Your Emergency and Local Safety List

Your Emergency and Local Safety List

Create a quick-access list of emergency numbers and local contacts - so you can act fast and stay in control.

  • 10–30 mins
  • One-time
  • Effort: Moderate
  • Ingredient: Safety & Security
    Knowing you and your loved ones are safe at home and outside
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How

01

Build your list: Choose 5–8 essentials - police, ambulance, fire, municipal helpline, building security, women/child helpline, one trusted contact.

02

Save & label clearly: Add to Favorites or a “Safety” group with plain names (e.g., “Police – Ward X Desk”).

03

Share & Print: Send to your household; keep a small card near the door/landline and in your bag.

04

Know How to Use Them:
When to call: Police → crime, harassment, unsafe situation | Ambulance → medical emergency | Fire → fire or smoke hazard.
What to say: Your name, callback number, exact location, nature of emergency, emergency contact if needed.

Easy Start

Save your city police emergency line and two Emergency contacts to Favourites.

Why It Matters

In emergencies, clarity and speed matter. Having the right numbers and knowing what to say cuts response time and prevents panic.

Questions and Thoughts

  1. I don’t know the right numbers. → Start with your city website or ask the building security desk; add more over time.
  2. I’ll forget what to say. → Keep a short note in your phone: “Name + Location + Callback + Issue.”
  3. Too many contacts. → Begin with 5 essentials: police, ambulance, fire, municipal, one trusted contact.
  4. Privacy worries. → Share only within household/trusted people; avoid posting lists publicly.

Care Notes

Use emergency lines only for real emergencies. For routine issues, use non-emergency desks or helplines.