Build a temporary access coordination plan for an elevator outage, including affected-person roster, alternative routes, contact assignments, delivery guidan...
--- name: elevator-outage-access-plan description: Build a temporary access coordination plan for an elevator outage, including affected-person roster, alternative routes, contact assignments, delivery guidance, and resident update card. Use for access logistics only, with emergency services for trapped persons or unsafe stair use. --- # Elevator Outage Access Plan ## Purpose Help the user coordinate temporary access during an elevator outage. The deliverable is an access needs roster, alternative route plan, communication card, delivery and visitor instructions, contact assignment list, and update schedule. This is a prompt-only access coordination workflow. It is not building maintenance guidance, elevator repair advice, legal advice, disability-rights advice, medical advice, or emergency response training. If anyone is trapped in an elevator, unable to use stairs safely, injured, in medical distress, or at immediate risk, advise contacting local emergency services or building emergency contacts immediately. ## Use This Skill When Use this skill when the user wants to: - Coordinate resident, guest, staff, patient, customer, student, or delivery access during an elevator outage. - Identify people affected by stairs, distance, doors, ramps, service entrances, weather, fatigue, mobility devices, caregiving needs, or time-sensitive deliveries. - Draft a temporary access card for residents, tenants, guests, delivery drivers, building staff, front desk, property management, or event attendees. - Assign check-in contacts and update timing while the elevator is unavailable. - Reduce confusion without diagnosing or repairing the elevator. Do not use this skill to instruct people to use unsafe stairs, carry people, bypass locked areas, tamper with elevator equipment, override building systems, or ignore official instructions. ## Best Inputs Ask for the minimum logistics details needed. - Building type, such as apartment, office, clinic, school, hotel, retail, event venue, dorm, or mixed-use building. - Floors affected and whether all elevators or only some elevators are out. - Estimated outage start time and expected update time, if known. - Official building contact or management contact, if known. - Affected people or groups, especially anyone with mobility, medical, caregiving, stroller, delivery, luggage, or accessibility needs. - Available alternatives, such as another elevator bank, ramp, stairwell, service entrance, garage route, neighboring entrance, front desk assistance, or temporary holding area. - Delivery, visitor, package, move-in, appointment, or event needs. - Preferred communication channels and languages, if supplied by the user. ## Workflow 1. **Check immediate safety.** Ask whether anyone is trapped, injured, in distress, or unable to use stairs safely. If yes, prioritize emergency services or official building emergency contacts. 2. **Confirm outage facts.** Record what is known, what is unconfirmed, affected floors, elevator banks, start time, estimated update time, and official contact source. 3. **Create access needs roster.** List affected people or groups, floor, access need, time sensitivity, communication preference, and assigned contact. Use minimal personal details. 4. **Map alternatives.** Identify viable routes and note limitations, such as stairs, ramps, locked doors, weather exposure, lighting, distance, steep grades, narrow doors, or service areas. 5. **Assign coordination roles.** Name who checks on affected people, updates signs, contacts management, manages deliveries, and shares status updates. 6. **Plan deliveries and visitors.** Provide temporary instructions for packages, food delivery, rideshare, caregivers, contractors, appointments, and guests. 7. **Draft the update card.** Create a concise notice with outage status, accessible alternatives, contacts, update time, and emergency instruction. 8. **Set update cadence.** Recommend regular updates even when there is no new repair estimate. Track time, source, and next check. 9. **Close the loop.** Add a restoration notice, follow-up for missed deliveries or appointments, and a lessons-learned note for future outages. ## Output Format Return the plan in this order. ### 1. Immediate Safety Check Start with whether anyone is trapped, injured, in distress, or unable to use stairs safely. If yes, recommend local emergency services or official building emergency contacts before logistics planning. ### 2. Outage Snapshot | Field | Detail | | --- | --- | | Building or area | | | Elevator or bank affected | | | Floors affected | | | Outage start time | | | Latest official update | | | Next update time | | | Primary contact | | ### 3. Access Needs Roster | Person or group | Floor or area | Need | Time sensitivity | Assigned contact | Notes | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | Use minimal personal details and avoid unnecessary medical information. ### 4. Temporary Route and Support Options | Option | Who it helps | Limitations | Contact or access point | Use only if safe? | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | ### 5. Delivery and Visitor Instructions Include instructions for packages, food delivery, rideshare, caregivers, contractors, appointments, events, and guests as relevant. ### 6. Communication Card Provide a short ready-to-post notice with: - Outage status. - Affected area. - Temporary route or contact option. - Check-in contact. - Next update time. - Emergency instruction for trapped persons, unsafe stair use, injury, or distress. ### 7. Coordination Tracker | Task | Owner | Due time | Status | Notes | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | ### 8. Restoration Follow-Up List what to update when service resumes, including final notice, affected-person check-in, missed deliveries, appointments, signage removal, and lessons learned. ## Safety Boundaries - Emergency services or official building emergency contacts come first for trapped persons, injury, distress, fire, smoke, power hazards, or unsafe stair use. - Do not provide elevator repair, maintenance, override, or troubleshooting instructions. - Do not advise carrying people on stairs or using a route that feels unsafe. - Do not provide legal, medical, or disability-rights advice. - Use minimal personal information in rosters and notices. - Follow official building instructions and local emergency guidance. ## Example Prompts Copy and paste one of these to get started: - "The elevator in our apartment building is out until tomorrow. Help me coordinate access for my neighbor on the 5th floor who uses a walker." - "Our office elevator is down for maintenance. Create an access plan for deliveries, visitors, and the team member on crutches." - "School elevator outage during parent-teacher conferences. Build a temporary access coordination card with alternative routes and a communication notice."
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