Disaster Preparedness Month, night 19: Secure your water heater

One relatively simple, but hugely important, home-improvement action you can take in honor of Disaster Preparedness Month: Secure your water heater, since it can supply you with fresh water for quite a while if trouble interrupts your access to the main system. The sketch at right is from a how-to page on the state Department of Health website – which points out that plumber’s tape is no longer the preferred method for securing water heaters, because “so many tanks burst through this strapping” during the 1989 Bay Area and 1994 Southern California quakes. To see how to secure your water heater, check out the state how-to here. Got yours secured already? Send us a photo so we can show the world your awesome preparedness! And while we’re talking earthquakes – a reminder that the statewide drill, recommended for everyone (work, home, school, etc.), is coming up at 9:45 this Wednesday morning. Till then, make sure you’ve completed the basic preparedness steps we’ve been reiterating each night: Take the “3 to Get Ready” challenge (city campaign, sponsoring WSB this month); explore the West Seattle Be Prepared website and memorize your Emergency Communication Hub; and if you’re on Facebook, join the West Seattle Be Prepared group.

1 Reply to "Disaster Preparedness Month, night 19: Secure your water heater"

  • goodpoint April 20, 2010 (8:35 am)

    Great idea. So simple to do. We really forget how important this is – we all want access to water after an earthquake right? This is a common one that the home inspectors recommend because they often aren’t strapped. You can buy a kit at the hardware store in a box that isn’t that expensive. We went that route after we asked the hot water heater person who installed a new one to do it – he was going to charge $100 and said we are better off buying a kit and doing it ourselves which was true.

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