-- Romana Didulo CULT Decree "Flood Emergency" As read by Stinkey Prime on "QRTRV News" video stream. 12 December 2025 Thanks to @SMetharp.bsky.social for these transcripts! PDF: https://pdfhost.io/xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -- Page 0 - 12/11/2025 - Flood Emergency Grand Rising Everyone, Happy Divinum Sanguinem 3, 0035, also known as December 11th, 2025. Royal Decree issued by Her Royal Majesty Queen Romana Didulo The First, Queen and Commander-in-Chief of The Kingdom of Canada and The World, Living Crown and Custodian of Earth and Humanity, Commander-in-Chief of The United Armies of Earth under Natural Law. Flood-Emergency Training for All First Responders Preamble: Whereas flooding has become the most frequent and financially damaging natural hazards across The Kingdom of Canada, affecting communities, infrastructure, and public safety from coast to coast to coast. Whereas the weather patterns rapid snowmelt, extreme rainfall events, and coastal storm surges have increased, the likelihood of severe and sudden flooding across multiple regions simultaneously. Whereas first responders comprising humanitarian peace officers, fire services, emergency medical services, and search and rescue units and municipal emergency authorities afform the frontline defense in safeguarding lives, property, and essential services. Whereas coordinated actions, standardized competencies and unified operational protocols are necessary to ensure public confidence, responder safety, and national resilience. Now, therefore, I am Her Royal Majesty Queen Romana Didulo The First Decree The Establishment of Mandatory National Training Requirements for Flood Emergency Preparedness and Response for all First Responders Operating Within The Kingdom of Canada. Section 1: Purpose of This Royal Decree This Royal Decree establishes a unified national training framework, ensuring that all first responders possess the knowledge, skills and operational readiness necessary to respond effectively, safely, and collaboratively to all forms of flooding. Section 2: National Mandate for Flood Emergency Training 1) Universal Training Requirement: All first responders organizations shall ensure that their personnel are trained in recognized flood emergency competencies, including the following: 1) flood hazard recognition 2) responder safety and survival 3) incident command system integration 4) public evacuation and rescue procedures 5) critical infrastructure protection 6) host event operational protocols. Scope: This requirement applies to peace officers, fire services, emergency medical services, search and rescue, and municipal and regional emergency personnel. Section 3: Rationale for this Royal Decree 1) Flooding is the nation's leading natural hazard, both in frequency and cost 2) Events are increasingly multi-regional, affecting several municipalities simultaneously and overwhelming specialized teams. 3) Responder and civilian safety require consistent training in water hazards, swift water risks, electrical danger, and submerged infrastructure. 4) Critical infrastructure, roads, bridges, power grids, and hospitals is at heightened risk, requiring trained personnel to manage closures, support continuity and safeguard essential services. 5) Effective response demands cross-agency coordination, which cannot occur without standardized training, common terminology, and interoperable operational procedures. Page 1 - 12/11/2025 - Flood Emergency 6) Preparedness reduces risk and long term cost, protecting lives, property, and public resources. 7) The public expects competent, coordinated emergency services during flood events, and standardized training strengthened public confidence. Weather change and national vulnerability necessitate modernized, proactive preparedness measures across all responder disciplines. Section 4: Implementation Requirements. 1) Training Standard Adaption. All agencies shall adopt the National Flood Response Training Curriculum approved by the designated Emergency Management Authority. 2) Certification Timeline. Awareness level training for all responders within 30-days. Operational level training for designated personnel within 30-days. Technician level training for specialized units as required. 3) Inter-Agency Exercises. Annual regional flood readiness exercises shall be conducted to ensure coordination, communication, and operational proficiency. 4) Reporting and Compliance. Agency shall maintain training records and submit annual compliance reports to their governing Emergency management bodies. Section 5: Review and Modernization. These standards and requirements set forth in the Decree shall be reviewed not less than once every year to ensure alignment with evolving flood risks, scientific evidence, and operational best practices. This Royal Decree is effective immediately dated today, December 11th, 2025. Signed Her Royal Majesty Queen Romana Didulo The First, Queen and Commander-in-Chief of The Kingdom of Canada and The World, Living Crown and Custodian of Earth and Humanity, Commander-in-Chief of The United Armies of Earth under Natural Law. Here now are the budgets, the financials for each province and territory. This is for flood training and equipment. Ontario 90 million. Quebec 80 million. Manitoba 40 million. Saskatchewan 40 million. Alberta 65 million. British Columbia 70 million. Yukon 10 million. Northwest territory is ten million. Nunavut is 5 million. Prince Edward Island 15 million. Nova Scotia 30 million. New Brunswick is 30 million, and Newfoundland and Labrador is 15 million. The total budget is 500 million and just to make sure I will repeat each province. Ontario 90 million. Quebec 80 million. Manitoba 40 million. Saskatchewan 40 million. Alberta 65 million. British Columbia 70 million. Yukon 10 million. Page 2 - 12/11/2025 - Flood Emergency Northwest territory is ten million. Nunavut is 5 million. Prince Edward Island 15 million. Nova Scotia 30 million. New Brunswick is 30 million, and Newfoundland and Labrador is 15 million. Next is the National Training Framework for Flood Emergency Response. Purpose: Establish consistent, interoperable, all hazards flood response competencies for all first responders across The Kingdom of Canada. Scope: This applies to peace officers, fire services, emergency medical services, search and rescue, municipal emergency management personnel, provincial/territorial emergency organizations, and federal responders as relevant. B) Core Competencies. 1) Flood Hazard Recognition. Types of flooding, riverine, overland flash, coastal, ice jam, levee failure, hydrology basics and community specific risk. 2) Responders Safety and Survival. a) Swift Water Awareness, b) electrical, chemical, and debris hazards, c) personal protective equipment, d) rescue zone identification; hot, warm, cold zones. 