Skip to content

Fortune Favors the Prepared

Semper Paratus, Semper Gumby

Menu
  • The Continuity Chronicles
  • Daily Threat Reports
        • DAILY THREAT REPORT
        • DAILY THREAT REPORT – LITE
        • DAILY PREPAREDNESS BRIEF
        • Analytical Standards and Tradecraft
        • Acronym & Abbreviations Glossary
        • DTR Source Registry
        • COMMS WATCH
        • FLASH & SPECIAL REPORTS
        • Area-Specific Assessment Report
        • SOFT TARGET SECURITY BRIEF
        • THE HOUSEHOLD BRIEF
        • FINANCE SECTOR
        • HEALTHCARE SECTOR
        • TRANSPORTATION & LOGISTICS SECTOR
        • Strategic Intelligence Supplement
        • AI, DATA CENTER & INFRASTRUCTURE REPORT
        • CONSTRUCTION & MANUFACTURING SECTOR
  • WATCH DESK
  • About
        • The Why
        • Vision and Mission
        • Services
          • Business Resiliency
        • Testimonials
        • Insider
        • Friends
          • Patriot Volunteer Examiner (VE) Team
          • Angery American
          • Signal Stuff
          • Forward Observer
  • Communications
        • Stump Knocker
          • SOI
          • STUMP KNOCKER DMR UPDATES
          • MMDVM Hotspot
        • Preparedness Communications
          • What Radio Should I Get for Preparedness?
            • What Radio to Buy?
              • What Radio to Buy? – video
              • Ham Radio on a Budget
              • Live – What Radio to Buy?
              • Portable Radio Kit
              • Mobile Communications
          • Emergency Communications Principles
          • Communications Options
          • Starter Radio Paths by Preparedness Scenario
          • How Communications Fail
          • HF Communications
            • SHTF HF Communications
            • Simple Antenna Builds for HF – video
            • NVIS in Amateur Radio
        • Amateur (HAM) Radio
          • Why Do I Need a Ham License?
            • How to Obtain Your Amateur Radio License
              • Amateur Radio Learning Resources
              • Finding a Ham Exam
                • HAM Exam Accommodation
              • Getting Into Ham Radio – Video
            • Are You Expired?
            • Why You Should Upgrade to a General Ham License
          • HAM Simplex Frequency Card
          • Analog versus Digital
          • Analog vs Digital Voice: A Preparedness-Focused Comparison
          • CTCSS and DCS
          • Programming Radios with Software
          • ARES, RACES, ACS and AUXCOMM
          • Ham Radio Beyond Line-of-Sight
            • Linked Analog Repeaters
            • EchoLink and IRLP
            • AllStarLink
            • Yaesu System Fusion & WIRES-X
            • D-STAR
            • Digital Mobile Radio (DMR)
            • P25 in Amateur Radio
            • NXDN in Amateur Radio
            • Amateur Radio Satellites (AMSAT)
            • The 60-Meter Band (5 MHz)
          • Meshtastic
          • HAM VoIP
        • Personal Radio Services
          • FCC Rules for Personal Radio Services
          • Family Radio Service (FRS)
          • General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS)
            • GMRS Repeaters
            • Getting a GMRS License
            • FRS / GMRS / MURS Frequency Card
          • Multi-Use Radio Service (MURS)
          • Citizen Band (CB) Radio
            • CB Frequency Card
        • Other Radio Services
          • Communications Continuity Programs and Capabilities
          • Marine Communications
        • Cell Sites and Their Services
          • When Cell Service Fails
          • Radio over LTE and Rapid Radios
            • LTE Radio Comparison
        • Satellite Communications
          • America’s Secret Eyes
          • The Commercial Eye
          • Seeing Through Everything (SAR)
            • Remote Area Emergency Communication Devices
            • Which Beacon Should You Carry?
          • Personal Satellite Communications
        • Wired Communications
          • MAG Phone System
          • TA-312/PT Field Telephone and SB-22/PT Switchboard
          • Understanding Telephone Wiring
          • The AT&T Long Lines Program
        • Communications Planning
          • Communications Plan Annex
            • Communications P.A.C.E.
            • Finding Information for Your Communications Plan
            • Area-Specific Assessment Report
          • Automatic Link Establishment (ALE)
