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Colo. student develops Twitter app for disasters

October 3rd, 2011

By Brittany Anas
The Daily Camera

twitter Twitter has become popular during disasters because it offers a concise and efficient communication medium.

BOULDER, Colo. — Inspired by the swift swapping of emergency information through Twitter during last year’s Fourmile Fire, a University of Colorado graduate student developed an Android application to help people use a common language while tweeting during disasters.

Daniel Schaefer, a University of Colorado doctoral student in communication, created a software application — or “app” — for mobile devices that turns everyday language into a Twitter syntax used during disasters through a special smart phone keypad.

Just as public safety communication codes were developed for citizens’ band radios — or CBs — that grew in popularity in the 1970s, a common language is emerging for disaster communication on Twitter.

Twitter has become popular during disasters because it offers a concise and efficient communication medium, Schaefer said. But, he said, a need to standardize the syntaxes used on Twitter has surfaced particularly for the emergency personnel, affected individuals, concerned loved ones, information officers and journalists who use it to provide and monitor information and collaborate on rescue efforts.

Already, Android phones have downloadable smart keyboards that allow users to type in emoticons or foreign languages.

“I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be great if there were a keyboard for people using Twitter during a disaster to use standard codes?’” Schaefer said.

Schaefer’s application uses syntax developed in 2009 by doctoral student Kate Starbird of CU’s Project EPIC (Empowering the Public with Information in Crisis) research group. Nearly 3,000 tweets using the “Tweak the Tweet” syntax were posted in the weeks following Haiti’s 2010 earthquake.

During the Fourmile Fire, Colorado’s most destructive wildfire, Schaefer noticed that people were using wrong hashtags to mark their tweets for easy searching.

Schaefer’s app helps provide a solution to better streamline emergency tweets.

The free app is called the Bucket Brigade Keyboard. It transforms the standard smart phone keyboard display into a keypad of a dozen message choices such as “help,” “location” and “request.”

When those messages are selected, corresponding tweets that could include a user’s status, needs or offers to help are queued for posting online.

The app, for example, turns “I’m Ok” into “#imok.”

Schaefer entered the Bucket Brigade Keyboard in the Federal Communications Commission’s “Apps for Communities” contest.

The challenge called for apps that help local government deliver quality-of-life improving information to populations that are typically disenfranchised or disconnected from broadband communications.

The app has been downloaded in 20 countries.

(Original Source: http://www.firerescue1.com/social-media-for-firefighters/articles/1130209-Colo-student-develops-Twitter-app-for-disasters/)


Thumbtack.com

September 12th, 2011

CHECK OUT OUR LISTING – Disaster Reconstruction Professionals


FEMA’s Gone Mobile

September 7th, 2011

FEMA

FEMA App

In the new FEMA App, you’ll be able to:

  • Check off the items you have in your family’s emergency kit,
  • Enter your family emergency meeting locations,
  • Review safety tips on what to do before, during and after a disaster,
  • View a map of shelters and disaster recovery centers across the U.S., and
  • Read FEMA’s latest blog posts.

When FEMA built the app, they kept the disaster survivor in mind, making sure much of the information would be available even if cell phone service isn’t, so you’ll be able to access the important information on how to safe after a disaster, as well as your family emergency meeting locations.

So as Administrator Fugate said, you can download our app today in the Android market, and look for FEMA App for Blackberry version 6 devices and iPhones in the coming weeks.

FEMA Text Messages

A new and separate service from the new app, our text message updates will allow cell phone users to receive text message updates from FEMA.

Text PREPARE to 43362 (4FEMA) to sign up to receive monthly disaster safety tips
Text SHELTER + your ZIP code to 43362 (4FEMA) to find the nearest shelter in your area (example: shelter 12345)

(For availability of shelters and services, contact your local emergency management agency.)
Text DRC + your ZIP code to 43362 (4FEMA) to find the nearest disaster recovery center in your area (for example, if you lived in Annandale, Virginia with a Zip Code of 22003, you’d text DRC 22003).


So download the app or text PREPARE to 43362. We encourage you to tell a family member, friend, or neighbor as well, so they can have disaster safety information always at their fingertips.

To read the entire article at it’s original source, log on to http://blog.fema.gov/2011/08/new-digital-tools-fema-app-and-text.html


This September: A Time to Remember. A Time to Prepare.

