NZ ShakeOut at John McGlashan College
School Earthquake Drill and Evacuation
Period #5 - Thursday 27th September 2012
Period #5 - Thursday 27th September 2012
Friday, 28 September 2012
Monday, 24 September 2012
Change of evacuation meeting point for Thursday's JMC ShakeOut
Be sure to review the *updated* evacuation details in the post below...as the evacuation meeting point has changed after being reviewed.
We are now all to meet on the school field...away from buildings. Once all heads are counted and numbers are reported to the wardens, we can then gather on the grassy bank to review how it all went.
Please remember that the tennis courts are the usual meeting point for all other school evacuations.
We are now all to meet on the school field...away from buildings. Once all heads are counted and numbers are reported to the wardens, we can then gather on the grassy bank to review how it all went.
Please remember that the tennis courts are the usual meeting point for all other school evacuations.
Sunday, 16 September 2012
John McGlashan College - Evacuation Procedure
Earthquake Drill Procedure
While you are doing the drill, imagine that it is real and what might be happening around you. Then, consider what you might need to do before a real earthquake happens to help protect yourself, staff and students, and your school.
Practise what you will do after the shaking stops.
Period #5 on 27th September:
On hearing the continuous school bell...
- Do the Drop, Cover, and Hold drill with staff and children in your care: Instruct students to
- DROP down onto your hands and knees
This position protects you from falling but allows you to still move if necessary. - COVER your head and neck (and your entire body if possible) under a sturdy table or desk. If there is no shelter nearby, get down near an interior wall (or next to low-lying furniture that won't fall on you), and cover your head and neck with your arms and hands.
- HOLD on to your shelter (or your position to protect your head and neck)
Adjust these steps as needed if you will be in an elevator, or other situations during your drill or in an actual earthquake. Instructions are also available for people with disabilities or special requirements.
While you are doing the drill, imagine that it is real and what might be happening around you. Then, consider what you might need to do before a real earthquake happens to help protect yourself, staff and students, and your school.
Practise what you will do after the shaking stops.
The routine
is:
· The bell will still be ringing continuously... ask class to leave immediately.
·
Count them as they leave
·
If possible shut windows and doors before you leave
·
Quickly check any neighbouring room
Exit the building using the safest route... using stairs not elevators
Exit the building using the safest route... using stairs not elevators
·
Walk your class up to the grassy school field....away from buildings. Find the safest route there, away from power poles, falling debris from buildings etc...
·
Count heads from your class.
·
Report to Warden after head count.
·
Students with special needs may require particular consideration
As well as
doing this, certain persons should act as Marshalls.
This means
they check their area is ALL CLEAR and report that to the Warden.
·
Mve – Administration
·
Aan – Rooms 1 – 6
·
Gav – Rooms 7 – 10
·
Mro – Rooms 11 – 13
·
Adu – Rooms 14 – 16
·
Bjo – Specialist Block
·
Dbo – Rooms 23 – 27
·
Rsh – Gilray Block
·
Pga – Library - ELC
·
Nga – Student Centre, Chapel
Other information to consider before the drill...
Other information to consider before the drill...
Ground shaking during an earthquake is
seldom the cause of injury. Most earthquake-related injuries and deaths
are caused by collapsing walls and roofs, flying glass and falling
objects. It is extremely important for a person to move as little as
possible to reach the place of safety he or she has identified because
most injuries occur when people try to move more than a short distance
during the shaking.
Look around you now, before an earthquake.
Identify safe places such as under a sturdy piece of furniture or
against an interior wall in your home, office or school so that when the
shaking starts you can respond quickly. An immediate response to move
to the safe place can save lives. And that safe place should be within a
few steps to two metres to avoid injury from flying debris.
Drop Cover Hold - What to do in an earthquake
View the video to see what to do in an earthquake...
Kids know best ;)
" Dunedin residents 'should not be complacent' " - ODT Article
While the chance of a serious earthquake hitting Dunedin
is one in 1000, the odds are better than winning Lotto and
citizens "should not be complacent", geologist Prof Richard
Norris says.
