Contra Costa County CERT Program Unit 10 – Pet Preparedness
description
Transcript of Contra Costa County CERT Program Unit 10 – Pet Preparedness
Contra Costa County CERT Program
Unit 10 – Pet PreparednessReleased: 6 September 2011Released: 6 September 2011
Visual 10.2
Community Emergency Response Team
Personal safety is ALWAYS the number one priority Work as a team Wear personal protective equipment…gloves,
helmet, goggles, N95 mask and boots
The CERT goal is to do the
Greatest Good for the Greatest Number Hope for the best but plan for the worst
Visual 10.3
Disaster Preparedness for Pets
Why pets matter Keep your animals safe
Identify evacuation locations Secure your animals Keep your animals alive Keep your animals healthy Provide a clean, safe place ID your animals and yourself
Get additional training Get your city prepared for pet evacuation What’s next?
Visual 10.4
Why Pets Matter
Why Pets Matter 63% of all US households own pets Before Katrina, 25% of pet owners failed to
evacuate (during mandatory evacuation) Before Katrina, 40% of pet owners left pets
behind (during mandatory evacuation) Before Katrina, 70% of those pet owners
attempted to return to rescue their animals After Katrina, 61% of pet owners state they
will not evacuate without their pets
Pets Matter, Because People Matter...
Visual 10.5
Pets in Disasters
"During Hurricane Katrina, tens of thousands of animals became homeless or perished. Many pet owners stayed with their pets and perished," Rep. Chris Shays, 2006
The Pets Evacuation and Transportation Standards (PETS) Act – introduced by Rep. Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) and Rep. Chris Shays (R-Conn.) – requires the inclusion of companion animals in disaster planning at the state and local levels.
It was signed into law by President Bush on October 8, 2006
Visual 10.6
Pets in Contra Costa
City Population Households Dogs Cats Birds Horses Other Total
Antioch 101,049 37.846 21,951 24,978 3,785 1,892 4,050 56,656
Brentwood 40,912 15,323 8,887 10,113 1,532 766 1,640 22,938
Clayton 10,982 4,113 2,386 2,715 411 206 440 6,157
Concord 124,798 46,741 27,110 30,849 4,674 2,337 5,001 69,971
Danville 42,809 16,033 9,299 10,582 1,603 802 1,716 24,002
El Cerrito 23,407 8,767 5,085 5,786 877 438 938 13,124
Hercules 23,360 8,749 5,074 5,774 875 437 936 13,097
Lafayette 24,317 9,107 5,282 6,011 911 455 975 13,634
Martinez 36,818 13,790 7,998 9,101 1,379 689 1,475 20,643
Moraga 16,435 6,155 3,570 4,063 616 308 659 9,215
Oakley 28,265 10,586 6,140 6,987 1,059 529 1,133 15,847
Orinda 17,797 6,666 3,866 4,399 667 333 713 9,978
Pinole 19,604 7,342 4,259 4,846 734 367 786 10,991
Pittsburg 62,605 23,448 13,600 15,475 2,345 1,172 2,509 35,101
Pleasant Hill 33,638 12,599 7,307 8,315 1,260 630 1,348 18,860
Richmond 103,012 38,581 22,377 25,464 3,858 1,929 4,128 57,756
San Pablo 31,344 11,739 6,809 7,748 1,174 587 1,256 17,574
San Ramon 51,027 19,111 11,085 12,613 1,911 956 2,045 28,610
Walnut Creek 66,501 24,907 14,446 16,438 2,491 1,245 2,665 37,285
Unincorporated 161,574 60,582 35,138 39,984 6,058 3,029 6.482 90,691
Total 1,020,434 382,185 221,667 252,242 38,219 19,019 40,894 572,131
Visual 10.7
Identify Evacuation Locations
Safe distance from home Coordinate with Neighbors Define Tasks Identify Pet Friendly Hotels
www.petswelcome.com www.dogfriendly.com www.petfriendlytravel.com www.travelpets.com
Identify Boarding Kennels and Ranches
Visual 10.8
Evacuation
Evacuate with your animals PETS Act: Mandatory evacuation of pets with
human animals If you are not home:
You may not be home when the evacuation order comes; find out if a trusted neighbor would be willing to take your pets and meet you at a prearranged location.
Visual 10.9
Secure Your Animals
Your Home May Be Compromised: Create Controlled Environment Have Kennels / Evac-Sacs in a
Safe Place Assign Retrieval Tasks to Family
Members Have Buddy System
• Exchange Keys / Plans With Neighbor / Pet Sitter
Identify Outdoors Holding Area Obtain Materials to Create Holding Area Identify & Remove Hazards
Visual 10.10
Keep Your Animals Alive
Store animal food (2 weeks) Airtight, waterproof containers In secure area
Store extra water (2 week supply) Not in direct sunlight Water that is unfit for human animals
is unfit for ALL animals Food and water bowls Paper towels, dish soap, disinfectant
Visual 10.11
Keep Your Animals Healthy
Pet first aid kit Medications Ask vet about his/her disaster plan Blankets Toys and treats Plastic poop bags or cat litter and litter trays
Visual 10.12
Provide a Clean, Safe Place
Dogs and cats Collapsible crate or kennel Harness, leash and cable screw / stake
Horses, swine, cattle Halter and lead rope Bedding material Manure fork
Birds, reptiles, rabbits Cage liners Evacuation cage or carrier
Fish?
Visual 10.13
ID Your Animals and Yourself
ID your pets Put an ID tag on collar Microchip each pet Vet contact Vaccination records / spayed or neutered
ID yourself Take photos of yourself with your pets
• In wallet• In emergency kit•With loved one outside of district
Visual 10.14
What’s Next?
Animal Response Training through Concord CERT DART – Disaster Animal Response Team Learn pet first aid
Noah’s Wish American Red Cross American Safety Academy
Take FEMA courses IS-10 – Animals in Disaster, Awareness and Preparedness IS-11 – Animals in Disaster, community Planning IS-111 – Livestock in Disasters http://training.fema.gov/IS/crslist.asp
Join animal rescue groups Get your city prepared for pet evacuation
Visual 10.15
Unit Summary
Why pets matter Keep your animals safe
Identify evacuation locations Secure your animals Keeping your animals alive Keeping your animals healthy Provide a clean, safe place ID your animals and yourself
Get additional training Get your city prepared for pet evacuation