September 1st, 2011

By Darryl J. Madden, Director, Ready Campaign

This September will mark the ten year anniversary of 9/11 and we ask you to take time to remember those lost as well as time to make sure you are prepared for future emergencies. September is National Preparedness Month (NPM), which was founded after 9/11 to increase preparedness in the U.S. It is a time to prepare yourself and those in your care for an unexpected emergency.

If you’ve seen the news recently, you know that emergencies can happen unexpectedly in communities just like yours, to people like you. We’ve seen tornado outbreaks, river floods and flash floods, historic earthquakes, tsunamis, and even water main breaks and power outages in U.S. cities affecting millions of people for days at a time.

This September, please prepare and plan in the event you must go for three days without electricity, water service, access to a supermarket, or local services for several days. Just follow these three steps:

  • Get a Kit: Keep enough emergency supplies on hand for you and those in your care – water,
    non-perishable food, first aid, prescriptions, flashlight, battery-powered radio – for a checklist of
    supplies visit Ready.gov.
  • Make a Plan: Discuss, agree on, and document an emergency plan with those in your care. For
    sample plans, see Ready.gov. Work together with neighbors, colleagues and others to build
    community resilience.
  • Be Informed: Free information is available to assist you from federal, state, local, tribal, and
    territorial resources. You can find preparedness information by:

    • Accessing Ready.gov to learn what to do before, during, and after an emergency
    • Contacting your local emergency management agency to get essential information on
      specific hazards to your area, local plans for shelter and evacuation, ways to get information
      before and during an emergency, and how to sign up for emergency alerts if they are
      available
    • Contacting your local firehouse and asking for a tour and information about preparedness

Police, fire and rescue may not always be able to reach you quickly, such as if trees and power lines are down or if they’re overwhelmed by demand from an emergency. The most important step you can take in helping your local responders is being able to take care of yourself and those in your care; the more people who are prepared, the quicker the community will recover.

As FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate reminds us, “Individuals and families are the most important members of the nation’s emergency management team. Being prepared can save precious time if there
is a need to respond to an emergency.” For more information on NPM and for help getting prepared, visit Ready.gov or call 1-800-BE-READY, 1-888-SE-LISTO, and TTY 1-800-462-7585 for free information.


Important Hurricane Cell Phone Tips

August 30th, 2011

Did you know texting might be a better option after a natural disaster? Meteorologist Chris Warren has some simple things you can do to keep your cell phone going when you need it the most.


Hurricane Irene

August 29th, 2011

Coastal Reconstruction Group deployed a team up the Eastern seaboard to prepare properties in the path of Irene!


Today Marks Sixth Anniversary Of Hurricane Katrina

August 29th, 2011

By Ashleigh Coran

NEW ORLEANS, Lousiana – Today marks the sixth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina’s landfall on the Gulf Coast.

The force of the hurricane wiped out entire communities in the region. Then, the levees broke in New Orleans, setting off catastrophic flooding.

Thousands of displaced families sought shelter at the Superdome.

More than 1,700 people were killed in the storm.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency called Katrina “the single most catastrophic natural disaster in U.S. history.”

(Original Source: http://www.kionrightnow.com/story/15350170/sixth-anniversary-of-hurricane-katrina)


Saffir-Simpson Wind Scale

August 24th, 2011

All Hurricanes are dangerous, but some are more so than others. The way storm surge, wind and other factors combine determines the hurricanes destructive power. To make comparisons easier and to make the predicted hazards of approaching hurricanes clearer to emergency managers, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s hurricane forecasters use a disaster-potential scale which assigns storms to five categories. This can be used to give an estimate of the potential property damage and flooding expected along the coast with a hurricane.

The scale was formulated in 1969 by Herbert Saffir, a consulting engineer, and Dr. Bob Simpson, director of the National Hurricane Center. The World Meteorological Organization was preparing a report on structural damage to dwellings due to windstorms, and Dr. Simpson added information about storm surge heights that accompany hurricanes in each category.

For a more detailed chart from NOAA, CLICK HERE.


NARPM Central Florida Volunteers at Habitat for Humanity

August 16th, 2011

Volunteers from NARPM Central Florida spent time last Saturday helping out at the local Habitat for Humanity! Thank you to everyone who took the time to assist this worthy cause!
















FALA Conference 2011

August 11th, 2011

Join us at the annual FALA Conference and Trade Show! Scott is speaking TODAY at 3pm and we would love to have you! Plus… someone WILL win an iPad 2!

Click HERE for details!

Congrats to Scott McCurdy for being elected to the Florida Assisted Living Association Board of Directors for another term!


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