| name | pikud-haoref-safety-protocols |
| description | Actionable safety protocols per Home Front Command alert type in Israel. Use when a user asks what to do during a specific type of emergency alert (missiles, hostile aircraft, earthquake, tsunami, hazardous materials, terrorist infiltration), needs regional response time guidance, wants safety instructions for special populations (elderly, disabled, children), or is a new immigrant learning Israeli emergency procedures. Provides step-by-step actions for each alert category, post-alert procedures, and when it is safe to leave the shelter. Helps users respond correctly during emergencies, which can be the difference between life and injury. Do NOT use for building alert API integrations (use pikud-haoref-alerts), for finding or preparing shelters (use israeli-shelter-guide), or for non-Israeli emergency response procedures. |
| license | MIT |
| compatibility | Knowledge-based skill. No tools, APIs, or network access required. Works on any agent that supports SKILL.md format. |
Pikud HaOref Safety Protocols
Step-by-step safety instructions for every type of Home Front Command alert in Israel.
Alert Types and Response Protocols
Category 1: Missiles and Rockets (ירי רקטות וטילים)
The most common alert type. Triggered by incoming rocket or missile fire.
Immediate actions (within your time-to-shelter window):
- Enter the nearest protected space (mamad, mamak, miklat, or stairwell)
- Close the blast door and window shutter completely
- Sit on the floor against an inner wall, below window height
- Cover your head with your hands
- If you have children, hold them close and cover their heads
If caught outdoors:
- Lie face down on the ground
- Cover your head with both hands
- Move away from buildings (falling debris) and vehicles (fuel/explosion risk)
- If near a concrete bus stop shelter, enter and crouch low
If in a vehicle:
- Pull over to the side of the road safely
- Exit the vehicle and move at least 10 meters away
- Lie face down, cover your head
- If you cannot safely exit (highway, tunnel), bend below the window line
Stay in shelter:
- For short-range fire (Gaza envelope, Lebanon border historical posture): remain at minimum 10 minutes after the last sound of explosion or impact
- For ballistic / Iran / Houthi / long-range threats: do NOT exit on a 10-minute timer. Wait for an explicit Cell Broadcast or HFC app release message; the 10-minute folklore was kept on the in-app screen by mistake during the Iran missile war and is dangerous as a default in that scenario
- Wait for the official release message (category 13 alert, Cell Broadcast lock-screen polygon, HFC app, radio broadcast)
- Do not exit based on silence alone. Debris from interceptors can fall minutes after the boom you hear, and secondary impacts can occur
Category 2: Hostile Aircraft Intrusion (חדירת כלי טיס עוין)
Triggered by unauthorized aircraft (drones, UAVs, manned aircraft) entering Israeli airspace.
Immediate actions:
- Enter the nearest protected space immediately
- Close all doors and windows
- Stay away from windows and exterior walls
- Remain in the protected space until officially cleared
Key difference from missiles: Aircraft intrusions may involve slower-moving threats (drones) that can carry explosives or surveillance. The threat may persist longer than a missile attack.
Stay in shelter: Until official all-clear. This can take longer than missile alerts as air defense operations may be ongoing.
Category 3: Earthquake (רעידת אדמה)
Israel sits on the Dead Sea Transform fault. Earthquakes are a real risk.
Priority order (Home Front Command):
- If you can reach open ground within a few seconds, exit the building to an open area
- If you cannot exit in seconds, enter the mamad or protected space but keep the door and windows OPEN so they cannot jam shut, or go to an internal stairwell and continue down and out
- If you can do none of the above, use Drop-Cover-Hold where you are
Drop, Cover, Hold On:
- DROP to your hands and knees
- COVER under a sturdy desk or table, protect your head and neck
- HOLD ON to the table/desk until the shaking stops
If no table available:
- Move to an interior wall, away from windows, mirrors, and heavy furniture
- Crouch and protect your head with your arms
If outdoors:
- Move to an open area away from buildings, power lines, and trees
- Drop to the ground and cover your head
If in a vehicle:
- Pull over away from buildings, bridges, and overpasses
- Stay inside the vehicle with seatbelt fastened until shaking stops
IMPORTANT: earthquake response differs from a missile alert. Do not run deep into a building to reach a sealed mamad and shut yourself in. If you do use the mamad as a fallback, keep its door and windows OPEN so a structural shift cannot trap you behind the blast door. The priority is open ground first, then mamad-with-door-open or the stairwell, then Drop-Cover-Hold. (This is the opposite of a missile alert, where you close the blast door.)
