The Last Safe Place In The World - Part 1
Are American neighborhoods on a war footing?
A guide to home security in post-Sept. 11 America
Mainstream media is warning Americans to get their homes prepared NOW - not after terrorists have struck
July 2, 2002
By Michael E. Ross
Youre watching the unthinkable on TV from the safety of your own home: A low-yield radiological weapon, a dirty bomb, is detonated in a major U.S. city at rush hour. Traces of potassium cyanide are found in the reservoirs serving another metropolitan center. High demand and two explosions at power-generating facilities on both coasts wreck the electrical grid, causing blackouts for 30 million Americans. The day you thought would never come has arrived. Can you count on the safety of your own home?
FOR TODAYS homeowners, facing threats unimagined in the Cold War era, life may not hinge on asking Whats possible? but Whats prudent? Whats reasonable preparation for terrorist threats that range from the plausible to the fanciful to the ridiculous? Choosing the rational over the hysterical could be the best way to address the real sum of our fears: not so much the threat of catastrophe as the uncertainty of how best to prepare for it.
A canvass of specialists, consultants and Web sites reflects a range of options on preparing for disasters. Most of their suggestions are as applicable to lifes ordinary calamities fires, floods, earthquakes as they would be to a terrorist attack.
But whats common to all reflects the need for planning and calm and the ability to distinguish plausible threat from improbable scare.
A PLAN IN PLACE
You want to have a plan in place, said Mike Howard, of the Federal Emergency Management Agency. You dont want to wait until the powers off and things arent working. Its unrealistic to expect that your family, home or business will be a first priority for emergency responders.
U.S. fortifies July 4th warnings
Howard said FEMA has long advanced the idea that people make plans enabling them to be reasonably self-sufficient for at least 72 hours.
The individual homeowner should have water, food, medication and a little cash on hand.
A canvass of first-response experts and Web sites reflects the need for calm, planning, and the ability to distinguish plausible threat from improbable scare.
FOOD, FIRE, FIRST-AID
With minor variations, specialists connected with disaster preparedness suggest stockpiling:
Water, the absolute necessity for life. It should be saved at about one gallon per person per day. More is suggested in warmer climates, and for children, pregnant women and nursing mothers.
Nonperishables and long shelf-life foods like nutrition bars with protein and carbohydrates; peanut butter; dried fruit; vitamin supplements; healthy snacks like trail mix, raisins and nuts; and dried foods like beef jerky. Canned foods are great for long-term storage.
The American Red Cross says a basic first-aid kit should contain adhesive tape, antiseptic ointment, bandages in assorted sizes, disposable gloves, gauze pads and other items. Besides special meds insulin for diabetics, nitroglycerin or blood-pressure medication for heart patients, inhalers for asthmatics consider aspirin, acetaminophen and other pain relievers.
And dont forget those items from your Boy or Girl Scout past: a flashlight and fresh batteries, needle and thread, compass, matches and a multipurpose device like a Swiss Army knife.
OTHER GOOD IDEAS
Other items arent specifically recommended but sensible just the same:
Cellular phones will be valuable if land-based telephone lines are down. The use of cell phones and wireless services spiked dramatically in the days after Sept. 11.
If the power grid in your state goes down, a lack of electrical power could be the first immediate proof of an attack or a similar catastrophic event. A generator gives you an alternate source of power important for operating appliances and cooking, and a safe alternative to camp-style stoves. Portable generators are available from about $500 to $3,000. Experts recommend using a generator listed by Underwriters Laboratories - look for the UL label.
There are choices: gasoline generators need ventilation, so indoor use isnt recommended, but theyre generally more powerful and versatile than electrical generators. Electrical generators can be safely used indoors and out. And theyre easier to use you can plug them in and charge them while powers available; when powers out, you can plug appliances into the generator and turn them on. But electrical generators usually have lower wattage, for fewer devices.
For personal warmth, a portable catalytic heater, a staple for outdoor-minded vacationers, would be effective for indoor use. Newer models some using fuel-cell technology heat enclosed spaces quickly and safely, without open flames.
And a cross section of Web sites surveyed suggest keeping cash available. If worse comes to absolute worst a nonfunctional electrical grid, civil insurrection, panic in the streets, ATM machines besieged or inoperable few things are likely to give you more immediate post-disaster leverage than the coin of the realm.
Consult the For more information box below for more emergency-readiness options.
KNOW THY NEIGHBOR
People dont know their neighbors. ... Now, everyones sitting in front of the TV watching 150 channels, and logging on to the Internet. CHRIS MCGOEY, professional security consultant
Chris McGoey, a California-based security consultant and expert witness in security-related trials, finds that for most Americans, such preparation has largely been anathema. People dont buy into prevention, he said. Most people are not prepared. They live almost vicariously, watching the news and reading newspapers, never thinking it will happen to them.
After tornadoes, fire, whatever, youll hear [the victims] say, we didnt have an inventory of documents, we didnt have our wills updated, we didnt have durable power of attorney. People dont think about it. They dont dwell in that world.
