We spend a lot of time discussing emergency kits for the
home. Those kits should be geared
mostly toward keeping yourself supplied at home if the stores and banks are
closed, and at least part should be a portable kit that you casually take to a
shelter with you. You presumably won’t
need to grab it and run out of the building during a quake, because you are not supposed to run out of a building during a quake. So these emergency kits can be large and
contain supplies for up to 7 days.
But what about where you work, and your car? It’s important to think about such things,
because if you are stuck somewhere that isn’t home, your home emergency kit
isn’t going to be much help to you. Here
are some thoughts about how to go about preparing work and car kits.
But more likely, you work far enough away from home that
getting back home may be impractical if the roads are blocked or public
transportation is down. Around here in
the San Francisco Bay Area, many people do bridge or tunnel commutes (Golden
Gate Bridge, Bay Bridge, BART tunnel under the bay, etc.). While one bridge down just makes people go to
the next bridge, a failure on one bridge can make the authorities close the other
bridges for a while, as Marin commuters discovered after the 1989 Loma Prieta
quake when the Golden Gate Bridge was shut down in response to the Bay Bridge’s
failure. If you can’t get home, and
stores and restaurants aren’t functioning, then your primary goal for an
emergency kit is to tide you over with food and water, with flashlight and
radio and probably medical kit, until you can get home somehow. Hmm, sounds an awful lot like what I
suggested for the first scenario.
Here’s one more thing to think about: if you are working
within a somewhat long walking distance from home, and you typically work in
uncomfortable shoes, think about keeping a pair of old comfortable shoes in the
work place so that you don’t do that 2-mile walk home in high heels or
uncomfortable men’s suit shoes.
When might you need an emergency kit in your car? Being literally stuck inside your car is not
impossible, but it would be a relatively rare consequence of an
earthquake. Much more likely, you have
been driving around somewhere that is not in walking distance from home, and
the roads home are too damaged or are gridlocked. Food, water, comfortable shoes if you don’t
wear them already, radio in case your car battery gives out, flashlight...it’s
starting to sound familiar! (In fact, it
makes sense to have supplies like this in your car even if you live in a region
that does not experience earthquakes.)
But in the car, compactness might be more important. Also keep in mind that any emergency food
supplies kept in the car probably will expire more quickly than the food you
keep in your home and work kits, due to the car sometimes being left out in the
heat. Having a cable that enables you to
charge your cell phone from your car battery is worthwhile.
One more thing to consider is that, more than what you might
keep at work, the car kit could be even more useful if it is easily portable,
like in a backpack. I admit that as I
write this, my emergency car supplies are wedged into spaces that accommodate
them, like in the well with the spare tire; but if you find yourself needing to
hoof it due to impassable roads and impossible driving conditions, carrying
your emergency supplies with you could be quite nice. It all depends on what you have room for
permanently in your car trunk.
If you are worried about really getting stuck inside your
car, due to an earthquake, dramatic fall from a bridge, or unfortunately timed
discovery of a living Tyrannosaurus rex, having a Life Hammer® in
the car can help you cut seat belts and smash side windows. I got one of those a couple of years
ago. It’s still on my desk, as I try to
figure out how to mount the darned thing.
I’m sure many people will have other ideas of what should be
stashed in these places: foldable rain jackets, etc. You might want to think about what is in your home kit and decide whether it is
worthwhile to you to have more in your work or car kit. What I have described is the basic situation
for both places. In fact, if any readers
out there have personal experiences from 1989 Loma Prieta, 1994 Northridge, or
other situations in which you had to leave your car taking the supplies, feel
free to use the comment feature on this blog to tell people what worked well
for you and what you lacked but wished you had.
That means that interested readers should check back later to see if
anyone posted suggestions.
One of these days, there will probably be an iPhone app that
not only lets the phone double as a radio, map, and flashlight, as it already
does, but also makes it become edible and wearable on both feet. Until that day, having emergency supplies at
work and in the car makes a whole lot of sense, since you never know where you
will be when you have to rely on them.
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