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1 Daily Operations Briefing September 2, 2012 As of 8:30 a.m. EDT.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Daily Operations Briefing September 2, 2012 As of 8:30 a.m. EDT."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Daily Operations Briefing September 2, 2012 As of 8:30 a.m. EDT

2 2 Atlantic – Tropical Outlook

3 3 Tropical Depression Isaac As of 11:00 a.m. EDT (September 1)  70 miles WSW of Columbia, MO  Moving east at 4 mph  Max sustained winds 20 mph  Tropical Depression has lost tropical characteristics while moving across Missouri  Isaac merged with a frontal zone and its extra tropical circulation continues moving east across Middle Mississippi Valley into the Ohio Valley  Flash Flood threat diminishing

4 4 Atlantic - Tropical Storm Kirk As of 5:00 a.m. EDT 710 miles southeast of Cape Race Newfoundland 740 miles northwest of Azores Moving northeast at 32 mph Max sustained winds 50 mph with higher gusts This general motion accompanied by an increase in forward speed is forecast during the next day or so Additional weakening is forecast Kirk is forecast to become a post-tropical cyclone later today Tropical storm-force winds extend 105 miles

5 5 Atlantic – Tropical Storm Leslie As of 5:00 a.m. EDT 295 miles east-northeast of Leeward Islands Moving northwest at 15 mph Maximum sustained winds 70 mph General motion is forecast to continue today; gradual turn to the north-northwest and north along with a decrease in forward speed Unfavorable upper-level winds & some fluctuations in strength possible next 48 hours Tropical storm-force winds extend outward 175 miles

6 6 Atlantic – Area 1 (Invest 99L) As of 2:00 a.m. EDT Area showers and thunderstorms about 1,075 miles northwest of Cape Verde Islands Slow development of this disturbance possible next 48 hours Moving west-southwestward at 10-15 miles LOW (20%) chance of becoming tropical cyclone next 48 hours

7 7 http://www.nhc.noaa.gov/gtwo_epac.shtml This product is updated at approximately 5 AM, 11 AM, 5 PM, and 11 PM PDT from May 15 to November 30. Special outlooks may be issued as conditions warrant. Eastern Pacific – Tropical Outlook

8 8 Eastern Pacific – Tropical Depression Ileana As of 5:00 a.m. EDT 725 miles west of southern tip of Baja California Mexico Moving west at 10 mph Max sustained winds 35 mph General motion is forecast to continue for the next day or two A turn toward west-northwest forecast on Tuesday Weakening is forecast Ileana expected to become a Post-Tropical Remnant Low today

9 9 Eastern Pacific – Area 1 (Invest 98E) As of 8:00 a.m. EDT The area of low pressure has become better defined Located 250 miles south of Manzanillo, Mexico Shower and thunderstorm activity continues to organize Could become a tropical depression later today Moving WNW at 15 mph HIGH (90%) chance of becoming tropical cyclone next 48 hours

10 10 Eastern Pacific – Area 2 (Invest 99L) As of 2:00 a.m. EDT A small area of showers and thunderstorms associated with a surface trough Located about 240 miles south of Manzanillo, Mexico Environmental conditions appear conducive for development System could become a tropical depression during the next day or two as it moves WNW at 15 mph. LOW (10%) chance of becoming a tropical cyclone during the next day or so before it merges with Invest 98E to its south

11 11 Central Pacific – Tropical Outlook

12 12 State Response Florida:  EOC activated at Level II (Partial Activation 7AM-7PM)  IA and PA PDAs are currently underway Alabama:  SEOC at Level IV (Normal operations; 8AM-8PM) Mississippi:  EOC activated at Level I (24/7) ▲IA PDA Pilot Teams to begin operations on September 2 Region IV ▲RRCC activated to Level III for Post Tropical Cyclone Isaac (8AM -5PM) and DNC (September 2: 9 AM to 9PM; September 3-6: 12 PM to 12 AM) Region IV

13 13 State Response Arkansas  AR EOC activated at Level IV (Normal Operations) Louisiana  LA EOC activated at Level I (Full Activation) ▲35 PODs, managed and staffed by the Louisiana National Guard ▲3 DRCs open Texas  TX EOC activated to Level III (Increased Readiness Conditions) Region V Region VI ▲RRCC activated at Level II (24/7)  Disaster Housing Assessment Team deployed to assist Housing Task Force with identifying temporary housing needs Region VI