After the earthquake:
- Expect aftershocks. They can occur minutes to days later
- Check for gas leaks (smell, hissing sounds). If detected, open windows, leave building, call 102 (fire department)
- Check for structural damage. If walls are cracked or the building shifted, evacuate
- Do not use elevators
- Listen to official channels (radio, Home Front Command app) for tsunami warnings
Category 4: Tsunami (צונאמי)
Can follow an earthquake. Affects Mediterranean and Red Sea coastal areas.
Warning signs (even without an official alert):
- Strong earthquake felt near the coast
- Unusual sea withdrawal (water receding rapidly)
- Loud roaring sound from the ocean
Immediate actions (Home Front Command):
- Move inland and to higher ground immediately, at least 1 km from the shore (further is better)
- If you are in a building of 3 floors or fewer, leave it and move inland
- If you cannot move inland in time, go to the 4th floor or higher of a sturdy nearby building
- Stay away from beaches, harbors, and river mouths
- Do not return to the shore for about 12 hours
Stay safe: Remain inland or at height until official all-clear. Tsunamis come in waves, the first wave is often not the largest.
Category 5: Radiological Event (אירוע רדיולוגי)
Nuclear or radiological incident (dirty bomb, nuclear facility accident).
Immediate actions:
- Enter the nearest building immediately
- Close all windows, doors, and ventilation systems (AC, fans)
- If your mamad has an NBC filtration system, activate it
- Seal gaps around doors and windows with wet towels or tape
- Remove outer clothing if you were outdoors during the event
Decontamination (if exposed):
- Remove and bag outer clothing
- Shower thoroughly with soap and water (do NOT scrub skin hard)
- Do not eat food that was outdoors during the event
- Do not drink tap water until cleared by authorities
Stay inside: Follow official instructions. Evacuation may be ordered for specific zones.
Category 6: Hazardous Materials (חומרים מסוכנים)
Chemical spill, industrial accident, or deliberate chemical attack.
Immediate actions:
- Enter a building and go to the highest floor possible (many chemicals are heavier than air and settle low)
- Close all windows, doors, and ventilation systems
- Seal gaps with wet towels
- If your mamad has NBC filtration, activate it
- If outdoors and exposed: move uphill and upwind from the source
If you feel symptoms (dizziness, difficulty breathing, burning eyes):
- Move to fresh air immediately
- Remove contaminated clothing
- Rinse eyes with clean water for 15 minutes
- Call Magen David Adom: 101
Stay inside: Until hazmat teams clear the area. Follow official decontamination instructions if issued.
Category 7: Terrorist Infiltration (חדירת מחבלים)
Armed attackers entering a community or area.
Immediate actions:
- Enter the nearest building
- Lock all doors and windows
- Move to an interior room away from entrances and windows
- Turn off lights
- Silence phones (vibrate mode, turn off sounds)
- Stay quiet and out of sight
- Do NOT open the door for anyone except identified security forces
If outdoors:
- Run away from the threat if you can do so safely
- If you cannot run, find cover (solid wall, concrete barrier)
- As a last resort, hide (under vehicles, in bushes, behind solid objects)
Call for help:
- Police: 100
- If you see the attackers and can safely call: provide location, number of attackers, weapons observed, direction of movement
Stay locked down: Until security forces announce the area is clear. Infiltration events can last hours.
Category 13: Event Concluded (האירוע הסתיים)
Note on numbering: Home Front Command publishes alerts by named type, not numbered categories. The category numbers used here (1-7, 13, 14) are the codes from the Tzofar / Tzevaadom alert feed that community apps (oref_alert, RedAlert) consume. The meanings are accurate to that feed; treat the numbers as app-level codes, not official HFC labels.
This is the official all-clear signal from the Home Front Command. When you receive a category 13 alert (event concluded) for your area:
- You may leave the protected space
- Resume normal activity
- Check your surroundings for damage before moving freely
If you do NOT receive a category 13:
- For short-range fire: stay in the shelter for at least 10 minutes after the last impact/explosion. For ballistic / Iran / Houthi / long-range threats: stay until you receive an explicit Cell Broadcast / HFC app release message; do NOT exit on a 10-minute timer alone
- Monitor the Home Front Command app or radio for updates
- Call 104 (English) or 1207 (Hebrew) if unsure
Category 14: Pre-Alert Warning (התרעה מוקדמת)
A heads-up that alerts are expected in your area in the coming minutes. This gives you extra preparation time.
