/or daycare centers are closed.
- Talk to your children about the possibility of a disaster. Reassure them that even if these events occur, the family will work together to solve problems. Children should understand all aspects of the plan that pertain to them, including communication, evacuation, and reunification.
Pet & Livestock Owners
CRCOG encourages pet owners, including those with service animals or livestock, in the Hartford Capitol Region to get ready for all types of emergencies by following the be aware, plan, and prepare steps.
In addition, the following considerations will ensure that you and your pets, service animals, and livestock are prepared in the event of a disaster.
When you develop your emergency plan, consider your animals’ needs, including how you will care for them if you have to stay at home, how you will care for them if you have to evacuate, and what you will do if you are away from your pets when a disaster strikes. Keep in mind that what’s best for you is typically what’s best for your animals.
Pet Owners
- Prepare a Pet Emergency Kit.
- Plan in advance where you will go if you evacuate, as pets (other than service animals) are usually not allowed in public shelters. Some communities have established sheltering options for pets. Contact your local emergency management agency to see if there are any emergency animal shelters in your community or along your evacuation route.
- Contact hotels and motels outside your immediate area to check their policies on accepting pets and restrictions on the number, size, and species. Ask if “no pet” policies could be waived in an emergency. Keep a list of “pet friendly” places, including their telephone numbers, with other disaster information and supplies.
- Ask friends, relatives, or others outside your area if they could shelter your animals. If you have two or more pets, they may be more comfortable if kept together, but be prepared to house them separately.
- Prepare a list of boarding facilities and veterinarians who could shelter animals in an emergency. Include 24-hour telephone numbers. Ask local animal shelters if they provide emergency shelter or foster care for pets in a disaster situation. Animal shelters may be overburdened, so this should be your last resort unless you make such arrangements well in advance.
- Take your pets with you if you evacuate. If it is not safe for you, it is not safe for them. Leaving them may endanger you, your pets, and emergency responders.
- Carry pets in a sturdy carrier. Animals may feel threatened by some disasters, become frightened, and try to run. Being in its own carrier helps reassure a pet. A leash (or harness) is also an important item for managing a nervous or upset animal.
- Have identification, collar, leash, and proof of vaccinations for all pets. Make sure your animal’s license is current. At some locations, you may need to provide veterinary records before boarding your pets. If your pet is lost, I.D. tags with both your home telephone number and that of your primary out-of-town contact person will help officials return it to you.
- Purchase stickers for doors and windows indicating number, type, and probable location of animals. Change stickers as the number of pets in your household changes.
- Remember where your animals usually go to sleep or hide. That’s where they are likely to be in case of fire, and you may be able to direct firefighters to them if a fire starts in your absence.
- Time permitting, remove animals from a burning house on a leash or in a carrier. Make sure your animals wear non-breakable collars with current license and vaccination tags.
- Place muzzles, handling gloves, catch nets, and animal restraints where firefighters can easily find them.
- Keep animal health and ownership records in your Go Kit, so you can quickly grab them upon exiting. Put a copy of the records in a safe location away from your home.
- If possible, keep a copy of the pet records, including animal health and ownership records, with a friend because you may not have time to get them in a fire.
- Keep a current photo of your pet in case they get lost.
- Create a plan in case you are not at home during an emergency to ensure that someone takes care of your pets, even evacuating them if necessary. The plan should include these elements:
- Give a trusted neighbor the key to your home and instructions, as well as your daytime (work or school) contact information.
- Make sure the neighbor is familiar with your pets and knows the location of your Pet Emergency Kit.
- Make sure the neighbor listens to a local radio or television station for emergency information and puts your shelter-in-place or pet evacuation plan into action.
- Have a plan to communicate with your neighbor after the event. You will want to arrange a meeting place in a safe area so you can be reunited with your pets.Learn pet first aid and keep your pet first aid kit up to date.
- Learn pet first aid and keep your pet first aid kit up to date.
