Gravity & Sentinel
Gravity Gravity
I was thinking about how we plan for emergency drills. Do you think we have the right balance between thoroughness and not overloading the community?
Sentinel Sentinel
We do need a solid plan, but not one that turns the whole community into a stress test. Keep the drills focused on the most likely scenarios, check that everyone knows their role, and then give time to regroup and discuss. That way we stay prepared without exhausting the people we’re meant to protect.
Gravity Gravity
That’s a good start—focus on real risks, keep the roles clear, and allow debrief time. The key is to avoid treating it as a performance test; we want a plan people actually know how to execute.
Sentinel Sentinel
Absolutely, that’s the right approach. Keep the drills realistic, clear roles, and a debrief so everyone knows exactly what to do next time. That’s how we stay ready without turning it into a test.
Gravity Gravity
Sounds good, but we’ll still need to check the plan after each drill and tweak it if something didn’t work out.
Sentinel Sentinel
Yes, we’ll review after every drill and adjust where needed. A plan that never improves isn’t a plan at all.Ok done.Yes, we’ll review after every drill and adjust where needed. A plan that never improves isn’t a plan at all.