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OT ........HURRICANE PREPAREDNESS


iwillwalk

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Some important tips to keep you safe in the storm...

Soon, you're going to turn on the TV and see a weather person pointing

to some spinning red thing headed toward our coast and making two basic

meteorological points:

(1) There is no need to panic.

(2) We could all be killed.

If you're new to the area, you're probably wondering what you need to do

to prepare for the possibility that we'll get hit by "the big one."

Follow this simple three-step hurricane preparedness plan:

STEP 1. Buy enough food and bottled water to last your family for at

least three days.

STEP 2. Put these supplies into your car.

STEP 3. Drive to Nebraska and remain there until Halloween.

HOMEOWNERS' INSURANCE:

If you own a home, you must have hurricane insurance. Fortunately, this

insurance is cheap and easy to get, as long as your home meets two basic

requirements:

(1) It is reasonably well-built, and

(2) It is located in Nebraska.

Unfortunately, if your home is located in Florida, most insurance

companies would prefer not to sell you hurricane insurance, because then

they might be required to pay YOU money, and that is certainly not why they

got into the insurance business in the first place. So you'll have to

scrounge around for an insurance company, which will charge you an annual

premium roughly equal to the replacement value of your house. At any

moment, this company can dr! op you like a bad talk show host.

EVACUATION ROUTE:

If you live in a low-lying area, you should have an evacuation route

planned.. (To determine whether you live in a low-lying area, look at

your driver's license; if it says Florida, you live in a low-lying

area.) The purpose of having an evacuation route is to avoid being

trapped in your home when a major storm hits. Instead, you will be

trapped in a gigantic traffic jam several miles from your home, along

with two hundred thousand other evacuees. So, as a bonus, you will not be

lonely.

HURRICANE SUPPLIES:

If you don't evacuate, you will need a lot of supplies. Florida

tradition requires that you wait until the last possible minute, then go to

the supermarket and get into vicious fights with strangers over who gets

the last can of SPAM.

In addition to food and water, you will need the following supplies:

23 Flashlights.

At least $167 worth of batteries that turn out, when the power

goes off, to be the wrong size for the flashlights.

Bleach. (No, I don't know what the bleach is for NOBODY

knows what the bleach is for, but it's traditional, so GET some!)

A 55-gallon drum of underarm deodorant.

A big knife that you can strap to your leg. (This will be useless

in a hurricane, but it looks cool.)

And $35,000 in cash or diamonds so that, after the hurricane

passes, you can buy a generator from a man with no visible teeth.

Of course these are just basic precautions. As the hurricane draws near, it

is vitally important that you keep abreast of the situation by

turning on your television and watching TV reporters in rain slickers

stand right next to the ocean and tell you over and over how vitally

important it is for everybody to stay away from the ocean.

Good luck!

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