          • Understanding Communications Resiliency
        • Communications Resiliency Programs
          • ARES, RACES and ACS
          • Auxiliary Communications (AUXCOMM)
          • Military Auxiliary Radio System (MARS)
          • U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary Communications
          • Civil Air Patrol Communications
          • The 60-Meter Band (5 MHz)
            • Understanding the 60-Meter Band
        • Government Communications Continuity Programs
          • Government Emergency Telecommunications Service (GETS) and Wireless Priority Service (WPS)
          • National Warning System (NAWAS)
          • National Interoperable Frequencies
          • The FEMA National Net (FNARS)
          • National Emergency Communications Network (NECN)
          • The SHARES Program
          • State Emergency Capability Using Radio Effectively (Operation SECURE)
          • The High Frequency Global Communications System (HFGCS)
          • Satellite Mutual Aid Radio Talkgroup (SMART)
          • The AT&T Long Lines Program
        • Communications & Emissions Discipline
          • Communications Security (COMSEC)
            • Book Cipher
            • One Time Pads (OTP)
              • Decrypting One Time Pad Message
              • One Time Pads (OTP) Live Video
              • One Time Pad Training
          • Cryptographic Security (CRYPTOSEC)
          • Transmission Security (TRANSEC)
          • Communications Transmission Discipline (TRANSDISC)
          • Emissions Control (EMCON)
          • Communications & Emissions Training Framework
        • DMR Programming
          • DMR Programming – Talk Groups
          • DMR Programming - Roaming
          • MMDVM and Yaesu System Fusion (YSF)
          • Encryption in DMR Radios
        • Digital Mobile Radio (DMR) Networks
          • WR3IRS Interstate DMR Network
            • South Central PA (SC PA)
            • North East PA (NE PA)
            • Washington-Baltimore (W-B)
            • West Central Florida (WCF)
          • Florida Digital Amateur Radio Network (F-DARN)
          • Southeast Florida DMR Repeater Network W2GGI
          • Virginia DMR (DMRVA)
          • NC PRN DMR Network
          • SC Hospital Emergency Amateur Radio Team (SCHEART)
          • HEARS – Hospital Emergency Amateur Radio System
          • New England Digital Emergency Communications Network (NEDECN)
        • Baofeng/BTECH Radios Quick Guide
          • Manually Programming a Baofeng Radio – Video
          • A User’s User Manual for Baofeng Radios
        • MESSAGES & REPORTS
          • Phonetics
          • Procedure Words (Prowords)
          • Date Time Group (DTG)
          • NTS Radiogram Form
            • ARL Numbered Radiograms
          • SALUTE, SPOT, and SALT Reports
          • ACE/LACE Reports
          • GOTWA Report
          • CASREP (Casualty Report) Format
          • MEDEVAC Request Report
          • Formatted Messages (downloads)
        • Communications Knowledge Library
          • Communications Resiliency
          • Radio Etiquette, Jargon, and Best Practices
          • AmRRON RESOURCES & REFERENCES
          • Anytone Programmable Keys
          • Phonetics
          • Amateur Radio Colorado
            • Colorado Linked Repeater Systems
        • COMMUNICATIONS REFERENCES
  • Planning
        • Family Emergency Plan – The Basics
          • Family Emergency Plan
            • Area-Specific Assessment Report
          • Why Every Family Needs an Emergency Plan
        • Family Contingency Binder
          • Family Contingency Binder MindMap
        • Triggers
          • Preparedness Conditions – PREP-CON
            • Preparedness Conditions (PREP-CON) MindMap
          • Space Weather
        • Family Emergency Plan Workbook
          • Family Emergency Plan Workbook - owner resources
            • Area-Specific Assessment Report
            • Family Emergency Planning Form
            • Communications Plan
              • P.A.C.E.
            • Emergency Evacuation
            • Emergency Food Supplies
            • Family Contingency Binder
            • Message Drops
            • Get Home Bag
            • Bug Out Bag & Bins
            • Miscellaneous
        • Household Recovery Workbook
          • Disaster Debris — What to Do at the Curb
        • Next of Kin Workbook
        • METT-TC: Decision Discipline
