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GET A KIT. MAKE A PLAN. BE INFORMED
Flood Preparedness
Floods are among themost frequent and costly natural disasters. Conditions that cause floods include heavy or steady rain for several hours or days that saturates the ground. Flash floods occur suddenly due to rapidly rising water along a streamor low-lying area.
Flood Safety Checklist
Hurriane Preparedness
There are no other storms like hurricanes on Earth. Hurricane winds blow in a large spiral around a relatively calm center known as the eye. The eye is generally 20 to 30 miles wide, and the storm may have a diameter of 400 miles across. More dangerous than the high winds of a hurricane is the storm surge - a dome of ocean water that can be 20 feet high at its peak and 50 to 100 miles wide. The surge can devastate coastal communities as it sweeps ashore. A single hurricane can last more than two weeks over open waters and can run a path across the entire length of the eastern seaboard.
Click here to learn how you and your family can prepare for a hurricane
Swimming & Water Safety
There is no doubt that the Red Cross will be there to respond and provide relief when severe weather strikes, but the Red Cross is also there to help in other emergencies situation, like swimming emergencies. This summer, it is important to be safe in, on, and around the water. Swimmers of all ages and abilities can develop their swimming and water safety skills by contacting the Central Louisiana Red Cross at 318-442-6621.
water safety tips
Travel/Firework/Outdoor Cooking Safety Tips
The Central Louisiana Red Cross would like you to enjoy your holiday weekend but would also like you to take the following travel, firework and outdoor cooking safety tips into consideration:
Travel tips to keep you safe on the highway:
- Carry an Emergency Preparedness Kit in your trunk.
- Buckle up, slow down and do not drive if you have been drinking alcohol. If you plan on drinking, designate a driver who won't drink
- Be well rested and alert; give your full attention to the road.
- Use caution in work zones.
- Observe speed limits.
- Make frequent stops.
- Be respectful of other motorists and follow the rules of the road.
- Clean your vehicle's lights and windows to help you see well, especially at night.
- Turn your headlights on as dusk approaches, or during inclement weather.
- Find out what disasters may occur in the place where you are traveling, especially if they are disasters you have never experienced before. Find out how you would get information in the event of a disaster (local radio systems, emergency alert systems).
- Pay attention to the weather forecast for your destination. Travel and weather web sites can help you avoid storms and other regional challenges that could impact your safety.
- Don't let your vehicle's gas tank get too low.
- If you have car trouble, pull off the highway as far as possible.
- Let someone know your destination, your route and when you expect to arrive. If your car gets stuck along the way, help can be sent along your predetermined route.
How to grill safely:
- Never grill indoors - not inside your home, camper, tent or any enclosed area.
- Make sure everyone, including the pets, stays away from the grill.
- Keep the grill out in the open, away from the house, the deck, tree branches, or anything that could catch fire.
- Use long-handled tools especially made for cooking on the grill to keep the chef safe.
- Never add charcoal starter fluid when coals have already been ignited.
- Always follow the manufacturer's instructions when using grills.
- Always supervise a barbecue grill while food is cooking.
Enjoy the fireworks, but be careful:
- Never give fireworks to small children, and always follow the instructions on the packaging.
- Keep a supply of water close-by as a precaution.
- Make sure the person lighting fireworks always wears eye protection.
- Light only one firework at a time and never attempt to relight "a dud".
- Store fireworks in a cool, dry place away from children and pets.
- Never throw or point a firework toward people, animals, vehicles, structures or flammable materials.
- Stay at least 500 feet away from professional fireworks displays.
- Leave any area immediately where untrained amateurs are using fireworks.
"Be Red Cross Ready" this holiday weekend!
HEAT WAVE
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In recent years, excessive heat has caused more deaths than all other weather events, including floods. A heat wave is a prolonged period of excessive heat, often combined with excessive humidity. Generally temperatures are 10 degrees or more above the average high temperature for the region during summer months, last for a long period of time and occur with high humidity as well. |
| Excessive Heat Watch—Conditions are favorable for an excessive heat event to meet or exceed local Excessive Heat Warning criteria in the next 24 to 72 hours |
| Excessive Heat Warning—Heat Index values are forecast to meet or exceed locally defined warning criteria for at least 2 days (daytime highs=105-110° Fahrenheit). |
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Heat Advisory—Heat Index values are forecast to meet locally defined advisory criteria for 1 to 2 days (daytime highs=100-105° Fahrenheit).
HEAT WAVE SAFETY CHECKLIST |
Swine Influenza
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