Emergency Preparedness Merit Badge Pamphlet Emergency Preparedness Merit Badge

Emergency Preparedness


Requirements were REVISED effective January 1, 2018.

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To see the requirements, without the changes highlighted, Click here.

For the previous requirements, Click here.


Either this Merit Badge or Lifesaving MB
is Required to earn the Eagle Scout Rank


The wording of requirement 6a has an editorial error in the 2018 Boy Scout Requirements Book. The correct wording is shown below.


  1. Earn the First Aid Merit Badge.
  2. Do the following:
    1. Discuss with your counselor the aspects of emergency preparedness:
      1. Prepare for emergency situations Prevention
      2. Respond to emergency situations Protection
      3. Recover from emergency situations Mitigation
      4. Prevent emergency situations Response
      5. Mitigate losses in emergency situations Recovery
      Include in your discussion the kinds of questions that are important to ask yourself as you consider each of these.
    2. Make a chart that demonstrates your understanding of each of the aspects of emergency preparedness in requirement 2a (prepare, respond, recover, prevent, and mitigate) with regard to 10 of the situations listed below. You must use situations 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 below in boldface but you may choose any other five listed here for a total of 10 situations. Discuss this chart with your counselor.
      Using a chart, graph, spreadsheet, or another method approved by your counselor, demonstrate your understanding of each aspect of emergency preparedness listed in requirement 2a (prevention, protection, mitigation, response, and recovery) for 10 emergency situations from the list below. You must use the first five situations listed below in boldface, plus any other five of your choice. Discuss your findings with your counselor.
      1. Home kitchen fire
      2. Home basement/storage room/garage fire
      3. Explosion in the home
      4. Automobile accident
      5. Food-borne disease (food poisoning)
      6. Fire or explosion in a public place
      7. Vehicle stalled in the desert
      8. Vehicle trapped in a blizzard
      9. Flash flooding in town or in the country
        Earthquake or tsunami
      10. Mountain/backcountry accident
      11. Boating accident
      12. Gas leak in a home or a building
      13. Tornado or hurricane
      14. Major flooding or a flash flood
      15. Toxic chemical spills and releases
      16. Nuclear power plant emergency
      17. Avalanche (snowslide or rockslide)
      18. Violence in a public place
    3. Meet with and teach your family how to get or build a kit, make a plan, and be informed for the situations on the chart you created for requirement 2b. Complete a family plan. Then meet with your counselor and report on your family meeting, discuss their responses, and share your family plan.
  3. Show how you could safely save a person from the following:
    1. Touching a live household electric wire.
    2. A structure filled with carbon monoxide
    3. Clothes on fire.
    4. Drowning using nonswimming rescues (including accidents on ice).
  4. Show three ways of attracting and communicating with rescue planes/aircraft.
  5. With another person, show a good way to transport an injured person out of a remote and/or rugged area, conserving the energy of rescuers while ensuring the well-being and protection of the injured person.
  6. Do the following:
    1. Describe the National Incident Management System (NIMS)/ and the Incident Command System (ICS)
    2. Identify the local government or community agencies that normally handle and prepare for emergency services similar to those of the NIMS
      or ICS. Explain to your counselor
      1. How the NIMS/ICS can assist a Boy Scout troop when responding in a disaster
      2. How a group of Scouts could volunteer to help in the event of these types of emergencies.
    3. Find out who is your community's emergency management director and learn what this person does to prepare for, respond to, recover from,prevent, and mitigate prevent, protect, mitigate, respond to, and recover from emergency situations in your community. Discuss this information with your counselor and apply what you discover to the chart you created for , utilizing the information you learned from requirement 2b.
  7. Do the following:
    1. Take part in an emergency service project, either a real one or a practice drill, with a Scouting unit or a community agency.
    2. Prepare a written plan for mobilizing your troop when needed to do emergency service. If there is already a plan, explain it. Tell your part in making it work.
  8. Do the following:
    1. Tell the things a group of Scouts should be prepared to do, the training they need , and the safety precautions they should take for the following emergency services:
      1. Crowd and traffic control
      2. Messenger service and communication.
      3. Collection and distribution services.
      4. Group feeding, shelter, and sanitation.
    2. Prepare a personal emergency service pack for a mobilization call. Prepare a family kit (suitcase or waterproof box) for use by your family in case an emergency evacuation is needed. Explain the needs and uses of the contents.
  9. Do ONE of the following:
    1. Using a safety checklist approved by your counselor, inspect your home for potential hazards. Explain the hazards you find and how they can be corrected.
    2. Review or develop a plan of escape for your family in case of fire in your home.
    3. Develop an accident prevention program for five family activities outside the home (such as taking a picnic or seeing a movie) that includes an analysis of possible hazards, a proposed plan to correct those hazards, and the reasons for the corrections you propose.
For Requirement 9a you may wish to use this checklist:
(The checklist is already included in the worksheets below.)
Word Format PDF Format

BSA Advancement ID#: 6
Requirements last updated in: 2018
Pamphlet Publication Number: 35888
Pamphlet Stock (SKU) Number: 615832
Pamphlet Revision Date: 2015

 
Worksheets for use in working on these requirements: Format
Word Format PDF Format
 

Blanks in this worksheets table appear when we do not have a worksheet for the badge that includes these requirements.


Page updated on: November 18, 2021



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