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New Cal Anderson Emergency Hub launches teaching ‘Urban Survival Skills’ including water sterilization and Narcan administration to help Capitol Hill’s core neighborhoods

(Image: Seattle Parks Foundation)

A group is coming together to make sure Capitol Hill’s neighborhoods of densely packed apartment dwellers can build resources they need to be resilient during emergencies and natural disasters.

Already having an interest in personal emergency preparedness, Heather Currey attended an emergency hub drill after she learned of the event through Central Seattle Greenways. And while North Capitol Hill has its own emergency hub, Currey felt the need for stronger support in the central part of the neighborhood. Now, Currey is the captain of the Cal Anderson Emergency Hub, which is preparing for its September 7th Urban Survival Skills Fair in the park’s shelterhouse and sunbowl.

“Seattle has a fairly wide hub network, so these are places where under disaster conditions, when we’ve lost electricity and it’s harder for people to communicate with each other, hubs stand up to connect neighbors with neighbors, and neighbors with information,” Currey told CHS.

Currey said these emergency hubs are always needed.

The Cal Anderson Emergency Hub already has over a dozen volunteers who have been meeting for about six months and have worked to obtain grants and jump through bureaucratic hoops with the city, including Parks and Rec and the Department of Neighborhoods.

Those volunteer numbers are only expected to grow, Currey said.

The Urban Survival Skills Fair will take place from 3 to 5 PM Sunday and will be the hub’s second event following a launch party at the end of August where they handed out cookies in the park. This upcoming event will be hands-on and will feature 14 stations on different disaster and survival preparedness:

    • Narcan administration
    • Communication and tech hacks
    • Food safety
    • Emergency toilet
    • Utilities safety
    • Water sterilization
    • Active earthquake safety
    • Heading home
    • Prepared pets and pet first aid
    • General first aid
    • Amateur radio
    • Emergency and camping hacks
    • Prepared families and neighbors
    • Prepared city

Adding a Narcan-centered station was especially important for the Cal Anderson Emergency Hub, Currey said.

There will also be a representative from the city who will speak on Seattle’s emergency preparedness plan. Upcoming winter plans consist of forming connections with different neighborhood groups that may be able to offer buffering, like if Seattle Central College can provide shelter during an emergency, considering most who live around Cal Anderson Park are renters with limited space.

“We want to help build plans with different neighborhood organizations and businesses so we can all be working together,” Currey said. “I think we have to think a bit differently about people who aren’t going to have 14 days worth of water in their homes if they’re living in a studio apartment…so how do we find alternatives to make sure people have what they need?”

She added that looking at other high-density cities that have experienced significant disasters, like Tokyo, and their emergency preparedness plans can help guide effective plans in Capitol Hill. When a natural disaster strikes the area, human waste management will be complex no matter what, but having a strategy in place will soften the load.

“That’s one of the ones that keeps me up at night,” Currey said.

The Cal Anderson Emergency Hub is in the process of developing a website, which it hopes to launch this winter, but for the time being, more information is available at Seattle Emergency Hubs. People can visit the map feature on its website to view emergency hubs near their homes, schools, recreational areas, and places of employment for additional planning.

Currey encourages community members to become involved, whether it be to learn more about necessary disaster preparedness steps or to educate others through one’s own knowledge and skills.

“It’s always good to have people with robust camping knowledge, but there’s a role for everybody. You need people who are good with people. You need people who are good at tying knots,” Currey said.

At Nomadic Wine Dispensary on Thursday, September 4th from 5-7 p.m., the Capitol Hill Community Council is hosting an emergency preparedness happy hour event, and volunteers from the North Capitol Hill and Cal Anderson hubs will be in attendance.

 

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scooter
3 months ago

One of these things is not like the others, one of these things is <Narcan administration> :(

bcfls
3 months ago
Reply to  scooter

some people prefer not to watch loved ones, friends, or strangers die if they can help it. yes, addicts are often- despite callous screeching to the contrary from local regressives- loved and valued as human beings deserving of dignity.

heatherbikes
3 months ago
Reply to  scooter

Neighbors helping neighbors, it can look a lot of different ways

WutItIs
3 months ago
Reply to  scooter

“Narcan administration”, “emergency toilet” and “camping hacks” all give off a “how to be homeless in Seattle” vibe which isn’t particularly surprising given the location of this hub.

Zippythepinhead
3 months ago
Reply to  scooter

How dare you state a fact!

Nation of Inflation Gyration
3 months ago

Hat tip to Heather for being a pillar in this

Whichever
3 months ago

Addressing the symptoms instead of the root cause: those on drugs shouldn’t be left to just do whatever they wish on the public streets. So compassionate.

poncho
3 months ago

Why would Narcan be needed during a disaster?

bcfls
3 months ago
Reply to  poncho

because emergency responders are likely to be very busy and some people are gonna still do some drugs? not everyone has healthy responses to crises but that’s no reason to condemn them to death.
there’s a kind of “life undeserving of life” tone creeping in here that needs to be called out. we don’t use crises to enact purges, but nazis do(/did)

Smoothtooperate
3 months ago
Reply to  bcfls

That’s it. The “undeserving”.

It’s the same thinking the MAGA has. If they are miserable, so shall you be. Because anyone doing better is a threat to their well being. Because they are ‘stealing’ from the real ‘mercahns.

It’s pretty sick behaviors. The farmers of ‘mercah are finding out. Now they want a check to save them? How about a bushel of thoughts instead?

They do not care. It is all about them. Always has been.

Gentlefer
3 months ago
Reply to  bcfls

If there is an actual disaster, I’m going to protect myself and my loved ones first, as all should. Then injured folks, pregnant women, children. Not condemning addicts to death but they also would not be a priority for an everyday resident. Someone else’s lack of coping skills is not my problem but sure causes them.

heatherbikes
3 months ago

This fair is about personal and community preparedness, not just responding in a disaster, knowing how to use narcan to save a life is one way we can all be prepared to help our selves and neighbors in a personal emergency. I think narcan training is like learning first aid, donating blood (if eligible), or knowing how to use an epi pen, it’s just another way for us to look out for each other.

Gentlefer
3 months ago

No risking my health, Hep-C people, to help those who don’t care what they do to themselves or others.