          • METT-TC - tactical planning
        • Planning Your Preps
          • Charity in Planning
        • Mutual Assistance Group
          • Mutual Assistance Groups (MAGs): Skills, Vetting, and Building Real Resilience
          • Mutual Assistance Group (MAG): Recruitment Code of Conduct
          • MAG: Private Vetting & Intake Process
          • Compartmentalization in Mutual Assistance Groups (MAGs)
          • Resiliency Index
          • Continuity of Government & Application to MAGs
  • Threat Assessment
        • Personal Preparedness Assessment Workbook
          • Personal Preparedness Assessment Report
          • Personal Preparedness Assessment Workbook - owner resources
        • Readiness Conditions for Preparedness
          • PREP-CON - Preparedness Conditions
          • COMCON – Communications Readiness Condition
          • WX-CON Weather Conditions
          • SWX-CON Space Weather Condition
          • CONCON – Civilian Continuity Conditions
        • Readiness Conditions – Hierarchy and Relationships
          • LERTCON – Alert Condition
          • DEFCON – Defense Readiness Condition
          • COGCON - Continuity of Government
          • INFOCON – Information Operations Condition
          • FPCON – Force Protection Condition
          • EMERCON – Emergency Condition
          • CYBERCON – Cyber Readiness Conditions
          • CPCON – Cyberspace Protection Condition
          • WATCHCON – Watch Condition
          • SIPRNet – Secret Internet Protocol Router Network
          • REDCON – Readiness Condition
          • NC3CON – Nuclear Command, Control, and Communications
        • Readiness Conditions in The Conspiracy Chronicles
          • CERCON – Cerberus Readiness Condition
          • COMCON – Communications Readiness Condition
          • C-OPS – CERBERUS Operational Status Conditions
          • CONCON – Civilian Continuity Conditions
        • Being Prepared for Civil Unrest
          • Civil Unrest – Area Intelligence
          • Civil Unrest – Be Prepared
          • Civil Unrest – Defense
          • Civil Unrest – Defense (part 2)
        • Staying Informed Before, During and After Emergencies
          • Weather Awareness
            • Weather Event Codes
            • Weather Radio Comparison
        • Cascade Analysis & Infrastructure
          • Cascade Effects
          • Community Lifelines
          • Area Intelligence
          • Area-Specific Assessment Report
          • National Power Grid
  • Intelligence
        • ANALYSIS, TRADECRAFT & REPORTING
          • Understanding Intelligence Analysis Tools
            • Understanding Analysis of Competing Hypotheses (ACH)
              • ANALYSIS OF COMPETING HYPOTHESES (ACH) - TRAINING CURRICULUM
            • Understanding MDCOA
            • Understanding OAKOC
        • Operations Security (OPSEC)
          • OPSEC for Teens
          • OPSEC for Kids
          • The Gray Man
          • OPSEC: Don't Become the Target
          • Counterintelligence Tradecraft for the Prepared
        • Community Intelligence
          • Area Intelligence – Now!
            • Area-Specific Assessment Report
          • Community SITREP
          • Radio Traffic Situational Analysis During Emergencies
            • Radio Traffic Situational Analysis (RTSA) -TRAINING CURRICULUM
          • SALUTE, SPOT, and SALT Reports
        • ELECTRONIC THREAT & SURVEILLANCE
          • Staying Informed Before, During and After Emergencies
          • Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS)
          • Communications Continuity Programs and Capabilities
          • Short Wave Scanning
          • America’s Secret Eyes
          • The Five Eyes Satellite Intelligence Network
          • Seeing Through Everything (SAR)
            • Which Beacon Should You Carry?
          • Wireless Recon Devices
        • INTELLIGENCE DISCIPLINES
          • Communications Intelligence (COMINT)
          • Electronic Intelligence (ELINT)
          • Tactical Electronic Intelligence (TACELINT)
          • Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) – the basics (2020)
          • Signals Intelligence – Information Gathering Basics (2022)
          • Signals Intelligence (SIGINT)
          • Technical & Infrastructure Intelligence (TECHINT)
          • Electronic Counter-Surveillance
          • Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT)
