Archive for the ‘Communication’ Category

2010 Hurricane Season Summary

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

2010 Hurricane Season Summary

The Atlantic basin sits still and quiet for now, but come June 1st the warm waters will start to wake up and go into full cylcle.

The Storm Names for 2010 are as follows:

Alex, Bonnie, Colin, Danielle, Earl, Fiona, Gaston, Hermine, Igor, Julia, Karl, Lisa, Matthew, Nicole, Otto, Paula, Richard, Shary, Tomas, Virginie, Walter.
Prepare today and visit our WeAreSafeAndSound.com Facebook page, or get more information at 2010 Hurricane Season.

2010 Hurricane Season Starts Today, June 1st

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Today marks the first day of the 2010 Hurricane Season, and what a 2010 Hurricane Forecast that has been made.  In preparation, we’ve started a facebook fan page to stay up to date with the latest tips, storm names, vital support information, and overall preparedness materials (see or click image below to visit page).  Remember, don’t the roll the dice on a Hurricane being a near miss… Prepare Now!

Was Katrina A “Natural” Or “Man-Made” Disaster? New York Times Ombudsman Says Maybe Just Call It A “Disaster”

Sunday, May 16th, 2010
Also today in the New York Times ombudsman Clark Hoyt raised a wording question that has both journalistic and policy implications when it comes to disasters. As part of the column, “Semantic Minefields,” Hoyt wrote about a petition organized by Sandy Rosenthal of New Orleans asking the Times “to issue a style memo requiring that news articles use ‘man-made disaster,’ not ‘natural disaster,’ when referring to Hurricane Katrina’s impact on New Orleans.” The column continues: Read the remainder of Was Katrina A 'Natural' or 'Man-Made' Disaster?

“Preparing For The Next Haiti, With Maps, Texts And Tweets”

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010
Nathan Hodge of Wired.com’s Danger Room blog has a good post, Preparing For The Next Haiti, With Maps, Texts, And Tweets, which discusses the impressive high-tech volunteer response to the earthquake. Hodge attended the Haiti Tech Meetup yesterday at the U.S. State Department yesterday and spoke to a number of those involved in the recovery effort:  read the remainder of Preparing For The Next Haiti, With Maps, Texts and Tweets.

Surviving a Nuclear Bomb, by Robert B.

Saturday, May 8th, 2010
A serious letter to my dear beloved son, Eric, It is quite possible that the USA will soon experience a terrorist attack in the form of a nuclear detonation. The city just west of the University you are attending would be a high profile, terrorist "trophy" to attack. If a nuclear detonation by terrorist occurs in that city, you will notice a bright flash of light and, then feel the blast wave a few seconds after. Although the University is somewhat distant and shielded by terrain from that city, train yourself to not look toward the flash and immediately duck behind a solid barrier. Expect glass to be flying from any windows and plug your ears. Once the blast wave passes note the time. Your goal is to be inside a fallout shelter within 40 minutes and with enough supplies to last 2 weeks. This will only be possible if you prepare in advance... Read the remainder of Surviving a Nuclear Bomb.