Ottawa

Community associations take stock of tornado lessons

Representatives of Ottawa's community associations met Wednesday to look at how they might prepare for another tornado or natural disaster hitting their neighbourhood.

One rep says they made plans on the fly in the midst of 'total chaos'

The tornado that ripped through Arlington Woods in September caused serious damage to trees, homes and property. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

Representatives of Ottawa's community associations met Wednesday night to see what they could learn from last month's tornadoes.

Robert Onley, vice-president of the tornado-affected Trend-Arlington Community Association, described how his community responded.

"You never think you'll be organizing a tornado response," he told the representatives of other community associations Wednesday.

"I was amazed at how quickly you get the sense from the community that the social fabric starts to fray. There was this frustration, verging on anger that was percolating."

Need to communicate 

Onley said that frustration encouraged people to pitch in and the community association needing to manage and direct nearly 250 volunteers.

Part of that was going door-to-door and assessing which homes could use the help of volunteers.

Robert Onley, vice-president of the Trend-Arlington Community Association, says the organization had to quickly coordinate emergency response as neighbours turned to it for information and help. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

On top of the destruction of century-old white pine trees, some of which smashed into homes, Trend-Arlington is also close to the damaged Merivale power station and faced several days without power and steady cell phone reception.

"It was a real sobering moment when you realize that the only way you could communicate was to find people where they physically were, or hopefully make a call through a landline," Onley said.

Need to plan

At one point, the community association representatives broke into chatter at the idea that they all needed to have their own emergency response plan.

Onley said he recommends each community association establish a contact at the City of Ottawa's emergency management office, find a way to identify community needs, create a communication plan for reaching neighbours and stock emergency supplies at a local community centre.

"These were all things that we developed on the fly in the midst of what I would call total chaos," Onley said.

Anna Sawiski presented information on behalf of the Red Cross at the community associations' meeting. (Matthew Kupfer/CBC)

Representatives from the City of Ottawa's emergency preparedness team, Hydro Ottawa and the Red Cross also spoke about the response and the coordinate with each other.

"I think it's really important that communities like this have these conversations," said Anna Sawiski with the Red Cross.

"We're not alone as organizations."

The Red Cross recommends creating emergency kits for cars, home and the workplace that include food, medical and other essentials required for 72 hours so people can take care of themselves as organizations respond.