You don't need a law degree to protect your family. This guide gives the key rules, where to check, and simple steps you can finish this afternoon. Keep the family legal checklist by your fridge.
One-line takeaway: The federal government coordinates and funds; states and local officials run the response on the ground.
The National Response Framework explains how disasters work in the U.S.: local responders act first, states support them, and the federal government provides people, tools, and money when asked. For your family, that means local orders and local information matter most day-to-day, but a federal declaration can unlock aid.
A federal "disaster declaration" or "emergency declaration" lets FEMA and other agencies send help. Check your county on FEMA’s Disaster Declarations page. Search by state, county, or ZIP to see current and past declarations, the type (major disaster or emergency), and what programs may be available.
Quick check today:
Get the family legal checklist to capture these links and contacts on one page.
Next action: Look up your county in FEMA’s declarations database and save the page to your phone and home binder.
One-line takeaway: States write their own emergency powers—verify who can order what, for how long, and how it’s enforced.
Every state sets its own rules for emergencies. Common differences include:
How to look up your rules:
Good starter questions for your county emergency manager:
Get the family legal checklist to record state and county links and one contact name and phone number.
Next action: Find your state’s emergency powers page on NCSL and bookmark your county emergency management page.
One-line takeaway: Duties depend on local code and leases—keep egress safe, communicate clearly, and document everything.
Homeowners: Know your evacuation routes, nearest shelters, and any local building or wildfire/flood rules. Some areas require defensible space, clear addressing, or posted evacuation maps. Review your insurance policy’s notice duties (how quickly to report loss) and keep your declarations page handy.
Landlords: Duties vary by state and by lease, but typically include safe egress, access for emergency repairs, and timely notices to tenants about hazards, closures, or re-entry. OSHA’s emergency planning guidance is a useful model for clear procedures, contact lists, and incident logs you can adapt.
Simple checklist to stay compliant and organized:
Get the family legal checklist and add your insurance contact, policy number, and building code link.
Next action: Update your contact lists and create a one-page incident log template you can print and keep near the front door.
One-line takeaway: Declarations unlock tools and aid; evacuation orders can carry legal force—follow them and document your steps.
Types of declarations you may see:
Legal effects can include temporary rules such as curfews, restricted access, business closures, and roadblocks. Evacuation orders—sometimes called "mandatory," sometimes "voluntary"—come from authorized officials. Enforcement and penalties vary, so check state and local rules. When in doubt, follow the order. It protects your family and reduces legal risk.
What to do when an evacuation order hits:
Check FEMA’s Disaster Declarations page to confirm whether your area is declared and which programs apply.
Get the family legal checklist to store your evacuation map, two routes, and a short "leave now" list.
Next action: Save your county’s evacuation map and identify two shelter options (one inside your county, one outside).
One-line takeaway: Local officials send alerts through IPAWS—enable phone alerts and opt into your county system now.
How public alerts reach you:
Do these three things today:
If alerts don’t reach you (dead zones, phone off), use backups: outdoor sirens, NOAA Weather Radio, local AM/FM stations, and neighbor check-ins.
Sign up for local emergency alerts so your family gets notices even if one channel fails.
Next action: Enable WEA alerts on all family phones and enroll in your county’s text/email alert system today.
One-line takeaway: The ADA requires accessible information and services—ask for accommodations and document needs ahead of time.
Shelters and public communications must be accessible. That can include accessible routes, service-animal policies, accessible cots, charging for medical devices, interpreters or captioning, and plain-language materials.
Prepare a simple "care packet" now:
Before storm season, call your county emergency manager or shelter coordinator. Ask what accommodations they provide and how to request them quickly during an event. Keep copies (paper and phone) of medical and device records.
Get the family legal checklist and add your care packet items.
Next action: Create a one-page accommodations note and place it with your go-bag and medicine list.
One-line takeaway: Good records speed FEMA aid and insurance claims—photograph, save receipts, and keep a timeline.
Right after it’s safe, document everything:
Preparing for FEMA Individual Assistance (IHP):
A note on risk and liability: Not following lawful orders or code requirements can affect safety and, in some cases, your claims. If you face a coverage denial, landlord-tenant dispute, or unclear re-entry rules, consult a local attorney.
Get the family legal checklist and start your claims folder (digital + paper).
Next action: Create a claims folder with photos, receipts, policy documents, and a simple incident timeline.
One-line takeaway: Start with NCSL, your county emergency manager, and your city code—escalate to an attorney for disputes.
Step-by-step lookup:
When to call a lawyer:
Simple script for your county emergency manager:
Simple script for an attorney:
Resources to start:
Get the family legal checklist and add phone numbers for your county emergency manager, insurer, and one legal aid clinic.
Next action: Book a 20-minute call with your county emergency manager or a local legal clinic to answer one open question.
Next action: Save links to your state emergency powers page, county emergency manager, and FEMA declarations in your phone and home binder.