            • How to Conduct a Daily Threat Analysis Using OSINT
          • Measurement and Signature Intelligence (MASINT)
          • Electronic Surveillance (ES)
          • Overhead Imagery & Geospatial Intelligence (IMINT / GEOINT)
        • INTELLIGENCE REFERENCES
  • Medical
        • Medical Training
          • Patient Assessment & Casualty Management
            • MARCH-PAWS Rapid Assessment
              • MARCH-PAWS TRAINING CURRICULUM
            • DCAP-BTLS – Secondary Trauma Assessment
            • SAMPLE + OPQRST Secondary Assessment
              • Medical History as a Preparedness Skill
                • Medical History as a Preparedness Skill – TRAINING CURRICULUM
            • START Triage
            • MEDEVAC Request Report
            • Patient Assessment – Documentation
              • Patient Care Report Forms
              • CASREP (Casualty Report) Format
        • Medical Kits
          • Individual First Aid Kit (IFAK)
          • BooBoo and IFAK Kits Video
          • BooBoo & IFAK Kit Mind Map
          • Large Kit - video
        • Medical Myths
          • Medical Myths – Tampons
          • Medical Myths – Ingested Poisoning
        • MEDICAL REFERENCES
  • Transportation
    • Transportation Plan B
    • Improvised Transportation
    • Preparedness For Winter Travel
  • Animals
    • Preparedness for Pets
  • Food
        • Why You Should Start a Food Storage Plan
        • Food Storage Quick Start
        • Buying in Bulk
        • Inventory Tracking
        • FOOD PRESERVATION RESOURCES
  • Water
  • Power
        • Power Grid
        • UPS
  • Bags etc.
        • Bug Out versus Get Home Bags
        • Get Home Bag – Contents
          • Get Home Bag – video
          • Get Home and Bug Out Bags - video from live 2-10
  • Navigation & Signalling
        • Sketched Strip Map
        • Emergency Signaling
        • Covert Signals
        • The Constellations Above You
        • Which Emergency Beacon Should You Carry?
  • References
        • PLANNING & OPERATIONS
        • SECURITY OPERATIONS
        • INTELLIGENCE
        • CRYPTOLOGY
        • COMMUNICATIONS
        • REPORTING FORMATS
        • GENERAL/MISC
        • MEDICAL
        • FOOD PRESERVATION
        • CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
        • SURVIVAL MANUALS
        • OPSEC
        • COUNTER INSURGENCY & CIVIL DISTURBANCE
        • EMP / CME
        • Training
          • Training Videos
          • One Time Pad (OTP) Exercises
            • 45662
            • 222135ZDEC22
  • Blog
    • Boomer
      • Day 1 – The Journey Home
      • Day 2 – First Day in the New Home
      • Day 3 – More Training
      • Day 4 – Dad Goes Back to Work
      • Day 5 – A Day at Home with More Training with Dad (Boomer’s version)
      • Day 6 – More Training with Dad at Home
      • Day 7 – Dad Goes Back to Work, Boring Day
    • Mountain Readiness Fallout Workshops
    • Mapping DMR Repeaters
    • COMMUNICATIONS RESILIENCY
    • Getting The Message Through
    • What are you preparing for?
    • Never Let an Opportunity Go To Waste
    • Cascade Effects and the Perfect Storm
    • DO NOT REPLY
    • Space Weather Warning
    • Good, and Sad, News
    • Necessity vs. Luxury
    • Don’t Put off Until Tomorrow
    • No Plan Survives First Contact
    • Threat and Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment (THIRA)
    • Live – What Radio to Buy?
    • Big Daddy Unlimited Affiliate
    • Food – Tue 16th 7pm MST
    • Live from 2021-2-3
    • Live 2021-01-26
    • FLASH SALE
    • Live 2021-01-11
    • What Is Freedom?
    • Preparedness for Pets
    • What If The Lights Go Out?
    • Hoarding or Prepping?
    • Why Do I Need a Ham License?
    • How Bad is the SolarWinds Orion Issue?
    • How To Begin Prepping
    • Members Only Live Videos
    • Live 11/24
    • Ham Radio VoIP Phone
    • Training Calendar
    • A Chat (with some whisky)
    • Blog 2020 11 02
    • Live with Charlie Hogwood
    • EARTH EX 2020
    • A Live with Angery American
    • Have You Woken Up Yet?
    • BUG OUT READY
    • The Gray Man
    • Area Intelligence – Now!
    • Being Prepared for Civil Unrest
    • It Depends
    • The Art of Being Prepared – The New Prepper
    • Get Home versus Bug Out Bags
    • Why You Need an IFAK AND Training
  • Shop
  • Contact
    • Mailing List
  • Media and Press
Menu