14 14 Power Outage Trends 1414 (DOE, Sitrep #10, 9/1)

15 15 Shelter Trends (ESF-6 Open Shelter Report, 13:30 EDT, 9/1)

16 16 FEMA Region VI Hurricane ISAAC Sustainment as of 9/02/12 0500 EDT

17 17 FEMA Region IV & VI Hurricane ISAAC NGO Sustainment as of 9/02/12 0500 EDT

18 18 FEMA Resource Summary as of 9/02/12 0500 EDT

19 19 National Support Plan National Objectives: 1.Maintain a common situational awareness of the incident 2.Provide resources as requested or anticipated to support State and Local response/operational efforts 3.Support mass care requirements (e.g., hydration, feeding, emergency and short term housing, pet sheltering), including identifying the access and functional needs population and their requirements for support 4.Review, evaluate and implement national-level mass care task orders, contracts and ongoing requests for Federal Assistance. Decisions for next Operational Period:EEI for Next Operational Periods: NRCC level review Operational needs, power outage numbers decreasing and mass care needs decreasing FEMA staff deployment to support JFO, air teams, etcJFO set-up and start dates, additional needs based on IMAT information Retrograde assets in non-impacted areasState requests for additional assistance Determine feasibility of demobilizing ambulance and evacuation support State/FCO assessment of requirement Review requests for Individual Assistance declarationsPreliminary Damage Assessments Report on fuel distribution to first responder agencies Track burn rate for LA pods Report on staging, sort, and distribute donated items to the affected population in coordination with the American Red Cross and Mass Care/ESF #6 Consolidate damage information and feedback from other ESFs, National Infrastructure Simulation and Analysis Canter (NISAC), Critical Infrastructure/Key Resources (CI/KR) analysis regarding impacts relevant for Long Term Community Recovery.

20 20 NSP Task Status by Phaseby Core Capability

21 21 Operational Tempo – 9/2/12 2121 TIMEACTIVITY PLANNING ROLE/COMMENTS 0200Senior Leaders Brief Inputs Due to Situational Awareness SectionNone 0330Senior Leaders Brief Due to the NOCNone 0730NRCS Section Leaders Transition BriefGain insights on senior leaders intent 0800Shift Change BriefProvides NSP info to build brief; briefs planning issues (e.g. objectives, tasks, CIR, etc.) 0830Daily Operations BriefAttends for situational awareness 0900NRCS Objectives & Tasks Meeting 0930NRCS Section Chiefs MeetingCoordination 1000Operations and Logistics Coordination MeetingInformation and operational updates 1100ESF/LNO/NRCS Sections Report due to Situational Awareness SectionInformation and operational updates 1230Senior-Level VTCAttends for situational awareness. 1400ESF/LNO/NRCS Sections Report due to Situational Awareness SectionInformation and operational updates 1600NRCS Objectives & Tasks MeetingPlanning facilitates meeting; review previous objectives, tasks, and propose new objectives/tasks. 1600Senior Leadership Brief due to the NOCNone 1830NRCS Section Chiefs MeetingCoordination 1900National Support Plan ApprovedStaffs & acquires approval; approved NSP becomes an order for the NRCS. 1930NRCS Section Chiefs Transition BriefingGain insights on senior leaders intent 2000Shift Change BriefProvides NSP information to build brief; briefs planning issues. 2300NSP Revision (if needed)Revise NSP when conditions warrant. 2400Beginning of new operational periodExecution begins for NSP

22 22 Significant Activity: September 1- 2 Significant Events: Remnants of Isaac Tropical Activity: Atlantic: Tropical Storm Kirk; Tropical Storm Leslie; Area 1 (20%) Eastern Pacific – Tropical Depression Ileana; Area 1 (90%) Central Pacific – No tropical cyclones expected through Monday evening Western Pacific – No significant activity Significant Weather: Heavy rainfall – parts of the Ohio Valley Scattered showers and thunderstorms – East coast Slight risk of severe thunderstorms – Upper Mississippi Valley, Northern Plains & Tennessee Valley Critical Fire Weather Areas: portions of MT and ND Red Flag Warnings: MT, WY, ND, & SD Space Weather: Minor; S1 Level occurred/moderate; S1/G2 level expected Earthquake Activity: No significant activity Disaster Declaration Activity: Amendment No. 3 & Amendment No. 4 to FEMA-4080-DR-LA Amendment No. 2 to FEMA-4081-DR-MS

