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Office of Emergency Management

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Hurricane Info

Prepare for Disasters and Emergencies

July 20, 2017

Additional resources to help get your home, family, and business ready to deal with disasters and emergencies:

        • Sign up to receive SMS text and email alerts from Galveston County.
        • Read the Hurricane/Severe Weather Guide to learn about severe weather in the region.
        • Get the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s FEMA mobile app to receive weather warnings for up to five locations plus disaster, aid, and shelter information.
        • Watch FEMA’s short accessible video to better understand what a hurricane watch and warning means and how to prepare for a hurricane.
        • Sign up to receive SMS text and email alerts from the National Weather Service and see their suggested weather apps to stay informed.
        • Sign up for the State of Texas Emergency Assistance Registry at STEAR or Dial 2-1-1
        • Smartphones enabled with the Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) public safety system will receive emergency alerts for severe weather, disasters, and national emergencies automatically.
        • Get prepared for Texas summers with the CDC Guide to Extreme Heat
        • Create a Pet Emergency Plan
        • Review the  Galveston County Hurricane Presentation 2017 for specific information on hurricane evacuation and re-entry.

Hurricane Preparedness Meetings

May 12, 2017

Click “Read More” for a list of Hurricane Preparedness Meetings in Galveston County which include the location, date and time.  You can also contact our office directly for more information: 281-309-5002

Hurricane Preparedness Meetings in Galveston County:

Name of Presentation/Outreach Date Time Location
Hurricane Preparedness Breakfast 5/3/2017 8:30am Johnnie Arolfo Civic Center, 400 W Walker St, League City
Hurricane Preparedness Family Day- USCG 5/8/2017 10:00am USCG Sector- Ellington Airport, Houston
Friendswood Annual Hurricane Meeting 5/11/2017 2:30pm 1600 Whitaker Dr., Friendswood
Hurricane Blowout- League City 5/13/2017 10:00am Home Depot Parking Lot- 3200 Gulf Fwy, League City
Hurricane Preparedness Open House- SF 5/18/2017 6:00pm Library, 13302 6th St, Santa Fe
Hurricane Preparedness Fair- Galveston 5/20/2017 10:00am McGuire Dent Recreation Center, 2222 28th St, Galveston
Fire Fighter Games- Wally Wiseguy 5/20/2017 10:00am 6th Street, Texas City
Hurricane Preparedness- Gulf Coast Water 5/23/2017 7:00am Thomas S. Mackey Water Treatment Plant, Texas City
Preparedness Bootcamp (nursing homes) 5/31/2017 10:00am Doyle Center, 2010 5th Ave N, Texas City
Friendswood Hurricane Preparedness 6/1/2017 10:00am Friendswood Library, 416 S Friendswood Dr
Xtreme Weather Ready Expo- Houston 6/3/2017 10:00am George R Brown Convention Center, Hall A
Friendswood Hurricane Preparedness 6/5/2017 6:30pm Friendswood Library, 416 S Friendswood Dr
CLS Hurricane Preparedness 6/15/2017 7:00pm 1006 S Shore Dr, Kemah
Hurricane Preparedness Meeting- Jamaica Beach 6/17/2017 10:00am 16628 San Louis Pass Rd.5355 Jamaica Beach
Save Our Shores- San Leon 6/19/2017 7:00pm San Leon Fire Dept, 337 12th St, San Leon
US Coast Guard- MSU Hurricane Preparedness 6/21/2017 9:00am 3101 FM 2004, Texas City
Hitchcock Chamber Hurricane Meeting 6/21/2017 12:00pm 8300 Hwy 6, Hitchcock
Hurricane Preparedness – Kemah 6/22/2017 6:30pm Community Center, 800 Harris Ave, Kemah
Hurricane Preparedness Town Hall- Texas City 6/22/2017 6:00pm Doyle Center, 2010 5th Ave N, Texas City
Hitchcock Library- NWS and OEM 6/28/2017 2:00pm 8005 Barry Ave, Hitchcock
Hurricane Preparedness- Bayou Vista 7/6/2017 7:00pm Bayou Vista City Hall, 2929 Hwy 6, Bayou Vista
Hurricane Preparedness Town Hall- San Leon 7/20/2017 7:00pm San Leon Fire Dept- 337 12th St, San Leon

Galveston County Hurricane Presentation 2017

Hurricane Guide 2017

May 8, 2017

The Hurricane Guide is designed to help you prepare for the 2017 hurricane season. There are checklists on what to do before, during and after the storm. Also included are maps showing evacuation zones and routes, a hurricane tracking chart, names that will be used for upcoming storms, and web links for weather and emergency information.

