When you get around to developing your Emergency Action Plan
you will need to develop alternate courses of action (COA’s) for every part of
your plan.
Cooking
Gathering water
Evacuating
Sheltering
First Aid
Etc.
The important reason for having more than one way to do
something is because your situation might demand it.
The primary reason behind everything you do should be the
Safety, Health and Welfare of yourself, your family and loved ones. This is not
negotiable.
Today’s Emergency
So today I am on my way home from work, driving down the
highway with all of the other commuters, heading home, and minding my own
business listening to an educational CD. Suddenly to my front is a slew of road
rubbish. There does not appear to be anything too big or dangerous and evasion
is not an option. The speed, and
proximity of surrounding vehicles would make a radical lane change more
dangerous, I have to go over it.
Wham… suddenly the car is listing to the right and an unsettling
grinding noise is coming from beneath the car. I of course am thinking the
worse, blown transmission, damaged axel or drive shaft.
Fortunately the cars behind me witnessed something and are
giving way so I can get to the right and out of the traffic (good situational
awareness). I come to a stop on top of an overpass cars are blowing by me at
speed and I need to wait for a break in traffic to exit the vehicle. The driver
side door is about three feet from the moving traffic.
I make it out and see that the right rear tire is flat, no fluids
leaking from the transmission, and the drive shaft and axel appear to still be
true. Relief, the transmission, axel and drive shaft are probably OK…
So, what is my Primary COA? I can change the tire. I’ve a
spare the tools and experience. But the room needed is just too narrow between
the car and the guard rail, the two ton jack won’t fit correctly and give me
room to jack up the car (yep I have one in the back cargo area just for this
type of event). But I also have concerns that someone will think I’m in the far
right lane and will want to pull over to pass those slower cars in front of
them. Changing the tire is not an option.
Secondary course of action. I know that there is a tire shop
about two miles to my front, I bought the tires their about four months ago, should
I drive there? No I’ll ruin the Mag doing that.
Alternate course of action, call AAA.
Now I am waiting on AAA. I’m leery about sitting in the car
for the reason mentioned above, so I decide to stay out and well to the front
of the vehicle (emergency flashers are on). I cannot jump the guardrail to
avoid oncoming cars because it’s a 40 or 50 foot drop to an unforgiving
frontage road.
Fortunately the tow truck arrived within about a half an
hour of my service call. Props to the AAA dispatcher. I told her of the
possible risks where I was and she put me on a priority status. Oh, he had to wait
for some time until it was safe to exit his vehicle also.
Within 10-15 minutes or so we are at the tire shop, my tire
is in stock and my Roadside Hazard Warrantee (another tool) covers a good
portion of the cost for a new tire.
So where am I going with this experience? I had an
emergency, I knew the options available to me because I already had a plan, and
I chose the COA that was the best under the circumstances.
If you have to pull the trigger on a COA and it misses, you
will need to fire again and again until you hit the target, make sure you have enough ammo.
When creating your unique Emergency Action Plan, be the
Negative Nellie. Plan for the worst and hope for the best. Only with a well
thought out plan will you succeed. Any plan is better than no plan.
Until next time
"Be Safe"
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