How to Safeguard Your Home From Everything

From hurricanes to fires to zombies, here’s your 45-step plan

How to Safeguard Your Home From Everything

How to Safeguard Your Home From Everything

By Reuben Brody

Forests from California to the Rockies are ablaze. Hurricanes are ravaging the Gulf Coast. Large swaths of Mexico now stand in rubble.

And those are just the natural disasters. What about man-made ones?

“We tell people to prepare for a zombie apocalypse,” says Captain John Ignatczyk of the Los Angeles Fire Department. “It’s a joke, but if you’re prepping for that, you’ll be ready for all other types of hazards.”

To prepare for zombies — and other, more immediate dangers — we asked Captain Ignatczyk to put together a plan for disaster-proofing your home.

From go-bags to evacuation routes to off-grid essentials, here it is, in 45 steps.

  1. Have a damn good plan

“The most common mistake we see is that people don’t have a plan. We focus on three main points, and you can pick this up on ready.gov: ‘Have a plan, have a kit, stay informed.’ The fourth one we always talk about is ‘Get involved.’

The have-a-damn-good-plan checklist, in seven steps:


2. Safeguard your home

“[L.A. has plenty of] pre-’33 construction — or Victorian-style — homes built right around the turn of the century, where everything was held together by nails. Newer construction has metal plates holding all your members together. You’ll see that those are the stronger buildings. Older homes that aren’t bolted to their foundation. Roofing styles, for instance, can pose a problem. If you have a wood shake roof in a wildfire area, that’s not as fire-resistive as something that’s a composite shingle.”

Some things to take into account to :

home needs (6 images)

3. Supply your home

“At the fire department, we say [be ready for] 72 hours at a minimum. We’re not saying that we won’t get to you. We’re just saying that there’s going to be a delay in your normal fire service and your 911 provider. Disaster preparedness is everyone’s responsibility, and everybody needs to have something in their home, in their place of work, or in their car to help them out in those scenarios. Longer delays are for people in isolated areas, where roads and access might be more obstructed. That’s why we always tell people ‘minimum of 72 hours.’”

Water: Very important

You want to keep one gallon per day per person. Your correspondent gets water delivered, and he keeps five gallons of potable water on hand. “That’s good,” says Captain Ignatczyk. “We keep the solid 24-packs that you get in bulk and rotate those, so we’re never throwing away water.”

It’s important to remember not to store plastic directly on concrete, and instead on a wood pallet or in a rack. “Studies show where plastic, one-gallon containers stayed on a cement floor, and after not moving it for a long time, they pulled it up and it broke in half. Then the water was contaminated by leaching through the cement,” explains Captain Ignatczyk.

A good three-part water preparedness plan:

Lights: Very important

Basic life support: Very important

“Trauma dressing, Band-Aids, wound-care items such as gauze, eye washes, safety gloves, eye protection — those are the things that are very simple to use. You know if you see a cut that’s bleeding, all you need is something that could cover a wound and possibly tape.”

Food: Important

You can last longer without food than water, but why do it? Be mindful of your dietary needs.

Energy: Varies

“One of the most wanted resources after some kind of a disaster is always some form of backup power, especially during a heatwave or ice storm: to charge your phone, to keep your refrigerator cold. Think of the amount of money that you have invested in food: that’s a valuable resource. You might not have the luxury of having a big kit with a lot of food, but you do have a refrigerator; don’t let that food go bad.”

Protection: Varies

“Safety is always paramount in the home, as far as locking doors, lights — things like that. You have those options for security. As far as whether people need to own guns? That’s up to the individual.”

Additional resources

CERTA (community emergency response team)

FEMA (federal emergency management agency)

Ready.gov

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