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Community Emergency Response Team training

City emergency services personnel are best trained and equipped to handle emergencies. But following a catastrophic disaster, our neighborhoods may be on our own for hours or days due to the size of area affected by the earthquake or other disaster. That's what CERT training prepares people for.

"The primary reason for CERT training is to give people the decision-making, organizational, and practical skills to offer immediate assistance to family members, neighbors, and associates while waiting for help. While people will respond to others in need without the training, the goal of the CERT program is to help people do so effectively and efficiently without placing themselves in unnecessary danger."

Campbell Police Department-Cert-Logo:

In the fall of 2002 my husband and I took Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) training through the city of Campbell.

The training included disaster preparedness, fire suppression, medical operations, light search and rescue, and team psychology and organization. The final 'exam' on a Saturday morning at a neighborhood fire station included using a fire extinguisher to put out a small gasoline fire the fire station personnel started, a search of a room after a simulated quake with the removal of a victim from under a heavy object (without wrecking your back), practice of carrying victims (without wrecking your back), triage (first aid sorting) of a simulated busload of victims and much more.

Below: the simulated victims at a bus crash await traige at a Cupertino CERT exercise (final exam).

CERT triage animals: stuffed animals sit on chairs in rows representing a bus load of victims

This is low cost training.

Out of 30,000 plus people in our city, only a few dozen of us are CERT trained. I highly recommend it and hope more of our neighbors can find the time to take the training. My husband and I are Red Cross first aid/CPR instructors and I am an earthquake instructor, but we still learned new things from the class. This is not a difficult class, with a lot of testing or stress.

Below: Cupertino CERT students practice cribbing. With these techniques a small team can carefully lift a bookcase or other heavy object up off a victim. (But wouldn't it be easier to have your bookcase bolted to your walls?)

CERT cribbing practice:

In 2003 my husband and I became instructors for CERT.

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Photos below from a summer exercise at De Anza College, with Campbell, Cupertino, Saratoga and Los Gatos/Monte Sereno CERT teams, are by Arleigh Movitz

cert search: cert taking pulse:

cert first fire: cert second fire:

The Santa Clara County Fire Department sponsors CERT training primarily intended for individuals who live in the communities of Campbell, Cupertino, Saratoga, Los Gatos and Monte Sereno.

It consists of a total of 21 hours of training (8 modules) in:

Emergency Preparedness

CERT organization

Disaster Psychology

Fire Safety

Light Search and Rescue

Emergency Medical Operations

Terrorism

Disaster Simulation Exercise/Graduation

Cost and details of West Valley region (Campbell, Cupertino, Los Gatos, Monte Sereno and Saratoga) classes are at:

http://www.sccfd.org/pub_ed/disaster_prep.html and scroll down to the CERT section.

CERT certificate: State Assembly cert of recognition:



Having passed the course, our "job" is to try to organize our neighborhood to be better prepared for the next quake, for example. So I'm using space at my website to pass on information we learned in the course and to provide links to other sources.

Note to our neighbors who may be reading this: no matter how many of us get trained and organize, each family will have to be prepared to get by on their own. The CERT team members might not be in town or at home when the next disaster strikes, or may have their own problems to solve first. If your house slides off its foundation and you are trapped and injured or if a big fire starts, we aren't trained to help you and the help you would need might not be able to get to you in time. Preparation/prevention is the key. So, read on for ideas.

earthquake home hazards survey

A family (and babysitters, caregivers, overnight guests) disaster plan is at:

Disaster planning

toppled brick chimney USGS photo: chimney fallen on roof USGS photo:

Earthquake info sources

Earthquake information sources is a page of links to most often needed how-to-do-it information from PG&E, City of San Leandro, Association of Bay Area Governments, Los Angeles Fire Department, USGS, Red Cross, and the Federal Insurance and Mitigation Administration.

Also, here on my website:

Earthquake and pets advice

Helping Children Cope With Disaster

Disaster Supplies

Store water for after an earthquake

Babysitter Consent and Contact Form

Overwhelmed by the amount of things to do to prepare for a disaster?

Try: Fast, easy, cheap earthquake preparedness for the first to do.

For my CERT and earthquake preparedness class students:the Simple secondary survey study sheet at this website has the list of questions you want to memorize to be able to better help a conscious victim after the initial CERT treatment, or just to help an accident victim.

