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Are you ready for a Thunderstorm?

1) Before lightning strikes:
  • Keep an eye on the sky. Look for darkening skies, flushes of light, or increasing wind.
  • Listen for the sound of thunder.
  • If you can hear thunder, you are close enough to the storm to be struck by lightning.
  • Go to safe shelter immediately! Listen to NOAA Weather Radio, commercial radio, or television for the latest weather forecasts.
2) When a Storm approaches:
  • Find shelter in a building or car.
  • Keep car windows closed and avoid convertibles.
  • Telephone lines and metal pipes can conduct electricity.
  • Unplug appliances.
  • Avoid using the telephone or any electrical appliances.
  • Avoid taking a bath or shower, or running water for any other purpose.
  • ATurn off the air conditioner.Power surges from lightning can overload the compressor, resulting in a costly repair job!
  • Draw blinds and shades over windows. If windows break due to objects blown by the wind, the shades will prevent glass from shattering into your home.
3) If caught outside:
  • If you are in the woods, take shelter under the shorter trees.
  • If you are boating or swimming, get to land and find shelter immediately!
4) Protecting yourself outside:
  • Go to a low-lying, open place away from trees, poles, or metal objects.
  • Make sure the place you pick is not subject to flooding.
  • Be a very small target
  • Squat low to the ground.
  • Place your hands on your knees with your head between them. Make yourself the smallest target possible.
  • Do not lie flat on the ground-this will make you a larger target! After the Storm passes
5) If someone is struck by lightning:
  • People struck by lightning carry no electrical charge and can be handled safely.
  • Call for help.
  • Get someone to dial 9-1-1 or your local Emergency Medical Services (EMS) number.
  • The injured person has received an electrical shock and may be burned, both where they were struck and where the electricity left their body.
  • Check for burns in both places.
  • Give first aid.
  • If breathing has stopped, begin rescue breathing.
  • If the heart has stopped beating, a trained person should give CPR.
6) Learn first aid and CPR:
  • Take a Red Cross first aid and CPR course.
7) Plan and get ready:
  • A thunderstorm is always accompanied by lightning.
  • Thunderstorms are intense local storms averaging 20 miles across and reaching as high as 10 miles.
  • Thunderstorms occur in all 50 states and all U.S. territories.
  • Show children how to practice squatting low to the ground to be the smallest target possible for lightning in case they get caught outside in a thunderstorm. Show them how to place their hands on their knees with their head between their knees.
  • Assemble a Disaster Supplies Kit in a clearly labeled, easy-to-grab container.
  • Pick a safe place in your home where family members can gather during a thunderstorm. This should be a place where there are no windows, skylights, or glass doors.
  • Pick a safe place to be in your home in case of a tornado. The safe place you picked for a thunderstorm may not be the safest place to be during a tornado. If you hear a loud roar or hear a tornado warning, you need to go to the lowest floor of your home into a room where there are no windows or glass doors. (If you have a basement, make that your safe place to be for a tornado.)


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