Hurricane Katrina

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Hurricane Katrina

description

Hurricane Katrina. Silence All Phones and Pagers. Please move conversations into ESF rooms and busy out all phones. Thanks for your cooperation. Fire Medical Stress Severe Weather Parking. Safety Briefing. SEOC LEVEL 1 24 Hour Operations. EOC Staffing. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Hurricane Katrina

Page 1: Hurricane Katrina

Hu

rric

ane

Kat

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a

Page 2: Hurricane Katrina

Please move conversations Please move conversations into ESF rooms and busy out into ESF rooms and busy out

all phones.all phones.

Thanks for your cooperation.Thanks for your cooperation.

Silence All Phones and Pagers

Page 3: Hurricane Katrina

• Fire

• Medical

• Stress

• Severe Weather

• Parking

Safety Briefing

Page 4: Hurricane Katrina

SEOC LEVEL

124 Hour Operations

Page 5: Hurricane Katrina

EOC Staffing

• STATE COORDINATING OFFICER – Craig Fugate• SERT CHIEF – Mike DeLorenzo• OPERATIONS CHIEF – Leo Lachat• ESF 5 CHIEF – David Crisp• LOGISTICS CHIEF – Chuck Hagan• FINANCE & ADMIN CHIEF – Suzanne Adams• PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICER – Mike Stone• RECOVERY – Frank Koutnik

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State Coordinating Officer & Federal Coordinating Officer

Craig FugateJustin DeMello

Up Next – SERT Chief

Page 7: Hurricane Katrina

Mike DeLorenzo

Up Next – Meteorology

SERT Chief

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Meteorology

Ben Nelson

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Current Water Vapor Image

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Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Wed – 8 AM Thurs

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5-Day Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Wed – 8 AM Mon

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Monday Morning Weather Map

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Up Next – Information & Planning

Page 15: Hurricane Katrina

David CrispAnnie Ford

Information & Planning

Up Next – Operations

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Esc

ambi

a

San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnion

Bradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miami-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Area of Operations

South Area of Operations

Panhandle Area of Operations

Page 17: Hurricane Katrina

Esc

ambi

a

San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnion

Bradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miami-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

90% or less restored

90% to 98% restored

98% or greater restored

Electric Restoration

Response IndicatorsSouth Area of Operations

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Esc

ambi

a

San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnion

Bradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miami-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Boil Water Order or Utility System Problems

Normal Operations

Water

Response IndicatorsSouth Area of Operations

Boil Water Order and Utility System Problems

Page 19: Hurricane Katrina

Esc

ambi

a

San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnion

Bradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miami-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Shelters Open

No Shelters Open or on Standby

Sheltering

Response Indicators

Panhandle Area of Operations

Shelters on Standby

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Tampa IMT

NE FL IMT Georgia IMT

Task Force FL

Task Force Florida – MS Area of Operations

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Focus response efforts on:

south Florida

Panhandle

Task Force Florida – Mississippi

Shelterees from other states

What resources will likely be needed.

Fuel availability.

I-10 corridor transportation issues.

Keep the emergency worker safe.

Report deployments to ESF5

Planning Considerations

Up Next – Operations

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Leo LachatWayne Box

Operations

Up Next – Emergency Services

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Operational Period: 0700 08-31-05 to 0700 09-01-05

Up Next – Emergency Services

General Operating Objectives:

1. Evaluate SERT Activation Level 1. Support Re-entry Operations.2. Support Re-entry Operations.3. Support Human Services operations.4. Continue Logistical operations.5. Restore Critical Infrastructure.6. Monitor for severe flooding statewide 7. Support other States.8. Develop an Emergency Fuel Strategy

Planning Assumptions:

1. The operational area will be split between south Florida and the Panhandle.

2. Resources must be utilized effectively during this operational period.

3. Continue to re-locate resources if necessary.4. Re-Entry is occurring in the Panhandle.5. Evacuees from other States remain in Florida shelter.

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Emergency Services

Up Next – Human Services

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Emergency Services• Current Issues

• ESF 4 & 9• Continue to provide support for Division of Forestry incident

management teams deployed in Palm Beach County and Live Oak. Expected to demobilize in the next 24 hours.