Actions:
- Move toward your shelter now (don't wait for the actual siren)
- Ensure all household members are accounted for
- Bring supplies (phone, water, medications)
- Wait for the actual alert or for the situation to pass (typically within 20 minutes)
Special Populations
Children
- Practice shelter routines regularly so they become automatic
- Explain the siren in age-appropriate terms: "the siren means we go to our safe room"
- Keep comfort items in the shelter (stuffed animal, blanket)
- For very young children: carry them to the shelter. Do not send them alone
- After the alert: check for emotional distress. Children may need reassurance
Elderly
- If mobility is limited and you cannot reach the shelter in time, use the nearest interior room
- Keep medications, glasses, hearing aids, and a phone within reach at all times
- Inform neighbors and building committee of your situation
- Register with Home Front Command (call 104) for priority assistance
People with Disabilities
- Wheelchair users: if the shelter is not accessible, use the safest accessible interior space
- Hearing-impaired: ensure the Home Front Command app is installed with vibration/visual alerts enabled
- Visually impaired: practice the route to shelter so it becomes muscle memory. Keep the path clear of obstacles
- Service animals: permitted in all shelters
Pregnant Women
- Prioritize reaching the shelter. The mamad is safe for pregnant women
- Bring a cushion or pillow for comfort during extended stays
- Keep prenatal medications in the shelter supply kit
- If experiencing contractions during an alert, call Magen David Adom (101) from the shelter
Gotchas
-
Earthquake vs missile protocol confusion: Earthquake response differs from a missile alert. The priority is open ground first, then (if you cannot exit in seconds) the mamad or stairwell, then Drop-Cover-Hold. The critical difference from a missile alert: during an earthquake keep the safe-room door and windows OPEN so a structural shift cannot trap you, whereas during a missile alert you close the blast door. Do NOT tell someone to seal themselves into a closed mamad during an earthquake, and do NOT tell them to avoid the mamad entirely (it is a valid fallback with the door open).
-
"10 minutes" applies only to short-range fire and is NOT a release signal in the Iran/Houthi scenario. The 10-minute shelter time after the last impact is the historical minimum for Gaza/Lebanon short-range posture. For ballistic / Iran / Houthi / long-range threats it does NOT apply: residents must remain in the protected space until an explicit Cell Broadcast or HFC app release arrives. The Mako N12 / Ynet "Digital" coverage in 2026 Q1 confirmed the 10-minute screen text in the HFC app was carried over by mistake from the short-range posture and that the actual rule for ballistic scenarios is "stay until explicit release". Agents must NEVER tell a user "you can leave after 10 minutes" without verifying threat type and release channel.
-
Chemical alerts go UP, not down: For hazardous materials (category 6), the safe direction is UP (higher floors). Many chemicals are heavier than air. This is opposite to the instinct to seek underground shelters. An agent recommending a miklat (underground shelter) during a chemical event could put users in greater danger.
-
Terrorist infiltration is not a shelter event: Category 7 (terrorist infiltration) requires lockdown, not shelter entry. The protocol is lock-hide-silence, not run-to-mamad. Opening a mamad door during an infiltration event could expose residents.
-
Pre-alert does not mean sirens are imminent: Category 14 is a heads-up, not a siren. Users should prepare but should not panic. If no actual alert follows within ~20 minutes, the pre-alert can be considered expired.
Bundled Resources
See the references/ directory for:
references/alert-categories-quick-reference.md -- one-page summary of all alert types
references/special-populations-guide.md -- detailed guidance for vulnerable populations
Reference Links
Troubleshooting
| Situation | Action |
|---|
| Siren sounds but no app alert | Treat as real. Enter shelter immediately. The app may have a slight delay |
| App alert but no siren | Still take shelter. Sirens may not be audible indoors or in noisy areas |
| Don't know which alert type | Enter shelter and check the Home Front Command app for details. Default to missile protocol |
| Power is out | Use a battery radio (Galei Zahal / Army Radio: 102.3 FM in the north, 104 FM in the center and south, 96.6 FM in the Jerusalem area; or Reshet Bet 95.5 FM). The siren system is independent of power |
| No internet connection | The siren system and Cell Broadcast lock-screen alerts work without internet. If you have a radio (Galei Zahal: 102.3 FM north, 104 FM center/south, 96.6 FM Jerusalem), use it. For short-range fire the 10-minute-after-last-impact minimum applies; for ballistic / long-range threats stay put until an explicit Cell Broadcast or HFC app release arrives |
| Multiple alert types simultaneously | Follow the most restrictive protocol. Missile + chemical = shelter + seal room |
| Alert during Shabbat (no phone) | Sirens are audible. Follow the protocol for your location. Pikuach nefesh (saving life) overrides Shabbat observance |