Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Tornado Survival and recovery tips

How quickly must I react to a tornado warning?
A tornado warning means a funnel cloud has been detected and you should take cover immediately.

Where should I take shelter?
The safest place to be during a tornado is underground—for example, in a basement. If you can't get to a basement, seek shelter in an interior hallway or small interior room with no windows, like a bathroom or a closet.

If I'm away from my home, what should I do?
If you're away from home when a tornado strikes, the same basic rules of survival apply: Remain calm and get to the lowest level possible, away from windows and free-span roofs.

If I'm in my car, what should I do?
If you're in an automobile when a warning is issued, you should get out of your vehicle and lie down in a low area away from your car, with your hands covering your head and neck.

Can a mobile home provide sufficient shelter?
Not necessarily. If you live in a mobile or manufactured home, even one with tiedowns, you should seek shelter elsewhere at the first sign of severe weather. Make arrangements in advance to go to a community shelter or stay with a friend or relative. As a last resort, go outside and lie flat on the ground with your hands over your head and neck.

If you must seek shelter outdoors, be alert for flash floods that often accompany tornadoes.

TORNADO! The very word strikes fear in many people. While a tornado is perhaps nature's most destructive storm, deaths and injuries can be prevented. By following Tornado Safety Rules, lives can be saved and injuries prevented.

Warning the public of severe thunderstorms and tornadoes is the National Weather Service's (NWS) most important job. To help the public prepare for tornado situations, the NWS has adopted a WATCH and WARNING program.

TORNADO WATCH: This means that conditions are favorable for tornado development. This is the time to prepare. You should keep alert by listening to NOAA Weather Radio, or the commercial media for the latest weather information.

TORNADO WARNING: This means a tornado has been sighted or indicated by radar. People in the path of the storm should take immediate life saving action.

IN SCHOOLS, HOSPITALS, FACTORIES, SHOPPING CENTERS AND OTHER PUBLIC PLACES: Move to designated shelter areas. Interior hallways on the lowest level are usually best. Stay away from windows and out of auditoriums, gymnasiums, or other structures with large free span roofs.

IN VEHICLES: Do not try to outrun a tornado. Abandon your vehicle and hide in a nearby ditch or depression and cover your head.



Tornado Myths

MYTH: Areas near rivers, lakes and mountains are safe from tornadoes.
FACT: No place is safe from tornadoes. They can cross rivers, travel up mountains, and roar through valleys.
MYTH: Low pressure with a tornado causes buildings to "explode" as the tornado passes overhead.
FACT: Violent winds and debris slamming into buildings cause most damage.
MYTH: Windows should be opened before a tornado to equalize pressure and minimize damage.
FACT: Opening windows allows damaging winds to enter the structure. Leave the windows alone; instead immediately go to a safe place.


TORNADO SAFETY

IN ANY BUILDING
Basement is the safest place
Avoid windows and chimneys
Hide under furniture or stairwells
Cover your head
 
IN A HOME
Seek lowest level
Central section
Hide under furniture or stairwells
Avoid windows and chimneys
Cover your head
 
IN AN APARTMENT
Lowest level
Central portion of home Small room, closet or hallway
Avoid exterior walls and windows
Cover your head
IN AN OFFICE BUILDING
Seek lowest level, if available
Central portion of building Small room, closet or hallway
Avoid exterior walls and windows
Cover your head
IN A MOBILE HOME / TRAILER
Evacuation is a must ; mobile homes CANNOT withstand the force of even a small tornado
If there is time, seek shelter in a nearby permanent building
If not available, head for a low spot such as a ditch or ravine
Cover your head


Tornado Awareness

Tornadoes are relatively short-lived local storms.They are composed of violently rotating columns of air that descend in the familiar funnel shape from thunderstorm cloud systems. The weather conditions that tend to generate Tornadoes are unseasonably warm and humid earth surface air, cold air at middle atmospheric levels, and strong upper-level jet stream winds. Tornadoes can occur anywhere in the United States during any month of the year. However, the Great Plains and Gulf Coast States experience the largest number of Tornadoes. The greatest frequency of Tornadoes occur in April, May and June.