• Division of Forestry Type III Incident Management Team at the North Florida Fair Grounds, Tallahassee, has been activated as the check in area and overnight housing for deployments to Mississippi.

• Urban Search and Rescue Command Team in Mississippi• Fish and Wildlife Commission and State Fire Marshal are

providing Law enforcement support and watercraft.• FL TF-1 has been federalized and sent to Louisiana.• Upgrade Type III Task Forces to Type 1 with insertion of

additional personnel and equipment. Additional units now at Leon Fairgrounds.

• Five SAR Task Forces currently in Biloxi and Pascagoula, Miss.• 50 ambulance and rescue units current staged at Leon County

Fairgrounds for deployment.• Two engine Strike Teams ready for deployment – one currently at

Leon County Fairgrounds and one available in Region 1.

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Emergency Services• Current Issues

• ESF 8• 2 Miami-Dade Hospitals w/o power ( Jackson South

and Homestead Hospital)• 2 Nursing Homes flooded (Miami Shores and Gulf

Crest)• 50 Ambulance and rescue units current staged at Leon

County Fairgrounds for deployment.• ESF 10

• Mobilized 2 Environmental Specialist Teams to Tallahassee for deployment to Mississippi

• Complete surveys of Florida Panhandle• ESF 16

• 215 Law Enforcements personnel have been deployed as of 08/30/2005

• LE MAC established in Harrison County

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Emergency Services

• Unmet Needs• None at this time

• Future Operations• Assist with Special Needs Shelter Staffing• Monitor Search and Rescue issues throughout

day• Establish replacement teams for Florida Task

Forces

Up Next – Human Services

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Human Services

Up Next – Infrastructure

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Infrastructure

Up Next – Logistics

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Infrastructure

• Current Issues• ESF1&3

• Aerial and ground recon in Panhandle complete• Debris clearance teams at work• Federal & State roads clear, except SR30E Cape San

Blas• District 3 Bridge Inspection Crews will deploy @ 0800

CDT• ESF2

• Monitoring impact to communications infrastructures (trk# 42)

• Landline outages Approx. 31,800 (2.6%) customers in south Florida and 11,000 (3.5%) in Panhandle.

• Wireless outages 5% in South Florida and 5% outages in Panhandle.

• Mobilizing EMAC support team

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Infrastructure• Current Issues (cont)

• ESF12• FUEL

• Miami-Dade and Broward Counties – numerous stations closed due to power outages; lines at open stations.

• Panhandle area local EOCs have spot checked and report adequate fuel for first responders

• ELECTRIC• Broward County –9,250 outages (1%) and Miami-Dade

County – 60,200 outages (6%). (trk# 40)• South Florida electric utilities at 99% restoration by end

of today. (trk# 390)• Escambia County –8,091 outages (6%), Santa Rosa

2,516 outages (4%) – and Okaloosa – 648 outages (1%)

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Infrastructure

Up Next – Logistics

• Unmet Needs• Need for more fuel tenders.

• Future Operations• Flood control missions• Fuel support missions• Prepare for and support missions to Mississippi

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Up Next – Recovery

Logistics

Up Next – EMAC Mutual Aid

Chuck HaganDon Ferrara

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EMAC Mutual Aid

Up Next – Finance & Administration

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Finance & Administration

Up Next – Public Information

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Finance & Administration

Up Next – Public Information

• Current Issues• Keeping track of expenditures for EOC and EMAC

expenditures to Mississippi• Assisting with deployment of staff• Continuing to purchase equipment and supplies

• Unmet Needs• None at this time

• Future Operations• Continue to assist with deployment of staff • Continue to track costs for EOC and EMAC• State Agency conference call today at 2:30 pm• ***Agencies must track costs separately for EMAC in

Mississippi****

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Public Information

Up Next – Recovery

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Recovery

Up Next – SERT Chief

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SERT Chief

Mike DeLorenzo

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Next Briefing

August 31 at 1830 PMESF Briefing