PREPAREDNESS INFORMATION PAGE
WEB LINKS FOR EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS:
Tarrant County Emergency Preparedness Website
Sign Up for Emergency Alerts in your County
Know your Neighbors !
Here’s why:
- Emergency response teams may be delayed
- Your neighbors may be the first ones who can help
- They know where you live and will have a better idea of what you might need
So meet your neighbors today!
Being prepared for an emergency begins with “Hello”.
- Introduce yourself and let them know you live nearby
- Tell them you’re making a plan in the event of a emergency and want to share your information
- Exchange contact information such as a phone number or email
In major disasters, between 70% to 95% of victims are rescued by neighbors, not professional responders. Some of your neighbors will need assistance that can be easily provided by you and others that live in your community. The County of Tarrant Neighborhood Action Kit is a free resource that can help you and your neighbors get organized and ready to act.
To learn more about how to help get your neighborhood disaster-ready, download the Neighborhood Action Kit and its supporting documents by clicking on the links on this page.
For more information, or to request for a speaker from Tarrant County’s Office of Emergency Management to come speak to a neighborhood group.
Source: oem@fortworthtexas.gov

Community Emergency Response Teams
Tarrant County & Fort Worth sponsors Local CERT Training
During an Emergency your local Law Enforcement or Emergency Services may be overwhelmed or not able to reach you. For this reason the Fire Dept. Sponsors training for local community CERT groups. Team Building, First-aid, Light Rescue, Communications.
The goal of these groups is to start with your home & family, then your neighbors next door, then your community.
CERT offers free, FEMA approved 20-hour CERT training to the communities we serve. Classes are taught by trained emergency personnel, including firefighters and Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel. Through this training, residents learn about hazards that may impact their area as well as basic disaster response skills, such as fire safety, light search and rescue, team organization, and disaster medical operations. Upon completion of the course, CERT members can assist others in their neighborhood or workplace following an event when professional responders are not immediately available to help.
It is important to note that CERT volunteers do not work for the City or County. Instead, volunteers are registered with their respective cities, unincorporated areas or local law enforcement agencies. In the event of an emergency, some volunteers become part of the disaster plan for local authorities. Upon activation of an Emergency Operations Center, a city representative, a Fire Department liaison or law enforcement liaison will contact CERT volunteers and provide direction about how those volunteers will be utilized. Participants have no obligation or commitment to respond or act should a disaster occur.
How CERT’s Operate
As each CERT is organized and trained, its members select a team leader and an alternate and identify an emergency meeting location, or staging area, to be used in the event of an emergency. Teams are encouraged to go into action even during relatively moderate emergencies, regardless of actual need, to gain practice mobilizing and assessing damage.
The staging area is where the Police, Sheriff, Fire department and other services will interact with CERTs. Having a centralized contact point makes it possible to communicate damage assessments and allocate volunteer resources more effectively.
Damage from disasters may vary considerably from one location to another. In an actual disaster, CERTs are deployed progressively and as needs dictate. Members are taught to assess their own needs and those in their immediate environment first.
CERT members who encounter no need in their immediate Neighborhood area then report to their staging area, where they take on assigned roles based on area needs. Members who find themselves in a heavily affected location send runners to staging areas to get help from available resources. Ham, FRS and CB radio links also may be used to increase communication capabilities and coordination.
The CERT program can provide an effective first-response capability. Acting as individuals first, then later as members of teams, trained CERT volunteers can fan out within their assigned areas, extinguishing small fires, turning off natural gas to damaged homes, performing light search and rescue, and rendering basic medical treatment. Trained volunteers also offer an important potential workforce to service organizations in nonhazardous functions such as shelter support, crowd control, and evacuation.
The Department recognizes the value each trained citizen will bring in the event of a major disaster. As individuals, we can prepare our homes and families to cope during the first critical hours following an emergency. Through CERT, you can help yourself and your neighbors reduce your emergency needs and manage your existing resources until professional assistance becomes available.
Source: oem@fortworthtexas.gov