Should such a quake occur, parts of South Dunedin, Mosgiel
and the Taieri would "inevitably" be engulfed in
liquefaction, the hill suburbs would suffer landslips and
rockfalls and many heritage buildings would be reduced to
rubble.
Prof Norris, of the University of Otago geology department,
put such images to the Mornington Probus group at a meeting
yesterday.
The city's most active fault-line, Akatore, which runs from
Taieri Mouth to Dunedin, last broke about 1000 years ago, and
the chance of it happening again is less than one in 1000, he
said.
Researchers knew a lot about the fault-lines around Dunedin,
most of which were not highly active - the Titri Fault has
not moved for 90,000 years.
"But given Christchurch's experience, we should not be too
complacent," he said.
The September 4 quake which shook Christchurch and its
subsequent devastating aftershock on February 22 both
occurred on an old fault-line.
"It's likely the fault had not moved for 15,000 years," Prof
Norris said.
Even if extensive, and expensive, seismic research had been
carried out on the fault, it probably would not have been
given a high degree of significance.
The quake was "typical" of most in the South Island as it
occurred on a fault which was not recognised.
Once a fault like that broke, strain was released in its
vicinity, but pressure built at either end of it, evident
from the pattern of aftershocks Christchurch experienced
after September 4.
Between January and February 22, those aftershocks were
increasingly closer to Christchurch city and seismologists
knew a large quake could not be discounted.
Prof Norris believed the area around the fault was "being
shortened", culminating in the deadly 6.3-magnitude quake.
"The Port Hills have been thrust over the lower-lying areas
of the city," he said.
Christchurch's "seismic hazard" was "about double" Dunedin's,
but should one occur, the impact would be similar, but of a
different nature.
Soil liquefaction was likely at St Kilda, parts of St Clair,
Mosgiel, and the Taieri, including the airport.
The hill suburbs, along with the Peninsula roads and parts of
Kaikorai Valley, would likely suffer rockfalls and landslips,
the severity of which would depend on ground moisture.
There "is virtually no chance" of liquefaction on the hill
suburbs and the bulk of the city centre and North Dunedin
"because there is nothing to liquefy".
The city largely sits on solid rock, which would result in
less violent shaking than experienced in Christchurch.
However, Dunedin's higher proportion of historic brick
buildings meant damage would potentially be worse.
"A lot of the images we've had [of the Christchurch quakes]
have been masses of piles of brick and that's because brick
is not a very good material in an earthquake.
"I shudder every time I look around Dunedin."
Older wooden houses fared better as they are "incredibly
resilient" and "flex" in quakes.
"We should not be building with brick, in my view, in New
Zealand."
Prof Norris believed New Zealanders needed to be aware of the
nation's quake susceptibility - it sits on two tectonic
plates, the Pacific and Australian - and while the
Christchurch earthquake decreased the probability of
earthquakes in that area, the rest of the country was still
at risk.
"We live with earthquakes."
Otago Daily Times - Wed, 9 Mar 2011
Welcome to NZ ShakeOut!
At 9.26am on Wednesday 26 September [9:26-26:9]*, more than one million people will participate in the New Zealand ShakeOut earthquake drill, the first ShakeOut drill held nationwide in any country!
Participants are allowed to hold their ShakeOut drills at any time during the two weeks either side of Wednesday 26th Sept... and our school is having the drill during period #5 on Thursday 27th September.
While earthquake hazard varies from region
to region (see below), all of New Zealand is prone to earthquakes. You
could be anywhere when an earthquake strikes- at home, at work, at
school or on holiday.
New Zealand ShakeOut has been created to help people and organisations get better prepared for major
earthquakes, and practice how to be protected when they happen.
Everyone will practice "Drop, Cover and Hold"—the right action to take
in an earthquake.
New Zealand ShakeOut also provides a fantastic opportunity for organisations and businesses to examine and review their own emergency preparedness arrangements. Families and households can create, review and practice their household plans.
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