by Mark Hubbard
Director of the Baltimore County Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Management
On Monday June 4, County Executive Kamenetz reminded citizens of additional tools to help county emergency managers reach you with critical information in the event of an emergency. And on the Baltimore County web page for emergency preparedness , http://www.baltimorecountymd.gov/Agencies/emergency_prep/index.html, you will find information to help you prepare for community emergencies. Please take a look because in the world of today, information is power and society is on the go.
To stay in touch, first, sign up to follow our Twitter feed to get updates about evolving events and actions taken by first responders. If you live in Baltimore County and have a Verizon telephone number, we can call your home telephone to send critical time sensitive warnings. If you want these messages sent to your mobile phone, and if you have an e-mail address, you can register that number by following the instructions on the emergency preparedness web page. Finally, we always encourage you to sign up for messages and text alerts from local news and weather stations because today, news is published and distributed much faster than ever, meaning you can often follow events as they develop.
So when are you likely to get a call or e-mail directly from your emergency managers? We promise to avoid unnecessary interruptions to your day and generally only send very specific messages to very specific areas of the county. And these messages are sent only for urgent safety advice. In other words, if it is likely you already know about the event from other news sources, you probably will not get a call from us. So please join us as public safety partners in being ready for unpredictable events.
Buzz Beeler
7:42 pm on Friday, June 8, 2012
Masrk remember those days druing the snow storms at the ops center. Don't answer, they might think you know me. When you going to pull the plug?
moe green
9:47 pm on Friday, June 8, 2012
Buzz,
We're you ever a real,cop, working the road, making arrests, not sitting in. Nice warm
"ops" center?
Buzz Beeler
10:06 pm on Friday, June 8, 2012
Moe, yes I was a real cop and had a chest full of medals to prove it. How many lives did you save Moe? How medals do you have? I spent 20 years son the road
Sorry Mark for the typo.
PatchFriend
10:32 pm on Saturday, June 9, 2012
Buzz was a very well respected law enforcement officer.
Buzz Beeler
10:39 pm on Saturday, June 9, 2012
Thank you PatchFriend. I have to watch my typos. Moving too fast.
PatchFriend
1:02 am on Sunday, June 10, 2012
Buzz.......just be who you are. We all know you are saying things that need to be said.
PatchFriend
1:08 am on Sunday, June 10, 2012
One more thing.......Mark Hubbard is a great guy. He totally cares about the citizens of BalCo.......Truly a quality supervisor! Lucky to have him,,,,,,,,
Eastsider
7:40 am on Sunday, June 10, 2012
Baltimore County was very fortunately to be able to keep Assistant Chief Hubbard, almost lost him to a Fire Chiefs position in Corpus Christi Florida.
Buzz Beeler
8:13 am on Monday, June 11, 2012
Mark (got it right) is a class act and will be able to go where he wants. He was behind a lot of the FD's innovated concepts.