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EMDisAbility

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Emergency Evacuation of People with Disabilities
Adaptive Steps
Overcoming Communication Barriers
Emergency Management

Table of Contents

Table of contents



Ensure Access for everyone

In disasters individuals with disabilities and health problems consistently more negatively affected by disasters than the general population. It is imperetive that everything possible is done in advance to reduce the impact of disasters on these population groups, and to be prepared to provide high quality and appropriate levels of service and assistance during disasters.

There are also legal obligations as described in this FEMA document: Accommodating Individuals With Disabilities In The Provision Of Disaster Mass Care, Housing, And Human Services: http://www.fema.gov/oer/reference/index.shtm

ADA Access Requirments: http://www.fema.gov/government/grant/pa/9525_5.shtm

Tips to Ensure Access for All in Emergencies and Disasters


From: USDOJ recommendations from ADA Best Practices Toolkits for Emergency Managers: http://www.ada.gov/pcatoolkit/chap7emergencymgmt.htm

Here are some steps you can take now to ensure that emergency management programs, services, and activities are accessible to everyone, including people with disabilities.

Advance Planning: On an on-going basis, seek and use input from people with different types of disabilities

(i.e., mobility, vision, hearing, cognitive, psychiatric, and other disabilities) regarding all phases of your emergency management plan, including:
preparation; notification; evacuation and transportation; sheltering; first aid and medical services; temporary lodging and housing; transition back to the community;
clean up; and other emergency- and disaster-related programs, services, and activities.

Overcome Communication Barriers


Voluntary Registry

Create voluntary, confidential registries of persons with disabilities who may need individualized evacuation assistance, transportation, and/or notification. Establish procedures to ensure the registry’s voluntariness, guarantee confidentiality controls, and develop a process to update the registry when needed. Publicize the availability of the registry.

Notification that reaches everyone

If you use emergency warning systems such as sirens or other audible alerts, provide ways to provide people who are deaf or hard of hearing prompt notice of an impending disaster. Combine visual and audible alerts to reach a greater audience than either method would by itself. Consider using telephone calls, auto-dialed TTY (teletypewriter) messages, text messaging, emails, and even direct door-to-door contact with pre-registered individuals. Also, consider using open captioning on local TV stations, and dispatching qualified sign language interpreters to assist in broadcasting emergency information provided to the public.

The Accessible Emergency Notification and Communication Website
http://tap.gallaudet.edu/emergency/nov05conference/EmergencyCommConf.asp

Webcast Conference on Emergency Notification: http://www.tvworldwide.com/events/nod/051102/default.cfm


Ensure Access for People with Disabilities Who Use Service Animals

Modify “no pets” policies to enable people with disabilities to evacuate, use emergency transportation, stay in shelters, and participate in all emergency- and disaster-related programs together with their service animals. Teach first responders and the employees, volunteers, and third parties who perform emergency- and disaster-related functions that people with disabilities should not be separated from their service animals even in places where pets are typically not allowed. Only two questions may be asked to determine if an animal is a service animal: (1) Is this animal a service animal required because of a disability? (2) What tasks or work has this animal been trained to perform? If the answers to these questions reveal that an animal has been trained to provide assistance to a person with a disability, that person should be able to access services, programs, activities, and facilities while accompanied by his service animal. Service animals do not require certification, identification cards or licenses, special equipment, or professional training.


Evacuation and Return Home

Adopt policies to ensure that your community evacuation and recovery plans enable people with disabilities, including those who have mobility, vision, hearing, cognitive, and psychiatric disabilities to safely self-evacuate, to be evacuated by others, and to return home.


Transportation

Some people with disabilities will need accessible transportation. Identify accessible modes of transportation, such as wheelchair lift-equipped school buses, transit buses, paratransit vehicles, and taxis that will be available to evacuate people with disabilities during an emergency. Ensure that transportation plans address people with disabilities’ needs to transport mobility aids, such as wheelchairs or scooters, oxygen tanks or other medical equipment, and service animals.


Shelters

Policies: Review your sheltering program to ensure that rules, policies, and procedures comply with ADA requirements. Use the Department of Justice’s technical assistance publication, “The ADA and Emergency Shelters: Access for All in Emergencies and Disasters, ” which is located in Addendum 2 to this Chapter and at www.ada.gov/pcatoolkit/chap7shelterprog.htm All shelter operators need to know the ADA requirements discussed in this Chapter, including the Addenda. If your sheltering program is operated through any third parties, provide them with a copy of these materials.


