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Alberta RCMP Urges Residents to Build Summer Emergency Plans
Community Safety Alert for Alberta
The Alberta RCMP is advising all residents to put a clear household emergency plan in place as the province heads into the summer season, when floods and wildfires become more likely. While there is no single specific incident behind this notice, police are stressing that Albertans should be ready to act quickly if a natural disaster affects their area.
This advisory, issued on April 21, 2026, focuses on practical steps families can take now to reduce risk and avoid last‑minute confusion during an evacuation or shelter-in-place situation. The RCMP emphasizes that preparation before an emergency is critical to protecting lives, especially in communities that have seen repeat seasonal hazards across Alberta.
Official Preparedness Guidance from Alberta RCMP
Based on the official information, the Alberta RCMP recommends that every household create or update a written emergency plan and ensure all family members understand it. Key elements include:
- Household needs assessment: Plan around the specific needs of everyone in your home, including older adults, people with mobility or medical needs, children, and any pets or service animals.
- Communication plan: Decide how family members will reach each other if a disaster occurs while you are in different locations. Make sure everyone has each other’s phone numbers and key contacts saved (on their phones and written down).
- Evacuation plan: Identify the fastest and safest ways to evacuate your home and neighbourhood. Include primary and backup routes, as well as agreed-upon meeting or muster points outside the area in case you are separated.
- Shelter-in-place readiness: If you are unable to leave safely, be prepared to live at home independently for at least 72 hours (three days). That means having sufficient food, safe drinking water, and a secondary power source if possible.
- Emergency kit (grab-and-go bag): Assemble a ready-to-carry kit that can be taken with you at a moment’s notice. The RCMP highlights that this bag should include:
- Water and non-perishable food
- Prescription and essential medications
- Personal hygiene items
- Copies of important documents (ID, insurance, medical information)
- A complete first-aid kit
- A manual can opener
- Phone charger and power bank
- Flashlight and extra batteries
- Emergency blanket
- Extra cash
- Season-appropriate clothing
- Critical equipment locations: Ensure everyone in the household knows where to find the emergency kit, fire extinguishers, and the main shutoffs for water, electricity, and gas.
- Work, school, and community plans: Learn the emergency procedures used at your workplace, your children’s schools, and in your municipality so you understand what will happen if a disaster occurs while you are away from home.
- Follow official directions: In a flood, wildfire, or other disaster, follow instructions from local police and first responders for evacuation routes. Do not create your own shortcuts, as they may lead into blocked or dangerous areas.
- Out-of-town contact or destination: If you have the ability, identify a friend or relative in another community—far enough away that they are unlikely to be affected by the same event—where your family could stay if you are ordered to evacuate.
The RCMP also stresses the difference between official emergency messages:
- Evacuation alert: Indicates a potential or current threat. You should be prepared to leave on short notice—pack your emergency kit, refuel your vehicle, and be ready.
- Evacuation order: This is mandatory. You must leave the specified area immediately for your own safety and to assist emergency responders.
Residents can stay connected with ongoing preparedness guidance by following @RCMPinAlberta on Facebook, @RCMPAlberta on X, and RCMP-GRC Alberta on YouTube.
CrimeCanada.ca Safety Perspective
At CrimeCanada.ca, we track risk factors that affect community safety across the province, from criminal activity to natural hazards that strain policing and emergency resources. Seasonal disasters like floods and wildfires can quickly impact public safety statistics, emergency response times, and overall vulnerability in communities across Alberta. Having a household emergency plan and a grab-and-go kit reduces pressure on first responders and can save lives, especially in smaller or rural areas such as Beaver County and similar Alberta municipalities that may be closer to wildfire or flood zones. We strongly encourage residents to practice their plans regularly so every family member—children included—knows what to do before an alert or order is issued.
Official Source & Community Safety
This safety alert is based on an official release from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). CrimeCanada.ca aggregates and analyzes this data to keep the alberta community informed, aware, and safe. We are an independent safety data aggregator and not the original creators of the underlying incident report.
Read the full official release here: RCMP Official Statement.

