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Verizon stands ready as Hurricane Henri approaches the Northeast Coast

Network operations initiatives include preparedness for potential commercial power outages and flooding. The Verizon Response Team (VRT) stands at the ready 24/7 year-round to support first responders.

NEW YORK, N.Y. – As Hurricane Henri approaches the Northeast coast, Verizon continues to prepare for potential flooding and commercial outages that may accompany the storm – potentially the first storm of this magnitude to make landfall in this area in years. Engineers are topping off generators and trucks with fuel, staging emergency assets outside of the storm’s projected path, readying mobile network assets for rapid deployment, and activating response teams to keep customers and first-responders connected. Especially in the context of natural disasters, having reliable connectivity and a personal communications plan is essential.

“The importance of connecting with critical resources, colleagues, friends and family cannot be overstated, and we understand the important role we play in that,” said Kyle Malady, Chief Technology Officer for Verizon. “Reliability is in our DNA, and we prepare all year long to be ready when our customers need us most. The strength and reliability of our network have been evident to our customers during recent emergencies, and our teams are preparing for Hurricane Henri with the same tireless dedication and commitment to reliable communications.”

Verizon is ready

Verizon has prepared to ensure the network is ready for Hurricane Henri:

How you can prepare: Do you have a personal communications plan?

It’s never too late to prepare. With COVID-19 factoring in, we may see more sheltering in place instead of evacuations, making communication even more critical.

We encourage you to take these steps to ensure you and your loved ones and communicate during a storm.

Device preparation:

  • Ensure all battery-powered devices are fully charged before the storm hits. These include wireless home phones, smartphones, laptops, tablets, flashlights and radios.
  • Wireless devices can provide crucial information and communication in an emergency. Keep phones, tablets, laptops, batteries, chargers and other equipment in dry, accessible locations like re-sealable plastic bags, dry bags or waterproof cases.
  • In case of evacuation, make sure you can find your chargers (including wall and vehicle charging cords) and have portable device chargers fully charged and next to your device.

Know and back up your info:

  • Maintain a list of emergency phone numbers and email addresses, including police, fire and rescue agencies; power companies; insurance providers; and family, friends and co-workers. Program them into your phone, smartphone, tablet or laptop and also have a hard copy handy, someplace easily accessible.
  • Backup your information on Verizon Cloud. Verizon offers backup assistance through the Verizon Cloud to store your phone’s address book and contact information as well as pictures and other content on a secure server. Record video and take photos of your home possessions before severe weather hits.

Earmark resources:

  • Download weather applications and alerts that provide storm-related radar images, forecasts and severe storm warnings.
  • Program your smartphone to receive emergency alerts. Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEAs) are free wireless notifications delivered to mobile devices by local/national public safety organizations.
  • To prepare for potential evacuation, earmark your emergency resources on your phone so you can research any special restrictions, limitations or instructions if you need emergency shelter, medical care or other support that may be impacted by COVID-19.

How businesses and government organizations can prepare and stay connected

Businesses and governments know the importance of hurricane preparedness. This year, with so much of the workforce working remotely, contingency planning is even more critical. We offer customers products and services that can help disaster-proof communications and enable business continuity.

It’s also a good time to review readiness plans. Suggested steps for businesses and government organizations include:

  • Make sure you have contact information updated and readily available for all employees.
  • Make copies of insurance documents, review insurance coverages and update as appropriate.
  • Ensure employees working from home have documented all corporate equipment being used to work from home in case of damage or loss.
  • Ensure you have a backup plan to shift work in case work-from-home employees in a storm-impacted area have to evacuate their home or their home loses commercial power.

This storm season is predicted to be an active one, and Verizon is crisis-ready and crisis-proven.

**Editor’s Note: To access images and b-roll of past storms, Verizon equipment, recovery efforts and more, please visit Verizon’s Emergency Resource Hub at https://www.verizon.com/about/news/emergency-resource-center

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