Government Emergency Telecommunications Service (GETS) and Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

Priority Access, Not Infrastructure Independence

Executive Summary

During disasters, major incidents, and national emergencies, communications systems rarely fail all at once. More often, they become congested. Networks may still be technically operational, but demand overwhelms capacity, preventing critical calls from completing.

The Government Emergency Telecommunications Service (GETS) and Wireless Priority Service (WPS) exist to address this specific problem by providing priority access on existing landline and cellular networks for authorized personnel performing mission-essential functions.

It is critical to understand what these programs do—and do not—provide. GETS and WPS increase the likelihood that calls will complete on functioning terrestrial networks, but they do not operate independently of infrastructure. They are an important layer in a communications resilience strategy, but they must be paired with infrastructure-independent systems to fully address continuity risks.


What Are GETS and WPS?

GETS and WPS are federally managed priority telecommunications programs administered by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA).

They are designed to ensure that authorized users can complete voice calls during periods of:

  • Network congestion
  • High call volume
  • Partial infrastructure degradation

These programs do not create separate networks. Instead, they work by signaling priority to participating telecommunications carriers, allowing authorized calls to move ahead of non-priority traffic when network capacity is constrained Communications Continuity Progr….


Government Emergency Telecommunications Service (GETS)

What GETS Does

GETS provides priority access on landline and wireline telephone networks, including:

  • Traditional landlines
  • Certain VoIP services supported by participating carriers

Authorized users receive a GETS card and use a dedicated access number with a personal identification number (PIN) to invoke priority routing.

When invoked:

  • Calls receive priority treatment in network switching
  • Calls are more likely to complete during congestion
  • Priority applies only for the duration of the call attempt

What GETS Does Not Do

GETS:

  • Does not function if the underlying telephone network is down
  • Does not bypass physical damage to switching centers or fiber
  • Does not provide group or one-to-many communications
  • Does not operate independently of power or carrier infrastructure

GETS is best understood as a traffic-management tool, not a survivable communications system.


Wireless Priority Service (WPS)

What WPS Does

WPS extends priority access to cellular voice calls on participating wireless carrier networks.

