The ministers' meeting was timed to lead into Emergency Preparedness Week, which runs May 3 to 9 under the theme "Be Prepared. Know Your Risks." The national campaign is built around three actions every household should take:
Know the risks in your region. Not all hazards affect all areas equally. Wildfire, flooding, severe storms, and earthquakes each have distinct geographic distributions across Canada. Your provincial or territorial emergency management organization publishes region-specific guidance — find it and read it this week.
Make an emergency plan. Every household member should know what to do, where to go, and how to communicate if an evacuation or shelter-in-place order is issued. This includes agreeing on a meeting point, listing emergency contacts, and identifying the needs of children, elderly family members, and pets.
Build or refresh a 72-hour emergency kit. The federal standard is self-sufficiency for at least 72 hours — enough time for emergency services to reach your area in a widespread event. Water, non-perishable food, medications, copies of key documents, flashlights, batteries, a battery-powered or hand-crank radio, and cash in small bills are the essentials. For flood-specific preparation, Homeowner.ca's spring flood prep checklist covers the full scope from sump pumps to insurance review.
If you already have an emergency kit, this weekend is the time to check expiry dates on food and medications, replace dead batteries, and update your household contact list. Kits assembled last year may already have expired items.