http://www.ready.gov


http://channels.netscape.com/ns/news/story.jsp?floc=FF-PLS-PLS&id=2003021921
03000291953&dt=20030219210300&w=RTR&coview=

U.S. Homeland Security chief Tom Ridge urged Americans on Wednesday to take
three simple steps to prepare for any terror attack: put together a home
emergency kit, draw up a family contact plan and know where to get official
advice.
Duct tape and plastic sheeting -- the object of some confusion and ridicule
in the government's earlier attack advice -- can be stashed away for now, he
said. It still might come in handy for a temporary safe room inside the home
in the event of chemical or biological attack, he added.

"Terrorists force us to make a choice. We can be afraid or we can be ready,"
Ridge said. "Americans aren't afraid and we will be ready."

Ridge said the "Ready Campaign" he unveiled would carry its message to the
country by broadcast and print public service announcements.

It will be backed by a new Web site --- http://www.ready.gov -- and a
toll-free telephone line for advice, 1-800-BEREADY.

The home emergency kit, Ridge suggested, could be largely put together with
items already found around many households: three days worth of
nonperishable food and water, some battery-powered flashlights and a battery
powered radio.

Assemble the items in one place, he suggested, and "go back to living."

"Stash away the duct tape. Don't use it," he said. But the tape and plastic
sheeting could be used in the future for a safe room that would protect
people inside for "several hours" against poisonous agents.

Everyone should make a "family communication plan" so they know how to reach
each other and where to assemble in the event of an attack.

The third element, he said, is to stay informed via the new Web site and
toll-free number as well as knowing local emergency contact numbers.

The security alerts which the government issues, he said, are mainly for
professional law enforcement people. But the country should not forget that
the next attack "could happen to any community at any time."

The United States is under a code orange terror threat alert, its
second-highest level. In an interview on the public television program "The
NewsHour with Jim Lehrer," Ridge said the threat remains serious but that
assessment could be revised in coming days.

"In the next 24 or 48 hours, based upon what additional information we've
learned that's new and as we go back and continue to assess and churn the
information that we had gathered from other sources, we may draw a different
conclusion."

U.S. officials raised their assessment of the threat of attack to "high" or
code orange on Feb. 7, citing intelligence information on possible attacks
being planned against unspecified targets in the United States or on the
Arabian Peninsula.



xponent
Sheesh Maru
rob
________________________________
You are a fluke of the universe.
You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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