PEI

Wednesday's alert will be just a test, but EMO reminds Islanders to stay prepared

It's Emergency Preparedness Week across the country. Officials on P.E.I. are urging people and businesses to be proactive, and learn from post-tropical storm Fiona's disruption last fall.

Agency says emergencies can happen anytime, not just in hurricane season

Helping Islanders prepare for an emergency

2 years ago
Duration 7:17
EMO co-ordinator Tanya Mullally speaks with CBC News: Compass host Kerry Campbell at the start of Emergency Preparedness Week.

Don't panic when you hear an emergency alarm go off on your phone, TV and radio this Wednesday at 12:55 p.m. AT.

It will be a test tied to Emergency Preparedness Week across Canada.

"We don't want people to be alarmed, but we want people to take note of it because during a real event, that's what it's going to sound like and that's what you'll hear," said Tanya Mullally, provincial emergency management co-ordinator with the P.E.I. Emergency Measures Organization.

The alerts happen twice a year across the country — once in the fall and once in the spring — but P.E.I. decided to opt out of the alert last November to spare residents the trauma of hearing another alert so close to post-tropical storm Fiona, Mullally said.

"We had issued out two alerts during that time. So we just felt it was probably well tested then. We didn't need to redo it about a month after that event."

Tree down from Fiona.
P.E.I.'s Emergency Measures Organization opted not to send out a test alert last November, so soon after post-tropical storm Fiona. (Sheehan Desjardins/CBC)

The "event" left a trail of devastation across the Island, of course. All of P.E.I. lost power, with some homes out for up to three weeks.

Fiona may have taught residents to be prepared for life without electricity in hurricane season, but Mullally said people should be prepared for other types of emergencies — such as a major winter storm, fire or flood — any time of the year.

"Emergencies happen every single day, and whether or not it's in the province or across the country, it's our ability to respond to those that will really dictate whether or not that becomes a more significant event or a disaster."

Emergency Preparedness Guide.
P.E.I.'s Emergency Measures Organization is distributing a booklet to help people prepare for storms and other emergencies. (Shane Ross/CBC)

The EMO is distributing a booklet to help Islanders prepare. It focuses on knowing the risks, making a plan to share with housemates, and offering suggestions for creating an emergency kit.

"We have lots of people that have moved to P.E.I. over the past several years and may not be familiar with what a hurricane or an ice storm or a severe blizzard feels like and the experiences around that. So understanding all those components is really important."

With files from CBC News: Compass