While echoing the need for preparation, McGoey was downbeat on the possibility of preparing for any specific terror-driven scenario. Theres nothing you can do physically as a homeowner that would be practical to prepare for terrorism, he said.
Protecting your computer
More people use the Internet for access to banking records, health histories and other sensitive information. Last year, nearly 20 percent of all American households did banking online, according to the Online Banking Report. The CERT Coordinator Center of the Carnegie-Mellon Software Engineering Institute recommends that home computer users:
Where Americans can improve, he said, is at a more basic level of preparation: not doing what U.S. intelligence agencies were blamed for after Sept. 11 relying more on technology than on human intelligence.
People dont know their neighbors, he said. Houses used to have front porches ... Now, everyones sitting in front of the TV watching 150 channels, and logging on to the Internet.
Its all about personal relationships and planning, he said. Sometimes, the best tech is no tech.
ARMED AND PROTECTED
Still, technology has its role. Even before Sept. 11, the popularity of home security systems was increasing. In 2000, Americans spent $17.5 billion on electronic security products and services up from $16.2 billion in 1999 and $14.9 billion in 1998. Spending on security products, like those marketed by ADT and Brinks, is growing at more than 8 percent a year.
Dr. Russell Kormann, a psychologist and associate director of Rutgers Universitys Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders Program, said the sales boost in home security is more psychological than anything else.
The attacks themselves were something we had no control over, Kormann said. People are in a chronic state of anticipatory anxiety; theyre worried about what might happen.
A terrorist isnt coming to John Q. Publics house; hes going to go blow up a bomb downtown, Kormann said. But a security system gives you something you can actively do. It increases a persons sense of safety.
PRACTICAL PEACE OF MIND
The mindset nowadays is, where can I finally feel safe? Where can I feel comfortable, feel relaxed? Its in your home. Its the place where people can control the environment. SCOTT BLACK, home and commercial security expert
Scott Black, president of Protecting America, a Seattle home and commercial security company, agrees. For Black, home systems have two benefits. The first is as practical deterrent: The goal is to keep someone out in the first place. If your home is harder to get into undetected, youre less of a target.
The second benefit is peace of mind. Youve got all this fear out there, Black said. We turn on the news and read the paper and see whats going on. Nowadays, the idea that it cant happen to me is shattered. The mindset nowadays is, where can I finally feel safe? Where can I feel comfortable, feel relaxed? Its in your home. Its the place where people can control the environment.
And for Black, the job of home-security evangelist has gotten easier since Sept. 11. Theyre more receptive to the idea, he said of potential customers. I dont have to sell them on it.
PRODUCT OF THE MOMENT
Other companies are capitalizing on fears of another domestic attack, selling products presumed to enable Americans to prepare for catastrophe. The re-emergence of fallout shelters and other paraphernalia recalls the Cold War, when the duck-and-cover mentality permeated American life and culture.
Todays hot product is potassium iodide, which is used to prevent thyroid cancer by shielding the thyroid gland from radioactive iodine. It must be taken almost immediately after exposure and only protects against absorption of radioactive iodine, offering no protection against other radioactive isotopes.
SELLING PREVENTION
We put passion and pride in what we do, but we hope like hell no one has to use the products we sell. STEVE AUKSTAKALNIS, online entrepreneur specializing in disaster response products
For Steve Aukstakalnis, director of Two Tigers Radiological, sales of such products and others from radiation kits to fallout shelters to high-filtration masks are a matter of marketing the proverbial ounce of prevention.
We provide the tools and sensors used in the event of an emergency, said Aukstakalnis of his company, based near Wilmington, N.C.
He said Two Tigers business has increased at least a hundredfold since Sept. 11. We put passion and pride in what we do, but we hope like hell no one has to use the products we sell, Aukstakalnis said.
FORTRESS (YOUR NAME HERE)
The products he sells are a reflection of how our world view has changed since Sept. 11. In 1981, futurist Faith Popcorn identified the trend she called cocooning the need to protect oneself from the harsh, unpredictable realities of the outside world.
Now, more than 20 years later, after the worst attack on U.S. soil, Popcorns notion has taken on the weight of a law of nature. Since Sept. 11, the single-family home has truly become our panic room, the last secure redoubt, Fortress (Your Name Here).
Consider home sales A record 900,000 new single-family homes were sold in 2001, according to the Commerce Department. For previously owned homes, sales reached an all-time high of 5.25 million last year, according to the National Association of Realtors.
Or the popularity of home improvement centers Two companies, Home Depot and Lowes, dominated the market last year with $76 billion in revenue.
Or last years spike in gun sales FBI statistics show that in the six months after Sept. 11, the agency conducted 455,000 more background checks for gun purchases than the same period a year earlier.
POWER COCOONING IN EFFECT Were all survivalists now.
These and other trends underscore cocoonings hold on society, and todays version of the quest for life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
Maybe, in a relative instant last September, our very idea of a survivalist was transformed from the popular notion of an armed and dangerous Ted Kaczynski-style misanthrope seeing the world through khaki-colored binoculars to a view of survivalists as everyday people aware of their surroundings, knowing the names of neighbors, making distinctions between whats believable and whats just bull.
