Prepare your business
for a disaster.
Resources provided by VashonBePrepared.org
Steps to Comprehensive
Business Planning and Preparation
Got a business on Vashon? Here’s what you need to know to avoid disruption after a fire, a storm, a pandemic, or an earthquake. It is courtesy of the Washington State’s Emergency Management Division’s Business Preparedness Website, that includes a ton of additional resources to help your business survive!
Step 1: Develop a Business Continuity Plan to ensure core functions and key personnel are identified and to ensure normal operations are resumed as quickly as possible.
Step 2: Promote Employee/Individual Preparedness:
Distribute information and offer training for all employees on Individual and Family Preparedness.
Complete Out-of-Area Contact information card.
Maintain individual 72-Hour Comfort Kits in the office.
Step 3: Conduct a Non-Structural Hazard Assessment of your workplace. Take steps to reduce potential impacts.
Step 4: Develop and test Emergency Evacuation and Shelter-in-Place at Your Business that includes site specific information for each business location.
Step 5: Take steps to protect vital records.
Step 6: Develop a communication plan:
List key contacts: Personnel, Vendors and Suppliers, Contacts.
Step 7: Review insurance coverage on annual basis to ensure you have adequate coverage to meet your risk level.
Step 8: Learn how to drill/exercise using ICS principles.
Update plan to include changes from lessons learned.
Step 9: Complete the Key Vendors and Suppliers Form and ensure they have a Continuity Plan to validate integration of plans.
Step 10: Collaborate with local neighborhoods, community/volunteer groups, and businesses to promote disaster preparedness and plan for community recovery. The Vashon Chamber of Commerce provides coordination between business and support.
Step 11: Get to know your local fire, law enforcement, and local Emergency Management personnel; discuss their role and how you can support their response to your business if an event occurs.
Business (and organizational) Preparedness – also known as Business Continuity – is fairly simple on the face of it according to the Washington State Emergency Management Division‘s Business Liaison:
Develop plans to handle these four circumstances:
Fire or other building failure forcing evacuation
Inability of staff to get to work (whether due to sickness or transportation reasons)
Technology failure
Failure of any unique supplies or resources your organization needs to work
Having basic plans and backup resources identified and possibly under contract can help businesses handle a wide range of routine and exceptional incidents including fire, pandemic or earthquake. Accomplishing this requires a plan and there are commonly a number of templates, useful guidence and pitfalls that VashonBePrepared hopes to explain in this section of our web site.
If your business has a critical reliance access to off-island supplies, be sure you or your shipper has applied for access to the Washington State Business Re-Entry Registration
Also see this professionally accepted guidance to create a Business Continuity Plan: https://ibhs.org/BusinessDisasterRecovery