For a copy of the guide please click: Hurricane Guide

Functional Access Needs

March 20, 2017

Texas National Guard - Water and MREs

Call 2-1-1 If You Need a Ride

If you are a Texan who lives in an evacuation zone and you require access and functional needs assistance to evacuate during a storm – including the elderly, people with disabilities, or those who simply will need a ride – call 2-1-1 to register for a ride. Information can be provided in almost any language including Spanish. Assistance also available for emergencies, food, housing and shelter, education, legal, childcare, physical and mental health, financial assistance, and transportation.

Operators have been specially trained to take your basic, confidential information so that you can get to safety when a storm threatens the coast. Register well in advance of a storm by calling 2-1-1 (in Texas), or 1-877-541-7905 TODAY.

After a storm Register for Disaster Assistance with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Register for aid to help FEMA direct the necessary resources to you and your area.

1-800-621-3362

TTY1-800 462-7585 for the speech and hearing impaired

Tips for Texans with Access and Functional Needs

Create a support network by making a list of family, friends, co-workers, personal attendants, service providers and others who can be part of your emergency plan. Choose at least three people in each location where you spend time, such as home, school and your workplace.

Work with your support network to create a personal emergency plan not only for hurricanes but for all hazards that can impact your community, from a neighborhood fire to a major disaster of any kind. You should have a different plan for places you spend time regularly: home, work or school. Remember to include strategies you already use to deal with power outages, or transportation delays or breakdowns.

Learn about emergency exits in your school or office building and be sure you have at least two ways to get out of your home in an emergency. Discuss emergency exits and plans with officials in your school or workplace.

If local officials call for a hurricane evacuation, consider whether you want to shelter with friends and family, and how that would work for you. Also consider how a shelter designated for the public would meet your needs.

Make sure you and members of your support network have a list of contact information for everyone in the network, along with names of your doctors and other service care providers.

Make sure you have alternate ways to communicate if phones are not working (such as an assigned meeting place, use of pagers, e-mail or other technology that does not depend on phone lines). In case telephones and cell towers are not operational, you may want to make a list of contact information on paper that you normally store in electronic devices.

For individuals who use relay services, there are several options: dialing 7-1-1 (nationwide – landline), captioned telephone (CapTel), Internet-enabled relay service (Internet Relay and Video Relay Service – Internet). Individuals who have wireless notebooks, pagers or PDA can call Internet Relay Services.

Ask yourself what resources you rely on regularly and determine how a hurricane, electric power outages, lack of air conditioning or refrigeration might affect your access and ability to use them. This checklist can help.

Do you use communication devices?

  • Do you depend on accessible transportation to get to school, work, medical, appointments or to other places in your community?
  • Do you receive medical treatments (e.g. dialysis) or self-administer treatments such as glucose testing and insulin shots on a regular basis?
  • Do your medications need refrigeration?
  • Do you need assistance with personal care?
  • Do you rely on equipment depending electricity or other special medical equipment?
  • Do you use mobility or daily living aids such as a walker, cane, wheelchair, scooter, bath safety or other bathroom products, dressing aids, drinking straws, etc.?
  • If you have a service animal, do you know the plans in your city and state regarding service animals? Do you know what you will need to bring with your service animal— such as food and feeding bowls, identification tags, veterinary contact information, and proof of vaccinations.

In addition to a basic emergency kit, you may need the following items in your emergency kit:

Medical equipment and assistive devices (glasses, hearing aid, catheters, augmentative communication devices, cane, wheelchair, scooter, walker, dressing aids, oxygen, tubing, feeding supplies, drinking straws, etc.) Label each with your name and contact information. Be sure to have extra batteries and chargers

  • List of model numbers or serial numbers of medical devices and equipment
  • Medical alert tags or bracelets and written description of your disability-related or health care conditions
  • Medications and copies of all prescriptions, including a list of the prescription name, dosage, frequency, doctor and pharmacist. Also consider if medications need to be refrigerated and if so, bring a cooler with an ice pack or other coolant system
  • Special hygiene supplies such as absorbent pads
  • Phone numbers and names of your physicians or other health care providers
  • Supplies for a service animal including food, identification tags, proof of up-to-date vaccinations and veterinarian contact

Helpful Links

  • Dial 2-1-1 to Register for a ride (PDF)
  • Register for a Ride 2-1-1- FLYER (PDF)
  • Evacuation Planning for Texans with Access and Functional Needs (PDF)
  • Emergency Kit for Access and Functional Needs (PDF)
  • Access and Functional Needs Helpful Websites (PDF)
  • Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services (DADS)
  • Texas Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services (DARS)
  • Independent Living Research Utilization

Hurricane Info

March 20, 2017

Hurricanes are tropical cyclonic storms that form over warm water and when they move ashore can do considerable damage and disrupts people’s lives for very long periods of time.

Hurricane season is rapidly approaching and emergency management officials in Galveston County urge you to take all necessary steps to prepare and stay informed.

 

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county judge mark henry
County Judge Mark Henry

Emergency Management Director

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Phone: 281-309-5002
1353 FM 646 Rd West, Suite 201
Dickinson, TX 77539

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