Next
week is Severe Weather Awareness Week, and TTU will wrap up the
event with a campus-wide tornado drill on Friday, Feb. 23, beginning
at 10 a.m.
Everybody should plan to participate in the drill
by responding as if it were an actual emergency. The drill will
begin with the campus tornado sirens and coincide with the monthly
testing of all warning sirens in Putnam County.
Campus officials will also use the drill to test
public address broadcast systems installed in some buildings with
the new fire alarm systems.
"The feedback we received after the last
drill in September was that most people couldn’t hear the
sirens in the buildings to know to take shelter," says Jim
Cobb, director of Environmental Health and Safety.
"One of the features with the new fire alarm
systems installed in some of the campus buildings, including the
Roaden University Center, is a public address system so announcements
can be made over an intercom."
When the drill begins, all classes and offices
must be released so students, faculty and staff can immediately
go to your building's tornado shelter area.
The only exception for the drill is in case of
inclement weather in our area at the time of the drill. If the weather
is actually bad that day, including rain alone, the drill will be
postponed, and any sirens or emergency notifications should be considered
as authentic (not a drill).
When the drill begins, everyone must seek shelter
in a designated area. Each building has a coordinator designated
to monitor weather radios and notify people inside the buildings.
Each building also has shelter areas clearly marked. Seek shelter
in the lowest levels of buildings or an interior hallway remaining
clear of exterior windows and doors.
Also, immediately evacuate areas without reinforced
construction such as auditoriums, gymnasiums, and large rooms with
wide freespan roofs.
Those who are outside should seek shelter in the nearest building
when the alarms sound.
If caught in open areas, move away from the tornado's
path at a right angle. If there is no time to escape, lie flat in
the nearest depression, such as a ravine or ditch.
Tornado warning procedures are listed below, but can also be found
in the Campus Emergency Plan located in each office or online at
the Environmental Health and Safety Office web site.
Tornado Warning Procedures for Campus
1. Once a tornado watch has
been issued, a person working in the designated office where the
weather alert radio(s) is located for each building should monitor
weather information via weather alert radio, local radio station,
Internet weather site, television or other reliable source. Watch
information should be communicated throughout the building. This
can be accomplished via word of mouth, by walking the building,
or by telephone.
2. If a tornado warning is
issued, the warning sirens will be activated by the Cookeville/Putnam
County Emergency Management Agency. (University Police dispatchers
serve as backup for activating the sirens on campus). Immediately
upon notification of a warning, all organized university activities
will cease so that students, faculty, staff and visitors can seek
shelter immediately. This includes class instruction, meetings,
conferences, athletic events, other academic activities, food
services, etc. A person working in the designated office where
the weather alert radio(s) is located for each building should
monitor their media source for warning information and communicate
this to building personnel once they have reached the shelter
area. Remember, a tornado watch means it's time to pay attention,
a tornado warning means a tornado has been sighted, and it is
time to seek shelter.
3. Classes, meetings and other
special activities are routinely held outside of normal business
hours during the week and on the weekends. The class instructor
and/or person in charge of classes and other activities held outside
of normal business hours is responsible for ensuring these procedures
are followed.
4. During the warning period,
and for a time thereafter, personnel need to stay alert to repeat
warnings, as well as the extension of existing warnings. Weather
conditions change quickly when tornado conditions are present
in the area. Persons working in offices where weather alert radios
are located should continue to pay close attention to their media
source until all severe weather has left the area.
5. Normal activities will not
resume until the warning for Putnam County has expired. Expiration
times for warnings are broadcast over weather alert radio as well
as other media sources.
6. It is each individual’s
responsibility to seek shelter. The university policy is that
persons will be strongly advised to seek shelter and will be shown
where shelters are located. Shelter areas are posted in each building.
7. Employees who are aware
of visitors or persons with disabilities in their area should
render assistance to these individuals as needed.
8. When a warning is issued
for Putnam County there are some areas on campus that, if occupied
during the warning period, could be imminently dangerous. Some
that immediately come to mind are the concourse of Hooper Eblen
Center, the Tech Pride Room, and the large dining rooms of the
grill and cafeteria. Evacuation of these areas will be mandatory,
and occupants will be encouraged to proceed to the shelter areas
within the building.
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