Authorized users:

  • Dial *272 before placing a call
  • Receive priority treatment for call setup during congestion
  • Experience improved call-completion probability during emergencies

WPS applies only to voice calls. It does not prioritize:

  • Text messages
  • Data sessions
  • Internet access
  • Push-to-talk or messaging applications

Priority Levels

WPS supports multiple priority levels based on:

  • Role
  • Mission essentiality
  • Continuity responsibilities

Priority levels are assigned administratively through organizational points of contact in accordance with CISA guidance Communications Continuity Progr….

What WPS Does Not Do

WPS:

  • Does not work if cellular sites are offline
  • Does not restore coverage where towers are damaged
  • Does not provide interoperability or group communications
  • Does not bypass power or backhaul failures

Like GETS, WPS improves access only when the network still exists.


GETS and WPS in a Communications Resilience Stack

GETS and WPS are often misunderstood as “backup communications.” In reality, they are priority overlays on existing systems.

CapabilityGETSWPS
Network typeLandline / wirelineCellular
Infrastructure dependentYesYes
Improves call completionYesYes
Works during congestionYesYes
Works during outagesNoNo
One-to-many communicationsNoNo
Infrastructure-independentNoNo

They are most effective:

  • Early in an incident
  • During surge conditions
  • When infrastructure is stressed but not destroyed

They are least effective during:

  • Widespread power failure
  • Switching-center or fiber outages
  • Long-duration regional disasters

Who Should Have a GETS Card and Be Enrolled in WPS

GETS and WPS are not intended for universal distribution. They are designed for personnel whose inability to communicate would directly impact life safety, operations, continuity, or critical infrastructure protection.

Recommended Roles and Functions

Executive and Policy Leadership

  • Agency heads and deputies
  • Elected officials with emergency authorities
  • Continuity of Government / Continuity of Operations leadership

Emergency Management and Command

  • Emergency Operations Center (EOC) directors and section chiefs
  • Incident Commanders and Unified Command staff
  • Duty officers and watch commanders

Public Safety and Response Leadership

  • Law enforcement command staff
  • Fire and EMS leadership
  • Public safety communications center leadership

Critical Infrastructure and Lifeline Sectors

  • Electric, water, wastewater, and gas utility leadership
  • Transportation system operations leadership
  • Healthcare system executives and emergency coordinators
  • Telecommunications and network operations leadership

Continuity and Emergency Communications

  • Communications unit leaders
  • Continuity planners and coordinators
  • Primary and alternate emergency coordination points of contact

Role-Based Assignment Matters

GETS and WPS should be assigned based on function, not rank alone. Personnel who must coordinate resources, authorize actions, or communicate externally during incidents should be prioritized.

Best practice includes:

  • Multiple qualified personnel per role
  • Coverage across shifts
  • Identified alternates and successors

Quick Eligibility Checklist: GETS & WPS

If the answer is “yes” to any item, enrollment is strongly recommended.

Mission & Role

  • ☐ Performs a mission-essential function
  • ☐ Has decision-making authority during emergencies
  • ☐ Serves in incident command or EOC leadership
  • ☐ Acts as a duty officer or on-call coordinator

Communications & Coordination

  • ☐ Coordinates across agencies or jurisdictions
  • ☐ Communicates with state, regional, or federal partners
  • ☐ Activates plans, resources, or operational decisions

Critical Infrastructure

  • ☐ Oversees lifeline services (power, water, healthcare, transport)
  • ☐ Can authorize restoration or prioritization of services

Continuity

  • ☐ Identified in a COOP, COG, or EOP
  • ☐ Serves as a successor or alternate for a key role

Operational Impact

  • ☐ Loss of communications would delay response
  • ☐ Loss of communications would increase life-safety risk

Outcome

  • One or more boxes checked → GETS and WPS recommended
  • Multiple boxes checked → High-priority enrollment

Enrollment and Administrative Responsibility

Organizations should designate a GETS/WPS Point of Contact (POC) responsible for:

  • Requesting and managing access
  • Assigning priority levels
  • Maintaining accurate user lists
  • Removing access when roles change

Enrollment and management are handled through official CISA processes Communications Continuity Progr….


