This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Neighbor News

Getting Ready for the Unexpected With a Disaster Go Bag

— Local families understand the need to be prepared.

The Jibiki family prepare a “go bag” together.
The Jibiki family prepare a “go bag” together.

Flashlights, bottles of water, a first aid kit, and ready-to-eat meal packs line the Jibiki family’s living room floor. The family is not going camping—they are preparing for disaster by putting together a “go bag.”

Preparing in advance with a disaster-ready kit has helped families nationwide through extreme and abnormal weather events, which experts warn are on the rise.

Kenji and Mery Jibiki have lived in San Francisco for 15 years, and both have witnessed earthquakes. “I grew up in Japan and experienced numerous earthquakes, so I know the importance of being prepared,” Kenji Jibiki said. From their Twin Peaks home, he continued, “Good information is crucial to be prepared for a disaster. We’re impressed with the jw.org website because it’s available in many languages. My wife is Korean, I’m Japanese, and we have many deaf friends that use ASL. The same information is available to all of us!”

Find out what's happening in San Mateofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

“Having a personal preparedness plan increases your chances of staying safe,” according to a training program from the Columbia University’s National Center for Disaster Preparedness.

Jolted awake by a neighbor’s urgent knocking, Aaron and Jacqueline Pate were horrified to see the encroaching flames of the fast-moving Woolsey fire that had been miles away when they went to bed. It burned to within 100 feet of their Westlake Village home in 2018 as part of California’s deadliest wildfire season on record.

Find out what's happening in San Mateofor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"Because we had go bags, we weren’t running around trying to pack things at the last minute,” said Jacqueline. “We had the time we needed to comfort our kids and get everyone safely into the car.”

The Pates credited the disaster-preparedness help they received as Jehovah’s Witnesses, both through periodic reminders at their congregation meetings and from tips for putting together go bags on the organization’s website, www.jw.org.

"Life is precious, so we encourage all to heed the Bible’s advice to take practical steps to protect ourselves from danger,” said Robert Hendriks III, spokesman for Jehovah’s Witnesses in the United States.

Go bags also have proven useful in the opposite circumstances as “stay bags.”

Disaster-preparedness suggestions and tips for putting together a go bag are available from FEMA at ready.gov and from Jehovah’s Witnesses at https://www.jw.org/en/library/magazines/awake-no5-2017-october/disaster-....

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?