(Advertisement)

Emergency officials urge residents to be prepared

Posted: September 16, 2009 at 3:25 p.m.
Updated: September 16, 2009 at 5:41 p.m.

The Arkansas Department of Emergency Management issued a reminder Wednesday for residents to prepare for a disaster of any sort: a tornado, flood or earthquake.

Department officials said they weren't sure all of the state's 2.8 million residents were ready.

"Living in Arkansas, you should have a disaster supply kit for earthquakes, floods, tornadoes and ice storms," said David Maxwell, the agency's director.

Kits should include a gallon of water per day per person for three days, a battery-operated radio, first-aid kit, sleeping bags, can opener, candles, waterproof matches, flashlight, non-perishable food, a utility knife, extra eyeglasses and water purification tablets.

"There will be an earthquake" in the New Madrid Seismic Zone along the Mississippi River in northeastern Arkansas, said Sheila Annable, the emergency management department's preparedness director. "The question is whether it's on a 200-year cycle or a 500-year cycle."

During the winter of 1811 and 1812, a series of three earthquakes approaching magnitude 8 struck near New Madrid, Mo. A quake of the same strength today could cause billions of dollars worth of damage.

For extended power failures after an earthquake, it's possible that up to a half-million people would have to be moved.

"Folks don't cope well without electricity for an extended period of time. In an earthquake it could be months before electricity is restored," Maxwell said.

An ice storm in January left some people without power for more than a week in northeastern Arkansas. Maxwell said such emergencies help the department prepare for larger ones, but he worries about concurrent disasters, such as an earthquake hitting while a hurricane threatens the Gulf Coast.

"I need to look at the worst-case scenario," he said.

Annable said earthquake researchers have run simulations for what would happen in a quake of magnitude 7.7 and predicted that nearly 600 people would die and about 13,000 would be injured. The cleanup alone would be an incredible task.

"The ice storm will look like a piece of cake," she said.

The Department of Emergency Management also would help direct a response should a swine flu outbreak interrupt critical state and municipal services, Maxwell said.

As the agency's own precaution, bottles of hand sanitizer, still two-thirds full, stood atop desks at ADEM's headquarters' lobby and in various offices, including its cavernous command center at Camp Robinson in North Little Rock.

(Advertisement)



« Previous Story

White House dismisses race as basis for Obama...

The White House says President Barack Obama doesn't think he's being criticized because of his race. Read »

Next Story »

Brand, NCAA president, dead at 67

Myles Brand, the former Indiana University president, became the first former university president to lead the NCAA, college sports' largest governing body. Brand, 67, died Wednesday afternoon.

NCAA President Myles Brand, who while leading Indiana University fired basketball Coach Bob Knight, died Wedne... Read »

Comments

To report abuse or misuse of this area please hit the "Suggest Removal" link in the comment to alert our online managers. Please read our comment policy.

Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.

Registration is required to make comments. Click here to LOGIN.
You can register for FREE to post comments and receive alerts.