Practical information for safer next steps
Clear starting points for situations that require preparation and attention.
Use these plain-language resources to organize important information, prepare for common responsibilities, recognize urgent concerns, and understand when qualified outside help is needed.
Examples include severe injury, difficulty breathing, unconsciousness, suspected poisoning, uncontrolled bleeding, fire, violence, or another urgent danger.
Choose a topic
Start with the situation that best matches what you need.
Babysitter Readiness
Prepare youth caregivers before they are left responsible for a child.
View readiness guidance →Emergency Contacts
Keep essential names, phone numbers, addresses, and medical information available.
Organize emergency contacts →CPR and First Aid Preparation
Know what to verify before enrolling in a CPR, First Aid, or safety course.
Review training preparation →Community Event Safety
Prepare for emergencies, weather, crowds, facilities, and participant needs.
Review event safety →Official Notices
Organize documents, identify deadlines, preserve records, and seek appropriate help.
Review notice guidance →
Youth and family safety
Babysitter readiness checklist
- Confirm each child’s name, age, allergies, medical needs, and routine.
- Write down parent or guardian contact information.
- Know the full home address and nearest cross street.
- Identify emergency exits and fire extinguishers.
- Review food, medication, bedtime, and screen-time rules.
- Ask about pets, pools, gates, firearms, and household hazards.
- Keep a charged phone immediately available.
- Know when to call a parent, Poison Control, or 911.
Information to keep available
Emergency contact preparation
Emergency information should be easy to find and reviewed before a caregiver, volunteer, or responsible adult is left in charge.
Before enrolling
CPR, First Aid, and AED training preparation
Courses may differ in content, certification, physical requirements, and renewal periods. Confirm the details before registering.
Determine whether instruction covers adults, children, infants, or a combination.
Ask whether successful completion includes a certification credential.
Verify the training provider and instructor qualifications.
Confirm course length, attendance expectations, and renewal period.
Wear suitable clothing for kneeling and floor-based practice.
Ask in advance about physical limitations or accessibility needs.
Community planning
Community event safety checklist
- Identify who has authority to make safety decisions.
- Confirm emergency exits and assembly areas.
- Keep First Aid supplies accessible.
- Know the location of the nearest AED.
- Maintain emergency contact information.
- Plan for children, older adults, and participants with disabilities.
- Review weather, heat, traffic, and crowd-control concerns.
- Document incidents and follow-up actions.
Do not ignore important documents
When you receive an official notice
An official notice may involve a deadline, hearing, payment, response, government agency, court, tax matter, or other obligation. Begin by preserving and organizing the information.
Write down the date and method by which the notice was received.
Review the complete document, attachments, envelope, and instructions.
Mark response dates, hearings, payment dates, or appeal periods.
Keep the original and create a scan or copy for your records.
Identify whether it is legal, tax-related, administrative, or agency-specific.
Contact an attorney, tax professional, agency, or other specialist when needed.
What these resources provide
Preparation, organization, and a clearer starting point.
- General educational information
- Plain-language checklists
- Preparation questions
- Basic organizational guidance
- Direction toward appropriate outside help
What these resources do not replace
Emergency, medical, legal, tax, or professional services.
- Emergency services or 911
- Medical diagnosis or treatment
- Legal advice or representation
- Tax advice
- Professional certification instruction
Help improve community education
Suggest a resource or partnership.
Schools, families, nonprofits, youth groups, instructors, and community partners may recommend educational topics, safety needs, or collaborative projects.