
 Emergency Ops
 Emergency Ops
There are really only three things that we should add to what is currently being done 
within Troubled Times.
- For every solution set, we should make a conscious effort to address salability. In 
this regard, we should be utterly practical. For instance, the Troubled Times, Inc. 
approved prototype/demo list contains both a small water distillation demo for the 
purpose of teaching the principles, and a large scale water distillation prototype to 
supply the needs of a small community, since people need up to 6 gallons each per 
day. For larger groups the salability would most likely come in providing a number 
of the large units as opposed to making the units themselves larger.
- Place an even higher emphasis on means of getting the word and solution sets out 
and available to not only individuals, but also Emergency Operations Centers. This 
is a longer term activity that needs planning so that it can also be scaled up as time 
becomes shorter and there is likely to be a greater acceptance I think that as far as 
medium size communities go, that a form of the information should be somewhat 
targeted to the Emergency Operations Directors of these communities ahead of the 
pole shift, but late enough that they would be less likely to discard the information as 
they would do now, should they receive it. This puts the information in the hands, not 
so much of leaders, as those civil servants who will be immediately responsible for 
such matters.
- Where we now make it clear that people in communities, both large and small on 
down to individual families on the farm who live in "unsafe" areas such as the coast, 
and people in large metropolitan areas should evacuate; we should also make it 
clear that there are definite limits to the salability of the solution sets, and that as 
part of any Emergency Management Plan, a community of 30,000 (or whatever) 
survivors should be broken up into more manageable groups and dispersed so that 
the solution sets are workable.
Offered by Ron. 
