
- Home
- Business Disaster Survival Guide
- Planning Process
- Hazards Analysis & Response
- Hurricanes & Tropical Storms
- Flooding & Flash Flooding
- Thunderstorms & Lightning
- Tornadoes & Water Spouts
- Wildfires
- Sinkholes
- Extreme Heat
- Emergency Water Shortage & Drought
- Winter Storms & Extreme Cold
- Agricultural Diseases & Pests
- Emerging Diseases: Pandemic Influenza
- Hazardous Materials
- Building Fire
- Power Service Disruption
- Terrorism
- Bomb Threats
- Building Explosion
- Chemical & Biological Weapons
- Cyber Attacks
- Radiological Emergencies
- Violence In The Workplace
- Sabotage, Fraud & Theft
- Loss of Key Staff
- Civil Unrest
- Workforce Disruption
- Adjacent Hazards
- Recovery & Mitigation
- Disaster Planning Wizard
- Exercises & Training
- Preparedness Information Center
Adjacent Hazards
When assessing your vulnerability to natural, technological or other hazards, it is critical that you also look around your facility and adjacent areas.
- For example, your new building may be elevated above an anticipated flooding event; however, you are located in a hurricane evacuation area. Therefore, you still will be mandated to evacuate your facility given a hurricane threat. You will not be able to return until officials give the "all clear." What is the potential impact on your operations?
- The building adjacent to you houses a print shop which has specific chemicals identified as hazardous. An incident at that facility may force you to evacuate your building or shelter-in-place. Are you familiar with the businesses around you?
- Some organizations or businesses are at a higher risk of violence or attack because of the nature of their operations, i.e. landmarks, large venues, family planning centers, religious centers, government agencies, etc. Your business continuity plan should recognize the impact of their increased vulnerability and the potential impact to your company.