« Morning jolt | Main | “Spirits” play at the Mausoleum »

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Pictured: Devra Hall Levy
ACONA Devra Showing that there clearly has been a technical revolution in the Neighborhood Associations of Altadena, Devra Hall Levy of CoolidgeWatch showed a website/blog that she built herself this month which will allow her neighbors be better prepared for emergencies by identifying who’s CERT trained, who has emergency resources, who’s a nurse, etc. Just as important, her website/blog can help neighbors find a lost pet, or a plumber. Devra based her design partially on the brilliant work by Jeff Sedlik of BraeWatch , who has mapped out 14 neighborhood associations in Altadena using Google Maps.

Devra was followed by Natalie Salazar of the Sheriff’s Department who provided details on the county’semergency response training programs. For folks who don’t want to take the full Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT) training, which is like emergency response training on steroids (it takes 20 hours over several days), Natalie offered what’s called NET—Neighborhood Emergency Training, which delivers the basics of emergency training in a couple of hours. Natalie even said that NET could be delivered to members of a Neighborhood Association in someone’s living room.

The central theme of ACONA is “communications”: how to share important timely information between neighbors, between neighborhoods, and, when necessary, throughout LA County. Possibly nothing addresses this as well as Nixle , a service the LA County Sheriff’s Department uses to send emergency messages by emails or by text to subscribers’ smartphones. The service is free. Deputy Bob Boese demonstrated it to ACONA members. A key feature is that subscribers can enter not just their own address to be alerted to crimes or emergencies in their neighborhood, but can enter the addresses of their relatives (think your parents or grandparents), so subscribers can be alerted when there is an emergency in the neighborhoods of loved ones.

As always with ACONA, the last part of the meeting was an open discussion of other topics attendees wanted ACONA to address at future meetings. Dale Comfort got up and asked how it was that the speed limits in Altadena sometimes vary from block to block.

Haven’t noticed this? Sometimes you’ll be on the same street, and BLAM, the speed limit drops from 35 to 30 or even 25! ACONA is going to invite the California Highway Patrol (CHP) to the next meeting for an explanation. There are now over 70 Altadena residents who have attended ACONA meetings and who have signed on to work together to “make Altadena the best neighborhood in LA County.”

The next ACONA meeting will be in January. The date will be announced in the AltadenaBlog in December.

Contacts:
Elliot Gold (Elliot@telespan.com) ACONA

Douglas DeCesare (drdecesa@lasd.org) NET

Robert Boese (R1Boese@lasd.org) NIXLE

(Ed. note: corrected an attribution).

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83455629c69e20133f5c470fe970b

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference ACONA looks at success stories, resources for neighborhood groups:

Comments