Costs and Carrier Participation

GETS

  • GETS cards are issued at no cost
  • No subscription or monthly fees
  • Normal call charges may apply based on service plans

WPS

  • No WPS monthly fees are currently charged by participating wireless carriers
  • No carrier surcharge for WPS activation
  • Normal cellular plan charges still apply for voice usage

Cost is no longer a valid barrier to enrolling mission-essential personnel Communications Continuity Progr….


Common Misconceptions

  • “GETS and WPS work when everything is down.”
    False. They require functioning infrastructure.
  • “They guarantee calls will go through.”
    False. They improve probability, not certainty.
  • “They replace satellite or radio systems.”
    False. They complement them.
  • “Everyone in leadership automatically has access.”
    False. Access must be requested and managed.

Conclusion

The Government Emergency Telecommunications Service (GETS) and Wireless Priority Service (WPS) are essential priority-access tools, not survivable communications systems.

They are highly effective at managing congestion on functioning networks and are most valuable during the early and transitional phases of incidents. However, because they remain dependent on terrestrial infrastructure, they must be paired with infrastructure-independent communications layers to achieve true resilience.


Login with Patreon

Login with Patreon

Search Site

Products

  • Bundle - All 4 Workbooks (FEP + NoK + PPA + HRW) - Patreon Bundle - All 4 Workbooks (FEP + NoK + PPA + HRW) - Patreon $73.95
  • Bundle - All 4 Workbooks (FEP + NoK + PPA + HRW) Bundle - All 4 Workbooks (FEP + NoK + PPA + HRW) $93.95
  • Family Emergency Plan and Household Recovery Workbooks - Patreon Family Emergency Plan and Household Recovery Workbooks - Patreon $34.95
  • Bundle - Family Emergency Plan and Household Recovery Workbooks Bundle - Family Emergency Plan and Household Recovery Workbooks $46.95
  • Household Recovery Workbook Household Recovery Workbook $29.95
  • The Continuity Chronicles Seal Decal The Continuity Chronicles Seal Decal $5.00 Original price was: $5.00.$3.00Current price is: $3.00.
  • Family Emergency Plan Workbook - Patreon Family Emergency Plan Workbook - Patreon $19.95
  • Personal Preparedness Assessment Workbook - Patreon Personal Preparedness Assessment Workbook - Patreon $19.95
  • The Next of Kin Workbook - Patreon The Next of Kin Workbook - Patreon $23.95
  • Personal Preparedness Assessment Report Personal Preparedness Assessment Report $179.95
  • Bundle - Family Emergency Plan + Next of Kin Workbooks Bundle - Family Emergency Plan + Next of Kin Workbooks $46.95
  • The Next of Kin Workbook The Next of Kin Workbook $29.95
  • ASAR — 50 Mile Radius ASAR — 50 Mile Radius $139.95
  • ASAR 50-MILE + FEP WORKBOOK ASAR 50-MILE + FEP WORKBOOK $169.95
  • ASAR — 50 Mile Radius - Patreon ASAR — 50 Mile Radius - Patreon $39.95
  • Bundle - The Series Starter (Paperback) Bundle - The Series Starter (Paperback) $29.98
  • Bundle - The Gateway Bundle - The Gateway $30.95
  • The Brush (Paperback) The Brush (Paperback) $15.99
  • The Meadow Protocol (Paperback) The Meadow Protocol (Paperback) $13.99
  • Cards (4x6) - Brevity Cards for OTP Cards (4x6) - Brevity Cards for OTP $24.95

Product categories

Cart

©2026 Fortune Favors the Prepared | Built using WordPress and Responsive Blogily theme by Superb