Hurricane Katrina

54
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. Safety Briefing. SEOC LEVEL 1 24 Hour Operations. EOC Staffing. STATE COORDINATING OFFICER – Craig Fugate - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Hurricane Katrina

Page 1: Hurricane Katrina

Hu

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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

Safety Briefing

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SEOC LEVEL

124 Hour Operations

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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

Craig Fugate

Up Next – FEMA

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Scott Morris

Up Next – SERT Chief

FEMA

Page 8: Hurricane Katrina

Mike DeLorenzo

Up Next – Meteorology

SERT Chief

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Meteorology

Ben Nelson

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Category 3 Hurricane Katrina – 115 mph Sustained Winds

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Major Hurricane Katrina – 5 AM

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Hurricane Force Wind Speed Probabilities

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Tropical Storm Force Wind Speed Probabilities

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Doppler Radar Estimated Storm Total Rainfall

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Forecast Weather Map – 8 PM Sun

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Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Sat – 8 AM Sun

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Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Sun – 8 AM Mon

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Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Mon – 8 AM Tues

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Up Next – Information & Planning

Page 23: Hurricane Katrina

David Crisp

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

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Vulnerable Populations

551,143

Area of Operations

Based on a Category 4

South 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

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Full

Partial

Monitoring

EOC Activation

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

Miani-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

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Debris Clearance

Debris Removal

Normal Operations

Debris

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

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Shelters Open

Shelters on Standby

No Shelters Open or on standby

Shelters

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

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Full

Monitoring

EOC Activation

Response Indicators

Panhandle Area of Operations

Partial

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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

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Local State of Emergency

No Local State of Emergency

Local State of Emergency

Response Indicators

Panhandle Area of Operations

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Focus response efforts on south Florida.

Plan for Panhandle hit.

Residual effects from the 2004 Hurricane Season and Hurricane Dennis.

Fuel availability.

Lengthy impact period.

Severe flooding – related issues.

Impact Assessment reporting – [email protected]

Planning Considerations

Up Next – Operations

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Leo Lachat

Operations

Up Next – Emergency Services

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Operational Period: 0700 08-27-05 to 0700 08-28-05

Mission: To support county operations and the provision of public information.Areas of Operation: Florida Keys and Southern Florida

General Operating Objectives:

1. Re-establish Communications.2. Continue Activation Level 1.3. Support Evacuation Operations. 4. Support Human Services operations.5. Continue Logistical operations.6. Implement and monitor Search and Rescue Planning.7. Restore Critical Infrastructure.8. Prepare for severe flooding.9. Initiate the Recovery Process

Planning Assumptions:

1. Inclement weather will inhibit evacuation and response operations.

2. Due to the rapid onset of the Tropical Storm, the time for implementation will be short.

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

4. Resources must be utilized conservatively during the initial landfall period.

5. Infrastructure interruptions will occur.

Operating Objectives

Up Next – Operations Support

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Emergency Services

Up Next – Human Services

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Emergency Services• Current Issues

• ESF 4 & 9• Mobilizing DOF Red IMT to State LSA • DOF IMT (Type 3) on site at old Babcock Warehouse (Live Oak)• 1 Strike Team (5 ALS Fire Rescue Units and 1 Leader)

demobilized on 08/26/2005 • 1 ALS Unit at LSA Palm Beach starting at 6 am on 08/27/2005

• ESF 8• Issues being handled locally• ACHA is following up on hospitals and Nursing Homes• Evacuation / Relocation Planning for Hospitals• 1 SpNS open (Broward)

• ESF 10• Monitoring HAZMAT issues• Continuing to check drinking and waste water facilities to

determine needs• Coordinate response with EPA and USCG (which are present in

ESF 10 room)• ESF 16

• Monitoring Security issues

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Up Next – Human Services

Emergency Services

• Unmet Needs• None at this time

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

day• Revisit Florida Panhandle Unified First Response

Entry Plan• Preparing for possible second hit it Panhandle

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Human Services

Up Next – ESF 4&9Up Next – Infrastructure

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Human Services

• Current Issues• ESF-6: Shelter Operations

• 5,911 Meals and 2,524 snacks have been served• 3 shelters open with a population of 338 evacuees

• County breakdown of current shelter operations• Miami-Dade: 2 Shelters with 220 evacuees• Palm Beach County: 1 Shelters with 118 evacuees• Shelters on standby in the Panhandle: 38

