Probably the most important step is actually the first step, and that involves contacting the police (by calling 911 or
any other emergency phone number).
Not exact matches
Be sure to double - check that the camp has your cell
phone number or any
other emergency contacts.
Child Proof the House (Set the temperature of your hot water heater to 120 degrees F, use covers on electrical outlets and latches on cabinets, keep household cleaners, chemicals and medicines completely out of reach and always store them in their original container and know the Poison Control Center
number (1-800-222-1222), do not carry hot liquids or food near your child and do not allow your child near stoves, heaters or
other hot appliances (especially curling irons), and when cooking, use the back burners and turn pot handles inward, to prevent drowning, never leave your child alone near any container of water, keep a list of
emergency numbers near the
phone, and lock rooms that are not child proof).
This meeting is also a good opportunity to collect contact information such as email addresses,
emergency contacts,
phone numbers, and any
other pertinent details.
Mr. Baxter also offered a great suggestion that if you own a pet, then it would be helpful to put your chosen vet's
number, as well as a veterinary hospital
phone number, on the refrigerator with all of the
other applicable
emergency numbers.
The Microchip is registered with AKC Reunite so your pet's unique ID
number is linked to your name,
phone numbers,
emergency contacts and
other vital information in AKC Reunite's database.
Place the name, address and
phone number of the
emergency vet clinic on your refrigerator too so that
other family members have immediate access to it.
Registering your pet's microchip links your pet's microchip ID to your name,
phone numbers,
emergency contacts and
other vital information.
Leave your veterinarian's name and
phone number with the
other pet parent just in case of an
emergency.
Keep your veterinarian's
phone number and any
emergency phone numbers and directions next to your
phone along with all
other important
emergency information for your family.
If
emergency services are called to the scene, record the police report
number,
phone number, officer name and badge
number, and any
other information that could be relevant.
With your family, put together a list of
phone numbers, addresses, passwords and
other important information as well as a step by step plan of attack should any
emergency arise.
The card includes space for important
phone numbers to keep on hand such as an in case of
emergency contact
number, a non-
emergency number for police and
others.
Before heading out on your trip, be sure to provide the house sitter with a list of
emergency contacts and service providers, the names and
phone numbers of anyone else who has access to the home and
other pertinent information, like where the electrical breaker panel and water shutoff main are.
Personal: Travel (maps, destinations, hotels, frequent flyer state - ments) Home (recipes, decorating, gardening, organizing, party planning) Family (parenting articles, sports teams) Health (one for each member of the family) School report cards Children's sports teams
Phone numbers and address subcategories: Business (home maintenance contacts, work references) Personal (master list,
emergency contacts list) Financial and legal subcategories: Tax returns (current year, immediate past year, all
other years); Important Certificates: (birth, marriage, divorce and death certificates) Passports Wills Mortgage agreements or leases Insurance policies Car records Educational records Medical records (see below) Power of attorney Bank statements (each account gets a separate file) Credit card accounts (one file for each) Utility company bills RRSPs Investment records Loan agreements Pay stubs Home subcategories:.