Shelters – Physical Accessibility: Survey your community’s current shelters for barriers to access for persons with disabilities. Use the Department of Justice’s “ADA Checklist for Emergency Shelters,” which is located in Addendum 3 to this Chapter, and at www.ada.gov/pcatoolkit/chap7shelterchk.htm


If you find barriers to access, remove the barriers or work with the facility’s owner to remove them.


If barriers remain, find another nearby facility that is or can be made accessible. In identifying new or alternative shelter locations, use the preliminary survey tool which will help you determine if a facility is a good candidate for a potential emergency shelter.


Until all emergency shelters have accessible parking, exterior routes, entrances, interior routes to the shelter area, sleeping and recreational areas, dining facilities, and toilet/bathing rooms, identify and widely publicize to the public, including persons with disabilities and organizations with expertise on disability issues, the locations of the most accessible emergency shelters and the accessible features they provide.


Adopt procedures to ensure that shelter staff and volunteers maintain accessible routes and minimize protruding objects.


Social Services and Other Benefit Programs

Review your social service and other emergency- and disaster-related programs, services, and activities to ensure that people with disabilities have an equal opportunity to apply for and benefit from them.


Ensure that eligibility criteria do not unnecessarily screen out or tend to screen out people with disabilities – e.g., requiring a driver’s licence excludes people who, because of their disability, cannot drive; requiring a telephone number excludes many people who are deaf or have a speech disability.


Ensure that architectural barriers do not deny access to people with mobility disabilities.


Ensure that communication barriers do not deny access to people with disabilities. Establish policies and procedures to provide the auxiliary aids and services needed to communicate effectively with people with disabilities, giving primary consideration to the auxiliary aids and services requested by an individual with a disability.


Provide training so that employees and volunteers who staff these programs understand their ADA obligation to provide effective communication and make reasonable modifications to policies, practices, and procedures when necessary to avoid discrimination against people with disabilities.


Incident Management

During emergencies and disasters, first responders, emergency transportation drivers, and shelter staff often have questions about how to handle issues that arise. When these issues involve people with disabilities, ADA obligations are often implicated. Consider appointing one or more persons knowledgeable on ADA requirements and disability issues (ADA Incident Managers) who will beon-call throughout emergencies and disasters to provide quick guidance on issues that may involve the ADA and/or a person with a disability.


Recovery: During disasters

government facilities can be damaged or destroyed. When altering or rebuilding after a disaster, ensure that alterations to facilities and the design and construction of new or replacement facilities comply with all applicable federal accessibility requirements.

Studies and Resources

Working Conference on Emergency Management and Individuals with Disabilities and the Elderly presentations and trascripts: http://www.add-em-conf.com/presentations.htm#General%20Session%20Presentations

Emergency Preparedness Initiative

Guide on the Special Needs of People with Disilities for Emergency Managers
http://www.nod.org/resources/PDFs/epiguide2004.pdf
Text Version: http://www.nod.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=page.viewPage&PageID=1034&C:\CFusionMX7\verity\Data\dummy.txt

US Fire Administration: Fire Risks for the Blind or Visually Impaired


http://www.usfa.dhs.gov/downloads/pdf/publications/fa-205.pdf

DisabilityInfo.gov

Find links to additional preparedness information, grants, assistance, government policies, initiatives and much more. http://www.disabilityinfo.gov/digov-public/public/DisplayPage.do?parentFolderId=213

FEMA: Preparing and Planning for Individuals with Special Needs

http://www.fema.gov/plan/prepare/specialplans.shtm

Serving and Protecting All by Applying Lessons Learned Including People with Disabilities and Seniors in Disaster Services

http://www.cfilc.org/site/c.ghKRI0PDIoE/b.2903857/k.EDE4/Disaster_Preparedness_for_People_with_Disabilities.htm#disability_aging

National Council on Disability Saving Lives:Including People with Disabilities in Emergency Planning http://www.ncd.gov/newsroom/publications/2005/pdf/saving_lives.pdf

Tips for First Responders, how to assist Childbearing Women and Newborns. Tips also include persons with a wide range of disabilities, as well as Seniors, People with Service Animals, People with Mobility Challenges, People with Mental Illness, Blind or Visually Impaired People, Deaf or Hard of Hearing People, People with Autism, People with Multiple Chemical Sensitivities and People with Cognitive Disabilities: http://cdd.unm.edu/products/tips3rdedition.pdf


Created by admin. Last Modification: Thursday 29 of October, 2009 15:29:11 PDT by admin.

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