• ESF-11: 15 trucks of water have been dispatched from the Ice Houses in Polk County to be staged in Palm Beach County for distribution

• ESF-15: Coordinating with Volunteer agencies meeting volunteer agency requests

• ESF-17: Continued monitoring for pet food commodity needs

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Human Services

Up Next – Infrastructure

• Unmet Needs• None at this time

• Future Operations• ESF-6: Plan for mass feeding operations in South

Florida, Plan for the opening of shelters in the Panhandle

• ESF-11: Continue coordinating the shipment water and ice with logistics and the staging areas

• ESF-15: Open Volunteers and Donations Hotline 1-800-FLHELP1

• ESF-17: Continued response to animal related issues due to flooding and prepare to support possible requests for mosquito control.

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Infrastructure

Up Next – Logistics

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Infrastructure

• Current Issues• ESF1&3

• SFWMD reports 12” rainfall, emergency pumps functioning and discharging under emergency guidelines

• Army Corp of Engineers contacted, staff have arrived• Sandbag inventory est. 500,000 at FDOT sites• Aerial and ground recon underway• Debris clearance teams at work• State & Federal roads clear; and 97th Avenue and 836

(Dolphin Expwy) reopened.• MIA, Port Everglades and Palm Beach re-opened• Train services not operational on South Florida Rail

Corridor due to gate damages and power outages.

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Infrastructure

• Current Issues• ESF2

• SUNCOM Miami switch three T-1’s down• Monitoring impact to communications infrastructures

(trk 42)• Activating conference call lines• SLERS system down in Miami Area, link down, Tech.

deployed (am 8/27/05)• Deployed two ESF-2 personnel LSA at south Florida

Fairground.• Deployed 14 cell phones.• Activated 4 conference lines.• 17 COWS deployed – 18 desktop/CP’s10 laptops.• Approx. 104,000 landline outages.• 95% wireless coverage operational in SFL• 35% of site outage wireless.

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Infrastructure• Current Issues

• ESF12• FUEL

• Total of 160.7 Million gallons of Fuel available in the state • Western Panhandle long lines, several stations out of regular and

mid grade.• Ft Lauderdale, Pompano, and Miami- numerous stations closed

due to power outages.• Major haulers are sending additional carriers into the region to

provide support.• Local EOCs have been spot checked and report adequate fuel for

first responders.- • ELECTRIC

• ESF 12 is in contact with the electric utilities that will be impacted and they are ready to respond as soon as the hurricane passes and it is safe for the repairs to begin.

• 883,000 reported outages. FPL reports 870,000 outages, Municipals – 12,000 outages, Cooperatives – 900 outages. – Outages on tracker # 40

• FPL reports that 13,796 workers total, working on power restoration.

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Infrastructure

Up Next – Logistics

• Unmet Needs• None at this time

• Future Operations• Flood control missions• Fuel support missions• Currently coordinating staging areas and

expediting out of state electric crews entrance into the impacted areas.

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Logistics

Up Next – RecoveryUp Next – EMAC Mutual Aid

Page 47: Hurricane Katrina

Up Next – EMAC Mutual Aid

• Current Issues• State LSA established at South Florida Fairgrounds and shipping

orders• Two County Points of Distribution will open this morning at 8:00 in

Dade county supported by FLNG staffing• State Mobilization Area in White Springs still open and holding trucks

of water, ice and other resources• Planning complete for secondary landfall in Panhandle• Type I LSA Equipment Package ordered• 1000 Persons Base Camp Package ready awaiting approval• WARNORDs issued for agency support of State LSA and PODs• Provided one prime generator for Special Needs Shelter in

Panhandle• Conducting HVAC and generator assessments for 2-3 Special Needs

Shelters in Panhandle• Working in close coordination with FEMA and the USACoE on

logistics planning and staging• SERT/USACoE Prime Power Team established• ARF's in for MRE's, tarps, Prime Power Tech Support • FLNG Personnel on-site to support Logistics Section• Logistics Tactical Planner arriving Sunday through EMAC

Logistics

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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• There will be a conference call today at 2:30 pm.• Assisting with deployment of staff.• Assisting with purchases as needed to support

the LSA• Unmet Needs

• None at this time• Future Operations

• Continue to assist with deployment of staff• Continue to track costs• Continue to make necessary purchases to

support the EOC and LSA.

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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

Page 54: Hurricane Katrina

Next Briefing

August 27 at 1830 PMESF Briefing