Why Your Family Needs an Emergency Communication Plan
You're at work when your phone buzzes with an emergency alert about severe flooding in your area. Your heart races as you try calling your spouse—nothing but a busy signal. You try again. And again. Your kids are at school across town, and you have no idea if they're safe or what the school is doing. The panic sets in.
This scenario plays out thousands of times during every major disaster. Yet according to emergency management experts, most families don't have an emergency communication plan in place . We prepare our homes with flashlights and water, but somehow forget that knowing how to reach each other might be the most critical preparation of all.
During emergencies, communication systems often fail or become overwhelmed. When Hurricane Katrina hit, cellular towers went down and landlines stopped working, leaving families separated and desperate for information. Even in less catastrophic events like power outages or severe storms, the surge of people trying to make calls simultaneously can overload networks.
Here's something that might surprise you: text messages often work when phone calls fail . Texts require less bandwidth and can queue up to send when the network has capacity, making them more reliable during disasters. This simple fact alone can change how you prepare your family.
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