Its safe to say that in the face of a range of terroristic possibilities, from outside the United States and within, securing that last safe place in the world has probably never been more challenging, or more necessary. Regardless of whether we live in the mountains of Montana or the canyons of New York City, were all survivalists now.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/761444.asp
How prepared are you?
June 2, 2002
Hope for the best, prepare for the worst. Experts believe that old saw is generally sound advice. But where does a homeowner draw the line between vital supplies and panic buying? MSNBC.com contacted numerous government resources, emergency management specialists and state Web sites, and prepared a list of those things considered essential, and others less likely to be needed.
What youre likely to need
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT experts and the Red Cross recommend the following in case of a terrorist-related national emergency. Luckily, many of these items are the very same things considered essential preparations for natural disasters:
First-aid kit and essential medications: These should include activated charcoal and ipecac syrup; adhesive tape, antiseptic ointment, bandages in assorted sizes, a blanket, cold pack, disposable gloves, gauze pads and roller gauze, hand cleaner, plastic bags, scissors and tweezers, and a triangular bandage. Other first-aid items to consider include rubbing alcohol, anti-diarrhea medicine, laxatives, antacids and antiseptic sprays.
Canned food and a can opener.
Cooking and heating: You can get portable generators for anywhere from $500 to $3,000. Gasoline generators need ventilation, so indoor use isnt recommended, but theyre generally more powerful than electrical generators. Electrical generators can be safely used indoors and out. Theyre easier to use you can plug them in and charge them while powers available; when powers out, you can plug appliances into the generator and turn them on. But electrical generators usually have lower wattage, for fewer devices. To stay warm, a portable catalytic heater, a staple for outdoor-minded vacationers, would be effective for indoor use. They heat enclosed spaces quickly and safely, without open flames. Theyre generally priced under $200.
Foods: Nonperishables like nutrition bars with protein and carbohydrates; peanut butter; dried fruit; vitamin supplements; healthy snacks like trail mix, raisins and nuts; and dried foods like beef jerky. Keep food in the driest, coolest location in your home. If water is limited, try to avoid salty foods, which cause thirst. Prepare a food supply that could last two weeks, even though most any foreseeable emergency probably wont last that long.
Water: Emergency agencies recommend stockpiling one gallon per person per day, for each family member. People at normal activity levels need to drink at least two quarts a day; more is needed in warm climates, and by children, pregnant women, nursing mothers and those with health conditions. Store it in sealed containers that wont break.
Protective clothing, rainwear, and bedding or sleeping bags.
A battery-powered radio, flashlight and extra batteries: Consider flashlights with krypton or halogen bulbs, which offer brighter illumination and longer bulb life.
Special items for infant, elderly or disabled family members: For instance, diapers and formula or prescription medical supplies.
Written instructions on how to turn off gas, electricity and water if authorities advise you to do so.
A multipurpose tool, such as a Swiss Army knife and various other items you might have had in the Boy or Girl Scouts: a compass, needle and thread, matches in a waterproof container, storage containers, a fire extinguisher and signal flares.
Special considerations: If you or members of your family are physically handicapped, stock extra batteries and tire sealants for wheelchairs or motorized scooters; store disaster supplies with large-print letters or in Braille if you are blind or visually impaired; and keep pads and pencils at the ready with information on sign language if you are deaf or speech-impaired.
Keep a little cash on hand.
Secondary items
Some people have stocked up on the following items, which experts would not discourage but which are considered beyond whats absolutely necessary:
Gas masks and chemical suits: People should not be scared into buying gas masks and chemical suits, says Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson. The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that state and local health departments will keep the public informed about what to do in the event of a biological or chemical attack. An attack is more likely to occur in a large concentrated area rather than in the home, so the chance that someone would have a gas mask or a chemical suit at the time of the attack would be small.
Electronic home security systems: Russell Kormann, a psychologist and associate director of Rutgers Universitys Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders Program, says the sales boost in home security systems, like products marketed by ADT and Brinks, is more psychological than anything else. Now, a terrorist isnt coming to John Q. Publics house; hes going to go blow up a bomb downtown, Kormann says. But a security system gives you something you can actively do. It increases a persons sense of safety.
Potassium iodide, which is used to prevent thyroid cancer by shielding the thyroid gland from radioactive iodine. Potassium iodide blocks no other form of radiation, and protects no other organs of the human body. And in a November 2001 report, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, while admitting that potassium iodide is safe and would be effective in reducing the risk of thyroid cancer, also cautioned that it can have side effects, including gastrointestinal disturbances and allergic reactions.
Water purification kits: MSNBC terrorism expert Steve Emerson said it would be difficult for terrorists to contaminate a major reservoir. The amount of chemical or biological agents necessary to do so would be hard to obtain. However, other types of disasters a burst dam or a compromised sewage treatment facility could make these kits useful.
Vaccines and antibiotics: Emerson suggests you not stockpile these, since an adverse reaction to them could be dangerous.
Source: MSNBC research, American Red Cross, FEMA, Rutgers University.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/774778.asp?0cb=-21290063