CERT disaster medicine students: The START Triage quiz is for review.

http://cert.wflsd.org/wflsdCERTfog.htm has many forms

For eq preparedness class students who use the book:

cover photo putting down roots in earthquake country:

Putting Down Roots in Earthquake Country

Your Handbook for the San Francisco Bay Region

the website page of the links mentioned in the book is at: Putting down roots in earthquake country

The American Red Cross and the CDC created a website on terrorist incidents:

"The possibility of terrorist incidents in the United States concerns many people. To help, the American Red Cross and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) have teamed up to answer common questions and provide guidance on steps you can take now to protect you and your loved ones."

http://www.redcross.org/preparedness/cdc_english/CDC.asp

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If this hasn't motivated you or you don't have the time for all this or you need some more reasons to motivate a household member to get ready, read:

Why bother getting ready for an earthquake?

tt blue rule:

(If our houses won't slip off the foundation during a quake), we are all at greater risk from a fire in our homes than from an earthquake.

fire extinguisher:

You need an A B C type fire extinguisher in the garage and/or workshop, kitchen, on the second floor and in your vehicles(s).

    Class A - Ordinary combustible fires

    Class B - Flammable liquid, gas or grease fires

    Class C - Energized-electrical equipment

One of the first things we did after taking the CERT class was to switch from the cheap $5-ish model of smoke alarm we had in the hall to the better $25-ish model and put them in more rooms. The better models, with I (ionization) and P (photoelectric) on the box, will detect smoke faster than the cheap models.

Replace smoke alarms every ten years as they become less sensitive over time. This is a joint recommendation of the National Fire protection Association and the U.S. Consumer Products Safety Commission.

We also bought more ABC type fire extinguishers (we already had one in the kitchen, garage and each car, but a couple of them were probably too old).

If you ever need to put out a small fire with one, call the fire department anyway. They won't consider it a waste of time. They would much prefer to come out and check up on things and find you did a great job than to come out later when it turns out you didn't.

You need to put out the fire in your fireplace or woodstove completely before you go to bed or leave the house, even if you are in the good habit of closing the firescreen, in case a quake should knock things around.

We have liter bottles of water in the woodbox in case a quake shuts off the water supply, so we can put out the fire quickly.

http://www.fireextinguisher.com/ has rules for fighting fires, types of fire extinguishers, how to use them and more

Use the following checklist as a safety guide to spot possible fire safety problems which may be present in your home. It is a first step in reducing the risk of fire. Check YES or NO to answer each question. If you check NO to any question, the potential hazard should be corrected to avoid the risk of injury or death.

Home Fire Safety Checklist

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YOUR CELL PHONE and 911

When you call 911 from a land line telephone, such as in your house, you get dispatch for the city the phone (your house) is located in. When you call 911 from a cell phone you get the Highway Patrol at a central location. Sometimes, especially if you are not calling about something on the freeway/highway, it would be faster to get dispatch for the specific city the problem is happening in. This requires knowing the direct dial seven digit phone number for each dispatch.

Direct dial emergency phone numbers for most cities in Santa Clara County, California, can be found at the Santa Clara County ARES/RACES (Amateur Radio Emergency Services/Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services) website.

http://www.scc-ares-races.org/dd-emer-nos.html

or in the government section of the phone book.

San Mateo County cities (and the San Francisco airport) direct dial phone numbers can be found at:

http://www.blackberryreact.org/smco911phones.html

When you are planning a camping trip, try to get the direct dial number for the park/Sheriff or agency in charge before you go.

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CERT logo:

CERT info sources

The main CERT info page is:

https://www.citizencorps.gov/cert/

The Connection newsletter is comprised of articles written by people from around the country who are involved in community preparedness on a daily basis.

http://www.naem.com/connection.html

Check out the website for the CERT classes in Cupertino:

Cupertino CERT

The contact information for Los Gatos/Monte Sereno CERT is: Telephone: (408) 399-5722 E-mail: CERT@town.los-gatos.ca.us

A directory of Community Emergency Response Team Programs by state is at:

http://training.fema.gov/EMIWeb/CERT/dir.asp

citizenscorp:

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More suggestions in anticipation of the next emergency:

Give Blood. Only about 5% of eligible donors give blood. It's estimated we need an average of 34,000 units of blood per day in the U.S.

It only takes about an hour, and the Red Cross on North First Street, which is certainly on some kind of a work or shopping commute you take, has a huge supply of OJ, lemonade, chocolate chip cookies (and new & old magazines if you forget to bring a project or want to catch up on your trashy reading).

If you've never done it, it doesn't have to be intimidating or scary! For info on what happens, go to:

Blood donation FAQs

The American Red Cross

If every blood donor gave only one more time yearly, we would not have blood supply problems.

line drawing of CPR:

Learn CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) and first aid.

Links at this site to the classes I teach are: CPR AED and Red Cross First Aid

I also occasionally teach Earthquake Preparedness.

 Updated Sunday, April 27, 2014 at 4:47:48 PM by Mary Donahue - donahuemary@fhda.edu
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