Sunday,  June 16, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 332 • 3 of 33

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great suggestions for developing a family emergency plan, building an emergency supply kit, and learning what to do before, during and after emergencies (everything from home fires to terrorist attacks). They even provide an emergency plan for family pets.
• Here are some emergency-planning ideas you may not have considered:
• Pick meeting spots both in and outside your neighborhood where your family can gather after an emergency.
Choose one person (possibly out-of-town) everyone can contact for updates.
Make sure your kids know how to escape the house in case of fire.
Identify and stock essential items you'll need to survive for at least three days in case help is unavailable. Include ample water (at least a gallon per person, per day), non-perishable food, and medications. Don't forget water, food and supplies for pets.
Stock an emergency kit with batteries, flashlight, a battery-powered or hand-cranked radio, water-purification tablets, clothes, blankets, can opener, tools, toilet paper, moist towelettes, garbage bags, solar cellphone charger, etc.
If a family member receives life-sustaining treatments (e.g., dialysis), identify alternate treatment locations in case yours becomes incapacitated.
Take a picture of yourself with your pets in case you should become separated.
Safely store emergency cash in case ATMs aren't working.
Should disaster strike, you'll need access to financial and legal records. Take these steps now to ensure easier access when the time comes:
• Create a log of all account numbers, emergency numbers, contact information and passwords for your bank and credit card accounts, loans, insurance policies, utilities and other important accounts.
Update it regularly and save hardcopies in secure, offsite locations such as a safety deposit box or with a trusted friend living in another area.
You can also email the list to yourself in an encrypted, password-protected file, save it on a CD or USB drive, or use a cloud-based storage service that will let you access it from any Internet connection.
Make PDF copies of tax returns, insurance policies and legal documents and save offsite, as above, in case your files or computer are damaged. Also make digital copies of invaluable family photos, documents and memorabilia that money can't replace.
If you ever need to file an insurance claim or claim a tax deduction for lost, stolen or damaged property, it'll be much easier if you have an inventory of everything you own - photos or videos are even better. Try the Insurance Information Institute's free, secure home inventory software application (www.iii.org).

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