1 / 16

Prepared and Ready Club

Prepared and Ready Club. What is it?. Two types of clubs. Neighborhood Prepared and Ready Club NPRC Business-zone Prepared and Ready Club BPRC. NPRC. 50 adjacent homes About 100 adults and their children

lynda
Download Presentation

Prepared and Ready Club

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Prepared and Ready Club What is it?

  2. Two types of clubs • Neighborhood Prepared and Ready Club NPRC • Business-zone Prepared and Ready Club BPRC

  3. NPRC • 50 adjacent homes • About 100 adults and their children • An all volunteer safety team of neighbors: about thirty volunteer functions for a truly prepared neighborhood – a great group! • Back-up for each function

  4. The Safety Team Instead of being effect, being cause over possible unfortunate events by training and preparing! Functions include activities such as: Organizer – arranges neighborhood meetings; Trainer – teaches safety to all members – encourages members to take CERT class; Ham radio communications – FRS radios; Administrator – online private club administrator – helps neighbors meet online; Medical – knows CPR/First aid, etc.

  5. Meetings • Barbeque – at a neighbors house – out front or in back – demonstrate fire extinguisher • Evacuate to a park for a picnic – 2pm Saturday – wait in your car with “5 minute evac pack” – convoy to a local park • Disaster Preparedness Training – at a neighbor’s house – using the FEMA “Are You Ready” book • Christmas Party – at a neighbor’s house: bring one safety gift item per adult, wrapped – play the “game”

  6. Merit badges Like the Boy Scouts • 21 different merit badges • Judged and assigned by the Trainer • Includes: • Ham radio • FRS radio • Running a generator • Pack to evac • Total all the merit badges for all 100 adults and that is the “safety level” of the neighborhood • Compete for safest neighborhood in each city

  7. Private Online network • Each neighborhood has its own private meeting area on a secure Intranet • Includes “real” face – picture taken by the neighborhood safety team member – the photographer • Real name and an “about me” written by the neighbor • Announce events, find a baby sitter, share a hobby, sell the golf clubs, keep each other informed

  8. Sample “interaction” screen

  9. Benefits • Increased sense of community • Increased willingness to help each other in an emergency • Opens up resources and contacts • Reduction in crime as “everyone” will look out for their neighbors • Increased incident readiness and knowledge of what to do • Co-operative training, including being able to rapidly evacuate “as a neighborhood” to a safe area

  10. Who is organizing this program? • Neighborhood Safety Net, a non-profit 501 (c)(3) non-profit public benefit organization • Our mission is to implement an effective evacuation program in each city that can be activated in an emergency • To do this it is vital to have knowledge, cooperation and prior drilling within each neighborhood • The first step is the Neighborhood Prepared and Ready club and the establishment of Safety Teams with both online and “radio only” communication systems

  11. What about city officials? • City officials are not allowed to endorse anything – good or bad • However County Supervisors, Mayors, Police chiefs, Fire chiefs, City managers, Beat officers, the Red Cross, Churches and several other agencies have privately expressed their support

  12. Working together • We will invite the Crime Prevention Officer in each city to attend our meetings and give briefings • We will invite the Fire Prevention Officer to come and talk about the CERT program • We will invite the city manager to work with our Organizers in planning the city wide evacuation program

  13. Who pays? • We invite a sponsor, often a Real Estate agent to help us start each neighborhood club • Eventually there may be many sponsors in a city. Sponsors may pay for: • the people who knocked on your door • the people running the presentation • the private online club in your neighborhood • the city-wide management of teams and meetings • the “safety tip” emails that you receive • the handheld Ham radio • the safety vests for the team

  14. What does the sponsor get? • Good will – the sponsor is the good guy • The direct sponsor of your neighborhood is invited to attend your neighborhood meetings wearing their “Safety Team Sponsor” badge • Their name and face will appear on “safety” material • This is an opportunity for the sponsor to meet neighbors and build trust – the first step in business

  15. Getting a sponsor If you are looking at this slide show and do not have a sponsored club, simply call up your Real Estate agent, Mortgage Broker or Insurance agent and tell him or her a little bit about the program and give the person this email address: support@neighborhoodsafety.net

  16. First step • Please fill out the volunteer form • We start with two key individuals in each neighborhood • Organizer (to get the meetings going) • Administrator (for the online club) • We will have follow up meetings with these individuals to train them and get the club up and running

More Related