Livestock Owners
If you have large animals such as horses, cattle, sheep, goats, or pigs on your property, be sure to prepare before a disaster.
- Ensure all animals have some form of identification.
- Evacuate animals whenever possible. Map out primary and secondary routes in advance.
- Make available vehicles and trailers needed for transporting and supporting each type of animal. Also make available experienced handlers and drivers. It is best to allow animals a chance to become accustomed to vehicular travel so they are less frightened and easier to move.
- Be aware that many transportation services become overwhelmed in disaster situations and may not be able to help you even if you have a contracted agreement.
- Ensure destinations have food, water, veterinary care, and handling equipment.
- If evacuation is not possible, animal owners must decide whether to move large animals to shelter or turn them outside.
- When temperatures plunge below zero, owners of large animals and livestock producers need to give extra attention to their animals. Prevention is the key to dealing with hypothermia, frostbite, and other cold weather injuries in livestock. Make sure your livestock has the following to help prevent cold-weather problems:
- Shelter
- Plenty of dry bedding to insulate vulnerable udders, genitals, and legs from the frozen ground and frigid winds
- Windbreaks to keep animals safe from frigid conditions
- Plenty of food and water
Take extra time to observe livestock, looking for early signs of disease and injury. Severe cold-weather injuries or death primarily occur in the very young or in animals that are already debilitated. Cases of weather-related sudden death in calves often result when cattle are suffering from undetected infection, particularly pneumonia. Sudden, unexplained livestock deaths and illnesses should be investigated quickly so that a cause can be identified and steps can be taken to protect the remaining animals. Animals suffering from frostbite don’t exhibit pain. It may be up to two weeks before the injury becomes evident as the damaged tissue starts to slough away. At that point, the injury should be treated as an open wound and a veterinarian should be consulted.
Elderly
CRCOG encourages senior citizens in the Hartford Capitol Region to get ready for all types of emergencies by following the be aware, plan, and prepare steps.
Senior citizens often rely upon their social networks to receive warnings and/or disaster related information. To ensure that you receive the information you need, make arrangements with two or three relatives, caregivers, or friends who will call you or come to your home to check on you when disaster warnings or updates are issued.
In addition to the steps outlined above, the following considerations will ensure that senior citizens and their caregivers are prepared in the event of a disaster.
- Prepare a Disaster Supply Kit.
- Create a support network to help you plan for and respond to an emergency. Consider family, neighbors, friends, people who provide services to you, and faith-based and community groups. Tell these people where you keep your emergency supplies. Give at least one member of your support network a key to your home.
- Ensure that you have multiple individuals in your personal support network that will check on your status daily in the event of an emergency.
- If you receive any special community services, such as Meals-On-Wheels, Life-Alert, or weekly rides to the grocery store and/or pharmacy, determine how you would provide for yourself if those services were to be interrupted.
- If you are receiving federal or other retirement benefits, establish direct deposit or online payment so that you do not have to worry about an interruption caused by checks sent to your home while you are away, or the inability to deliver checks on time even if you are home.
- If you are receiving health care services at home, ask your home health provider about emergency procedures. For example, if you depend on electric power for home dialysis or infusion, be sure you know your options for temporary emergency power. In the case of home infusion, you may want to discuss having a back-up drip system.
- Determine a way to signal for help if phone lines are not working.
- Consider all of the special items or services you would need if you were required to evacuate or seek shelter somewhere outside of your home.
- If you are mobility impaired, register with your local office of emergency management for special assistance in the event of an evacuation.
- If you live in a retirement community, assisted living facility, or adult family home, learn about emergency planning and procedures. How will you be kept informed? What will the facility or community expect of you and your fellow residents?
- Keep at least two weeks’ worth of extra prescription medications, as your access to supplies may be disrupted in disasters.
- Even if you do not use a computer yourself, consider asking someone to help you put important information onto a portable thumb drive for easy transport in case of an evacuation.