Some Personal Preparedness for Persons with Major Illnesses

Here is some advice for those with major illnesses to help anticipate and enhance their ability to cope with a major disaster. The source of this information is the Mesothelioma Center.

Those who have been diagnosed or have a family member diagnosed with cancer can have a particularly hard time when natural disasters occur. This can range from not having the ability to refill a prescription to roadways being blocked so they can’t make it to the hospital to continue their treatment. That’s why we created this page https://www.asbestos.com/support/natural-disaster-emergency-plan/ to help give advice on what you should do before disaster strikes.

Alternatively, after a damaging natural disaster, the recovery process can be quite dangerous. Many old buildings may have been destroyed and asbestos may be unknowingly present. We also created these pages: https://www.asbestos.com/asbestos/natural-disasters/ . Also, https://www.asbestos.com/mesothelioma/causes/risk-factors/ to give tips on how to prevent yourself from being exposed to asbestos while cleaning up.

GAO Recommendations to DHS- July 5

Priority Open Recommendations: Department of Homeland Security.  
Full report is 34 pp.

“Each year, we make more than 1,000 recommendations to help the federal government save money, address issues on our High Risk List, and significantly improve government operations.

This letter to DHS outlines 42 open recommendations that it should prioritize. The recommendations relate to emergency preparedness, border and transportation security, infrastructure, cybersecurity and IT, chemical security, countering violent extremism, and domestic intelligence and information sharing.

DHS implemented 14 recommendations we identified as a priority last year.”

“Managed Retreat” from Flood-Prone Homes

From CNN: Thousands of Americans are leaving homes in flood-risk areas. But where are they moving to?

“For more than four decades, the US government has been paying cities and states to move homeowners away from areas that are at high risk of severe flooding.

When a hurricane or major flooding event devastates an area, a neighborhood can send a request for the local or state government to buy the impacted land and give residents money to start over someplace else.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s buyout program is a form of so-called “managed retreat” – a long process that relocates people, businesses, homes and infrastructure to an area that’s safer from the impacts of climate change-fueled weather events. But until recently, little was known about where people ultimately moved and whether their new location actually reduced their flood risk.”