The destructive path of a tornado averages about 250 yards in width and 15 miles in length. In extreme conditions, a tornado may travel more than 300 miles and leave a path of total destruction more than a mile wide. Tornadoes will travel up to 70 mph, with wind speeds approaching 400 mph within the tornado's center. Tornadoes usually travel from a westerly direction to an easterly direction.

Signs and Warnings
Tornadoes develop during severe thunderstorms. While not all thunderstorms create Tornadoes, the potential is there. During violent weather, keep tuned to a local television or radio station for tornado reports.
If you are outside and see a funnel-shaped cloud with obvious rotating motion, it may be a tornado. As a tornado develops, it will produce a loud roar that grows louder as the funnel cloud touches the ground. When nearby, a tornado has a loud sound comparable to the combined roars of several jet engines.
The National Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City issues tornado watches. Local National Weather Service offices issue tornado warnings. Local officials may sound sirens in a tornado warning.
A tornado watch indicates that conditions are right for a tornado to develop and the sky should be watched.
A tornado warning indicates a tornado has been sighted or is spotted on radar. Warnings will give the location of the tornado and the area immediately affected by the warning.

Immediate Dangers
The immediate threat from Tornadoes is danger to life and damage to property from violently whirling winds and debris hurled through the air by winds.

Long-Term Dangers
Long-term risks include the possibility of building collapse, fallen trees and power lines, broken gas lines, broken sewer and water mains, and the outbreak of fires. Agricultural crops and industries may be damaged or destroyed.

Preparedness
The best preparation for a tornado is to designate a safe place in or around your home as a tornado shelter. Tornado shelters are safest if they are underground. A storm cellar or basement away from windows offers the best protection.
If neither of these is available, plan to find shelter under heavy furniture or mattresses near an inside wall of your house on the ground floor. Get under solid furniture or cover yourselves with mattresses pulled off the bed.
Plan tornado drills with your family so everyone knows what to do.
Know the location of the designated shelter where you work or go to school.
Plan to evacuate your manufactured (mobile) home.
Make an inventory of your household furnishing and other possessions.
Supplement the written inventory with photographs or video. Keep inventories and pictures in a safe deposit box or some other safe place away from the premises.

Response
If you have a storm cellar or shelter, go to it immediately with your family. If no shelter is available, go to your basement and get under a heavy work bench or stairs. Do not position yourself directly underneath heavy appliances on the floor above you.

If your home has no basement, stay in the center of the house away from the windows or in a small room on the ground floor that is away from outside walls. Take cover under solid furniture or mattresses.  Protect your head.

In mobile homes or vehicles, leave and take shelter in a substantial structure. If there is no nearby shelter, lie flat in the nearest ditch or ravine with your hands shielding your head.

In any large building, such as an office or department store, avoid all large, poorly supported roofs.

Go to the basement or to an inner hallway on a lower floor.

Do not drive. You are safer in a home or basement shelter than in a car.

If you are driving in a city and spot a tornado, get out of your car and go to a nearby building.

If you are driving in open country, drive at a right angle away from the tornado's path if you can safely do so. Do not try to outrun the storm. If you cannot avoid the tornado, get out of your car.

Lie flat in the nearest depression, such as a ditch, culvert or ravine. Protect your head and stay low to the ground.

Recovery
After a tornado passes, keep tuned to the local radio or TV station to get an all-clear signal before leaving your shelter. Sometimes more than one tornado will develop during a violent storm.


Be alert to fire hazards such as broken electric wires or damaged electrical equipment, gas or oil leaks, or smoldering piles of wet hay or feed. Report broken utility lines to appropriate authorities.

Have damage to your property assessed by your insurance company.

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