Home
About Us
Make A Plan
Online Store
News
FAQ
Testimonials
Contact Us


Preparedness Guides & Checklists


Schools

Whether you are the parent of a student, a school administrator, and/or a student yourself, you must be sure that your school has the proper emergency kits and supplies. You must realize that after a major disaster, students may be stuck at school for several days to weeks.

Use our school emergency preparedness checklist below to ensure that your school has the proper emergency preparedness kits and supplies to prepare students:

Emergency Food

Many schools rely on their students to bring in an "earthquake kit" with "emergency food." Unfortunately, this usually consists of nothing more than some sugar-filled snacks that have a shelf-life of less than 6 months. What students and parents don't realize is that this food may already be spoiled when students need it if stranded at school in the event of a major emergency. A 3 day survival supply of emergency food is the minimum survival recommendation to keep for each student. But don't risk students getting sick from eating spoiled food or other survival food products which contain coconut oil; the last thing you want is a student to be sick or have an allergic reaction during in an emergency situation. That is why we recommend the ER Bar - US Coast Guard Approved, 5-year shelf-life, 3-day supply emergency food rations.

 Your school also should have a gallon of water per student per day for emergency preparedness. As a minimum survival recommendation, each of our school survival kits comes with a 3-day supply of emergency drinking water which is US Coast guard approved to store safely for 5 years. However, it is important to remember that running water may not be available or safe to drink after a disaster. The cheapest and easiest way to prepare to have enough water for drinking and sanitation is to have water purification and storage supplies such as water purification tablets and 50 gallon water storage barrels.

 There is a possibility that your schools building(s) may be unsafe to occupy after a major disaster. Since students mat be forced to stay overnight and outside at school for several days if not weeks, our emergency school survival kits also come with the emergency shelter supplies to protect your school staff and students from the elements. These supplies include emergency thermal blankets and emergency rain ponchos which offer protection from harsh weather conditions. Additional recommended emergency school shelter supplies include to help protect students from extreme weather include a canopy shelter, body warmer pads, and tube tents.

After a disaster, your students may be stuck at school without any electricity. This can obviously be a dangerous situation in and of itself. When you add dangerous debris lurking in the dark, you can quickly realize why it is so important to have emergency lights for you students at school. Storing a few flashlights and batteries in your school's emergency preparedness kit is not enough. Batteries have limitations such as their limited shelf-life and the fact they only last a few hours. That is why we recommend that each classroom has at least one am/fm solar and hand crank radio with lantern light which never needs batteries. We also recommend supplying each student with one of our 12 hour emergency lightsticks which have a 5-year shelf-life. We also recommend each classroom stores a a fluorescent lantern for additional lighting capabilities. Don't forget batteries...save yourself money and trouble in replacing batteries by purchasing our Code Red Batteries that have an amazing 20-year shelf life.

 In the event of an emergency while students are in school, there is a chance that the faculty and students will have to evacuate the school and travel to a safe location. Because electricity will likely be out, the faculty members need to have emergency radios for listening to emergency broadcasts in order to know where to go for safety. Due to the limitations of battery use, we recommend the am/fm solar and hand crank powered radio with lantern light which never needs batteries. Regular battery operated emergency radios have many limitations because the batteries only last for hours and have an extremely limited shelf-life of around only 6 months.

In a major disaster at school, many students may become injured as they evacuate the building or campus due to the amount of dangerous debris. That is why schools need to keep comprehensive emergency first aid kits that can easily be mobilized to safety. We recommend the Trauma Central Supply Kit which contains the appropriate supplies to treat up to 75 people for injuries and is ideally suited for school emergency preparedness.

Collapsed structures such as your school's buildings could trap students inside if the building suffers damage during a disaster. There will also likely be broken glass and dangerous debris that you will have to deal with when evacuating students to a safe area. That is why your school need to have emergency preparedness kits in each classroom that include the appropriate emergency search and rescue supplies. These kits should include an emergency pry/crow bar to open jammed windows and doors following structural damages to buildings. For setting up camp or shelter for evacuated students, kits should also include vinyl rope and duct tape. School emergency preparedness kits should also contain leather-palmed work gloves, vinyl gloves, and dust masks for protection from dangerous debris.

 Your school must consider the fact that plumbing will likely be unavailable after a major disaster. Schools need to have the proper emergency sanitation supplies for maintaining proper sanitary health conditions. Remember that students and faculty may be forced to stay outdoors in close proximity to one another. That is why for each classroom we recommend having a bucket-style portable toilet or portable folding toilet with sanitation accessory such as toilet bags, toilet chemicals, and tissue packs.

Back to service list

Home | About Us | Make A Plan | Online Store | News | FAQ | Testimonials | Contact Us |

© 2007 AEDCardioAlert.com