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State Emergency Guide

Oregon Emergency Preparedness

Official emergency management contacts, disaster risks, kit checklists, and action plans for Oregon residents.

Wildfires Earthquakes Flooding
5
FEMA Region
3
Active Risks
Severe Storms (2019)
Latest Declaration

State Emergency Management Agency

Oregon Office of Emergency Management

Sign up for your county's emergency alert system for real-time warnings. FEMA Region 5 also provides free CERT training and Ready.gov resources.

Oregon Risk Profile

Emergency Kit Checklist

Minimum 72-hour supply. For Oregon, plan for 7 days due to wildfires risk.

Water

  • 1 gallon per person per day (7-day supply)
  • Water purification tablets
  • Portable water filter (e.g., Sawyer, LifeStraw)
  • Collapsible water containers

Food

  • 7-day supply of non-perishables
  • Manual can opener
  • Portable camp stove + fuel
  • High-calorie energy bars

Communication

  • Battery-powered NOAA weather radio
  • Backup phone charger / power bank
  • Printed emergency contact list
  • Whistle + signal mirror

Oregon-Specific Extras

  • N95 respirators for smoke
  • Go-bag ready in 5 minutes
  • Phone charger in car
  • Air purifier with HEPA filter
Not sure how much to store? Use our Emergency Kit Estimator or Water Storage Calculator for exact quantities.

Make Your Emergency Plan

A physical kit is only half the equation. Every household needs a written plan that everyone knows.

1

Identify two meeting places

One near home (e.g., a neighbor's driveway) and one outside your neighborhood if you can't return home.

2

Designate an out-of-state contact

It's often easier to reach someone across the country during a local emergency. Everyone calls the same number.

3

Know your shelter-in-place option

Create defensible space around your home and have a go-bag ready to grab in 5 minutes. Sign up for local evacuation alerts — wildfires can move faster than people expect.

4

Sign up for county emergency alerts

The Oregon Office of Emergency Management coordinates alerts. Visit your county's emergency management website to register for text and email warnings.

5

Practice once a year

Do a full drill — where do you go, what do you grab, how do you communicate? Muscle memory matters in a real emergency.

Critical Documents to Protect

Photo IDs and passports
Insurance policies (home, health, auto)
Birth certificates and Social Security cards
Medical records and prescription list
Bank account and financial records
Property deeds and vehicle titles
Emergency contacts and utility account numbers
Will, power of attorney, and legal documents

Store originals in a fireproof, waterproof box. Keep digital copies in a secure cloud service. Keep photocopies in your go-bag.

Resources & Tools

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the biggest natural disaster risks in Oregon?
Oregon faces significant risks from wildfires, earthquakes, flooding. Residents should have emergency plans specifically addressing these hazards.
Which FEMA region is Oregon in?
Oregon is part of FEMA Region 5. Your regional FEMA office coordinates disaster response and provides preparedness resources specific to your area.
What emergency kit should Oregon residents have?
Every Oregon household should have at minimum a 72-hour emergency kit including water (1 gallon per person per day), non-perishable food, flashlight, batteries, first aid kit, medications, and important documents. Given Oregon's risk of wildfires, consider adding n95 respirators for smoke.
What is Oregon's emergency management agency?
The Oregon Office of Emergency Management is the state agency responsible for coordinating emergency preparedness and disaster response in Oregon.
Has Oregon had recent FEMA disaster declarations?
Yes. Recent FEMA disaster declarations in Oregon include Severe Storms (2019) and Flood (2018). These declarations unlocked federal assistance for affected residents.