3) Incident Command System Integration. Multi-agency coordination, unified command for multi-jurisdictional events, standardized communication protocols 4) Rescue and Evacuation Skills. 1) Watercraft higher water vehicle operations for qualified responders. 2) Evacuation planning, triage, and patient movement. 3) Door to door evacuation procedures, and 4) Pet and livestock evacuation considerations. 5) Critical Infrastructure Awareness. a) road closures, bridge washouts, and detour planning. b) impacts on utilities, power, water, and sewage. c) community facility protection, hospitals, care homes, etc.. 6) Public Communication. a) risk messaging. b) managing mis-information. c) coordinated communication with municipal and provincial authorities. 7) Post Incident Operations. a) reentry protocols. b) structural and environmental safety, and c) debriefing and after action reporting. C) Training Levels 1) Level one awareness, all responders. a) online modules. Page 3 - 12/11/2025 - Flood Emergency b) tabletop exercises, and c) annual refresher courses. 2) Level two operations, select personnel. a) hands on water awareness. b) use of rescue equipment, and c) integrated command systems applications. 3) Level three technician, specialized teams. a) swift water rescue. b) high risk flood operations, and c) advanced boat operations. d) delivery model. National standards developed jointly by Public Safety of The Kingdom of Canada provinces, territories, and national responder associations. b) Province led certification and enforcement, and c) annual exercise funded through federal and provincial emergency programs. Here now is your High Level Analysis for training all first responders in emergency flooding. 1) Flooding is Now The Kingdom of Canada's Most Frequent and Costly Natural Hazard. Flooding represents the largest share of natural disaster losses in The Kingdom of Canada. Weather change has increased the frequency and intensity of rapid snowmelt, flash flooding, river overflow flow, and storm surge events along coastlines. As floods become multi-regional and unpredictable every type of responder, peace officer, fire, emergency medical services, search and rescue, and local public works must be capable of safe and coordinated response. 2) Flood Events Are No Longer Localized. Herstorically, specialized teams handle flooding, but modern flood patterns can affect the following, a) several municipalities simultaneously, b) critical transportation corridors, c) remote communities and the urban centers with aging drainage systems. This means standard nationwide flood response competencies are required across all first responders groups. 3) Protection of Life and Immediate Safety. Effective flood training improves, a) safe evacuation of residents, b) swift water rescue capability, c) management of People trapped in vehicles or buildings, and d) rapid triage and patient transport under hazardous conditions. Since floods create complex water related hazards. For example swift currents, submerged infrastructure, electrical risks, untrained responders face elevated danger to both themselves and civilians. 4) Infrastructure and Essential Service Protection. Floods threatens assets that first responders rely on, a) roads and bridges, communications networks, power grids, hospitals, and emergency stations. Training ensures responders can, 1) assess infrastructure failures, 2) maintain service continuity, and 3) coordinate with municipal engineers and utilities. 5) Multi-Agency Coordination is Essential. Flood response requires synchronization among peace officers for evacuation, perimeter control, fire services for rescue, pumping hazard mitigation for emergency medical services, medical support, patient movement, emergency management offices, Military assistance when activated. Without standardized training inter-agency response delays increase risks, and incompatible procedures can compromise safety. Page 4 - 12/11/2025 - Flood Emergency 6) Weather Adaptation and Preparedness Obligations. Federal, provincial, and municipal emergency management frameworks emphasize, 1) all hazards preparedness, 2) weather resilience, and 3) incident command systems interopertability. Mandatory flood response trainings support these frameworks and ensure compliance with national standards. 7) Risk Reduction and Cost Savings. Well-trained responders, a) reduced property damage through faster intervention, b) minimize casualties, c) decrease long term recovery and insurance costs, and d) prevent responder injuries that result in lost capacity and compensation claims. Investment and training consistently yields higher financial savings that post disaster recovery spending. 8) Public Confidence and Operational Credibility. During flood emergencies communities expect, 1) competent, fast, and coordinated emergency services 2) clear communication and safe evacuation support, and 3) visible preparedness. Uniform training strengthens public trust and enhance operational legitimacy at all government levels. 9) Unique Kingdom of Canada's Vulnerabilities. The Kingdom of Canada has particular exposure to flood hazards due to the following large river systems: Northern snowpack melt, rapid urbanization in flood prone zones, coastal communities in Atlantic and Pacific regions, and aging storm water infrastructure. This national exposure reinforces the need for universal preparedness among all responders disciplines. Next is the High Level Rationale for this Royal Decree and its Directives. This Royal Decree Directive is issued in response to the escalating risk of flood related emergencies across The Kingdom of Canada. -Flooding has become the country's most frequent and damaging natural hazard, affecting urban centers, remote communities, agricultural regions, critical transportation corridors. -Weather trends indicate that extreme rainfall, rapid snowmelt, and coastal storm surges will continue to intensify. -First responders are consistently positioned as the first line of defense to public safety during such events. However, current training across jurisdiction remains inconsistent, leading to operational inefficiencies, unsafe response methods, and delays in evacuation and rescue operations. -Standardized national training ensures that responders can operate safely, communicate effectively, and integrate seamlessly under the Incident command system. By establishing this requirement, The Kingdom of Canada's government enhances national readiness, protects public safety, supports weather adaptation objectives, and ensures financial efficiency to improve mitigation capabilities. This Royal Decree reinforces the commitment to building resilient communities capable of withstanding increasingly severe flood events. Thank you everyone and have a wonderful day. Page 5 - 12/11/2025 - Flood Emergency Respect my thor-tay MFs, for I am the STINK KWEEN! Page 6 - 12/11/2025 - Flood Emergency