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HELEN R.

CAULTON-HARRIS
COMMISSIONER
SPRINGFIELD DEPARTMENT OF
HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES
1145 MAIN STREET, SUITE 208
SPRINGFIELD, MA 01103
PHONE: (413) 787-6546
FAX: (413) 787-6458
TTY: (413) 787-6745

PRESS RELEASE
NATIONAL PREPAREDNESS MONTH 2015
Emergency Preparedness Month provides an opportunity to raise awareness of the important work
being done to make sure our communities are safe, healthy, and ready for public health emergencies
and/or disasters.
Join with the Springfield Department of Health & Human Services and our partners on
Wednesday, September 9, 2015 at 9:30AM on the Court Square Green for our Mayors
Proclamation and events of the day.
This years theme is: Dont Wait. Communicate. Make Your Emergency Plan Today. Often
families are not with their loved ones when catastrophe strikes, so having up-to-date contact
information for those you need to get in touch with during a public health emergency and/or disaster
is critical. It is also possible to collect names and addresses of your neighbors and talking to them
one by one so that if something should happen you can call different neighbors and ask what can you
do or how can you help.
Ask about plans at the places where family spends the most time: work, school and other places you
frequent. If none exist, consider volunteering to help develop one. You will be better prepared to
safely reunite your family and loved ones during an emergency if you think ahead, and communicate
with others in advance.

Over 60 percent of Americans say preparation for natural or man-made disasters is very important to
them, however, only a staggering 17 percent of Americans claim to be prepared for an emergency
situation, according to a new survey commissioned by the Ad Council.
Disasters can have a major impact on the workplace, both for the people who work there, and to
workplace operations. After a disaster, workplaces cannot recover without their people and people
cannot recover without a job to go back to.
Organizations can have tremendous influence on their personnel when it comes to preparing for a
disaster. When employers encourage employees to be prepared for disasters, employees are 75
percent more likely to take action. And with more than 63 percent of the US population aged 16 or
older in the labor force, the workplace is one of the most effective environments for educating and
encouraging people to take steps to be ready for disasters, which includes being fully age-appropriate
immunized flu, pneumonia, HPV, MMR, etc.
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Emergencies can happen at any time, said Helen Caulton-Harris, Springfield Health Commissioner.
Taking a few simple steps now to prepare yourself, your family and your community makes the entire
community more resilient and better able to respond to emergency events All residents, Dont Wait.
Communicate. Make Your Emergency Plan Today.
Join with the Springfield Department of Health & Human Services and our partners on Wednesday,
September 9, 2015 at 9:30AM on the Court Square Green for our Mayors Proclamation and events
of the day.
For further information contact:
Deputy Commissioner, Bettye Anderson Frederic
(413) 787-6716 bafrederic@springfieldcityhall.com
Ready.gov/prepare
Cdc.gov//yme/transmission/index.html
National Weather Services
https://www.mylocalclinic.com;fess

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