IU to conduct annual full-scale tornado drill on March 22

21st March 2016
selfie-collage

Some #IUShelterSelfies taken in 2015. We hope to see more on social media this year.

NEW ALBANY, Ind. — IU Southeast will conduct a tornado drill Tuesday, March 22, as part of annual full-scale tornado drills across IU campuses. Held in conjunction with Indiana’s Severe Weather Preparedness Week, Operation Stormy Weather on March 22 gives emergency managers, students, staff and faculty members a chance to practice what they would do during a real tornado.

“Tornadoes pose a significant threat to this region and can strike at any time,” said Diane Mack, director of IU Emergency Management and Continuity. “Knowing where to go when you hear the tornado sirens or receive the IU-Notify alert could save your life.”

IU, along with municipalities and emergency management agencies statewide, will conduct two drills on March 22, in the morning and the evening. Students, staff and faculty members will be expected to respond as they would to the real deal: heading to their severe weather shelter or the safest location available. Once there, they should wait for the “all clear” message from IU-Notify.

What to expect:

  • IU-Notify alerts using most modalities, including email, text and Alertus desktop alerts, will be sent between 10 and 10:30 a.m. and 7 to 8 p.m. announcing the beginning of the drill. Another notification will announce the “all clear.”
  • In many IU buildings, volunteer staff will help direct students and staff to the safest location, which could be a specific shelter, interior hallway, stairwell or other location.
  • The drill should take 10 to 15 minutes. A survey will also be sent to gather feedback for improving the process.

It’s important to know where to go before the drill occurs. IU Southeast has prepared a Emergency Action Plan for for the campus, which includes procedures for how to respond to tornadoes and other threats.

IU Southeast’s Emergency Action Plan is available online, and each building entrance on campus has a floor plan that indicates the location of severe weather shelters.

The safest places to be during tornadoes are in basements, interior rooms or hallways, and severe weather shelters, which are indicated by a tornado funnel cloud symbol. The Protect IU website also provides information about preparing for tornadoes and severe weather.

During the March 22 drill, here are some other considerations:

  • If you’re working in a lab or conducting another critical function that cannot be interrupted (i.e. dentistry procedure) and can’t seek shelter during this drill, the people who cannot seek shelter during the drill should take a few minutes to review the procedures and know where you would have gone to seek shelter, and those procedures should be discussed with anyone else in the vicinity. If this were a real tornado warning, you would be expected to proceed to a designated tornado shelter location.
  • When IU-Notify messages are delivered, recipients should be sure that those around them are aware of the message in case they are not subscribed to IU-Notify. They should check to see if anyone in their vicinity needs assistance in following severe weather procedure.
  • Also be certain that those people from other countries — who may be used to a siren signaling a tsunami — know what the siren means in the United States.

Emergency Management and Continuity staff would like to see pictures of students, staff and faculty members in their shelters, either on campus or at home. Pictures can be posted to Twitter, Instagram and Facebook with the hashtag #IUShelterSelfie. A search of the hashtag will pull up pictures from last year. These pictures also can be viewed on Protect IU Instagram.

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