Post on 02-Oct-2014
Presenter’s Name June 17, 20031
FEMA REGION V MORNING BRIEFWednesday, October 26, 2011
FEMA Region V HSIN Portal
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Weather
• Storm Reports- Nothing significant to report.
• Precipitation- Michigan:
Up to 2½ inches.
• Impacts- Nothing significant to report.
Overnight SummaryOctober 25-26, 2011
Source: NWS Daily Precipitation
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
• RV IMAT Status: GREEN - White Team: On Call
• RV Liaison Officers:- Primary: William Pillai- Secondary: Todd Lawson- Tertiary: Cornelius Miller
• RV Fire Duty Liaison Officer: Fred Kaehler
IMAT Team Status
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
• Illinois SEOC: Normal Operations
• Indiana SEOC: Normal Operations
• Michigan SEOC: Normal Operations
• Minnesota SEOC: Normal Operations
• Ohio SEOC: Normal Operations
• Wisconsin SEOC: Normal Operations
RRCC/State EOC Status• Region V RWC: Watch/Steady State (24/7 Operations)
- Region V Watch: 312-408-5498/5365 / FEMA-R5-Watch@FEMA.gov- Day Watch: 0600-1800 CDT / Night Watch: 1800-0600 CDT
No Current Alerts
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Region V Nuclear Facilities
• Illinois: Nothing Significant To Report
• Indiana: Nothing Significant To Report
• Michigan: Nothing Significant To Report
• Minnesota: Nothing Significant To Report
• Ohio: Nothing Significant To Report
• Wisconsin: Nothing Significant To Report
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
National Weather Forecast
Source: NWS National Forecast Charts
Region V:• Light rain or snow showers across northeastern
Minnesota; no significant precipitation expected.• Isolated showers across Wisconsin, Illinois,
Indiana, and Ohio.
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Active Watches/Warnings
Source: NWS National Weather HazardsRegion V
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
3-7 Day Hazard Outlook
Source: NWS Climate Prediction Center
Presenter’s Name June 17, 20039
1 Day Severe Weather Outlook
Source: NWS Hydrometeorological Prediction Center
Convective Outlook Tornado Outlook
Wind Outlook Hail Outlook
Less Than 2% All Areas
Presenter’s Name June 17, 200310
2 Day Severe Weather Outlook
Source: NWS Hydrometeorological Prediction Center
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
St. Paul, MN
Milwaukee, WI
Chicago, IL
Springfield, IL
5-Day Forecast (1/2)
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Indianapolis, IN
Columbus, OH
Lansing, MI
Detroit, MI
5-Day Forecast (2/2)
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
24 Hour Precipitation Forecast
Region V Source: NWS Hydrometeorological Prediction Center
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
1-3 Day Precipitation Forecast
Source: NWS Hydrometeorological Prediction CenterRegion V
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
1-5 Day Precipitation Forecast
Source: NWS Hydrometeorological Prediction CenterRegion V
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
River Flood Outlook
Presenter’s Name June 17, 200317
Source: USGS
Seismic Activity
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Significant Fire Potential
Source: National Predictive Services Program
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Hurricane RINA (Category 2)Max Sustained Winds: 110 mph; Moving at 5 mph
Tropical Cyclone Activity
10% Chance of Tropical Cyclone Formation
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Tropical Cyclone ActivityForecast Models
Source: National Hurricane Center (via Stormpulse)
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
Space Weather Forecast
Solar Activity Forecast: Solar activity is expected to be low with a slight chance for M-class activity all three days (26 - 28 October).Geophysical Activity Forecast: The geomagnetic field is expected to be at quiet to unsettled levels, with isolated active periods on day one (26 October), due to lingering effects from the CME that impacted Earth on 24 October. Mostly quiet conditions are expected on day two (27 October). By day three (28 October), quiet to unsettled levels are expected due to effects from a recurrent coronal hole high speed stream.
NOAA Scale Past 24 hrs Current
Geomagnetic: G1 None
Solar Radiation: None None
Radio Outages: None None
Source: NWS Space Weather Prediction Center
G1 Minor
Power systems: weak power grid fluctuations can occur. Spacecraft operations: minor impact on satellite operations possible. Other systems: migratory animals are affected at this and higher levels; aurora is commonly visible at high latitudes (northern Michigan and Maine)**.
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
• October 25-27: State Hazard Mitigation Officers (SHMOs) Meeting, Chicago, IL
• November 1: FEMA Region V Regional Interagency Steering Committee (RISC) Meeting, Great Lakes Naval Station, IL
• January 12: IND Private Sector Summit, Argonne National Laboratory, IL
Training in 2011
This Week
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
• October 27: NLE 2012 National Cyber Security Awareness Seminar, Washington, DC
• November 1: IL State Level Exercise (SLE) Final Planning Conference (FPC), Carterville, IL
• November 1-4: Clinton Nuclear Power Plant, Clinton, IL
• November 9: National Emergency Alerting System Test
• November 10: Improvised Nuclear Device Private Sector Summit, Chicago, IL
• November 15-18: Illinois State Level Exercise (Catastrophic Earthquake), Springfield, IL
• December 7-8: NLE 2012 Mid Term Planning Conference, Washington, DC
• Feb 15, 2012: Improvised Nuclear Device Tabletop Exercise, Chicago, IL
• March 7, 2012: Braidwood Nuclear Power Plant Exercise, Reed Township, IL
• March 7-8, 2012: NLE 2012 National Tabletop Exercise, Washington, DC
• March 28-29, 2012: NLE 2012 Final Planning Conference, Washington, DC
Exercise Events in 2011
This Week
Presenter’s Name June 17, 2003
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we work together to build, sustain, and improveour capability to prepare for, protect against,
respond to, recover from, and mitigate all hazards.