23 23 http://www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/noaa/noaad1.pdf Daily: 0400 a.m. and 1600 National Weather Forecast

24 24 http://www.nws.noaa.gov/largemap.php Active Watches/Warnings

25 25 http://www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/tropical/qpf/tcqpf.php?sname=Isaac Precipitation Forecast – 1-3 Day

26 26 http://water.weather.gov/ahps/forecasts.php?current_color=flood&current_type=all&fcst_type=fcst&conus_map=d_map River Flood Outlook – 7 Day

27 27 Convective Outlook Days 1-3 Day 1Day 2 Day 3

28 28 Critical Fire Weather Areas Days 1-8 Day 1 Day 2 Day 3-8

29 29 MAP: http://origin.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/threats/hazards_d3_7.pnghttp://origin.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/threats/hazards_d3_7.png TEXT: http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/threats/threats_ie.phphttp://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/threats/threats_ie.php Hazard Outlook: September 3 - 7

30 30 Hazard Outlook: September 3 - 14 Sept 3-4: Locally heavy rain for Central Appalachians, Mid-Atlantic, Northeast & southern New England Sept 3-5: Heavy rain across southeast Alaska and northern Alaskan Panhandle Sept 3-5: High winds & waves for Aleutians, southwest Alaska & coastal southern Alaska Sept 3-5: River flooding continuing across Lower Mississippi Valley Sept 3-4: River flooding possible for parts of Missouri, Illinois, and Indiana Severe drought for parts of Southeast, Midwest, Middle Mississippi Valley, Great Plains, Rio Grande Valley, Rockies, Southwest, Great Basin and Hawaii.

31 31 http://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/ Drought Monitor as of August 28, 2012

32 32 http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/aviation/index.html http://spaceweather.com/ www.spaceweather.com http://www.swpc.noaa.n/index.html http:// Space Weather HF Communications ImpactSunspot Activity

33 33 Significant Earthquake Activity U.S. - Past 24 Hours No significant activity

34 34 US Wildland Fire Preparedness Levels As of September 1, 2012 National Preparedness Level: 4 Three or more Geographic Areas are experiencing incidents requiring Type 1 and 2 IMTs. Competition exists between Geographic Areas. Nationally, 60 percent of Type 1 and 2 IMTs and crews are committed.. PL 3 PL 4 PL 3 PL 1PL 5 Minimal Extreme PL 3 PL 1 PL 2 PL 1 PL 3

35 35 September 2, 2012: National Preparedness Level: 4 Initial Attack Activity: Light (109) New Large Fires: 1 Large Fires Contained: 7 Uncontained Large Fires: 19 Area Command Teams committed: 1 NIMOs committed: 1 Type 1 IMT(s) committed: 6 Type 2 IMT(s) Committed: 12 States Affected: MT, ID, WY, CA, CO, OR, NE, OK, & TX National Fire Activity

36 36 Western Wildfire Summary Fire Name (County) FMAG # Acres burned % Contained Evacuations (Type) Structures Threatened Structures Destroyed Fatalities / Injuries Idaho (2) Halstead Fire (Custer County, ID) Not Requested 123,893 (+12,055) 7% Yes (Voluntary) 41700 / 4 Trinity Ridge Fire (Elmore County, ID) 5006-FM-ID August 15 144,430 (+5,464) 22% No (Evacuations Lifted) 1,041120 / 5 Montana (1) Nineteen Mile Fire (FINAL) (Jefferson County, MT) 5008-FM-MT August 29 4,141 (+1,141) 64% (+39) No (Evacuations Lifted) 80200 / 0 Nebraska (1) Region 23 Fire Complex (Dawes County) 5009-FM-NE August 30 87,55547% (+22) Yes (Mandatory) 45030 / 0 South Dakota (1) Welcome SD Fire (Shannon County) August 3111,5000%Yes17500 / 0

37 37 Welcome SD Fire, SD Fire Name Location Acres burned % Contained Est. Full ContainmentFMAG Structures Lost / Threatened Fatalities / Injuries Welcome SD Shannon11,5000% August 31, 20120 / 1750 / 0 Shannon County (pop 1,600) Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (7 communities threatened) Threatening 175 homes & businesses Mandatory evacuations reported 1 shelter open with 44 occupants SEOC not activated FEMA Region VIII monitoring Fire Perimeter as of Aug 18, 2012 (Source: InciWeb)

38 38 Pine Creek Fire, Montana Fire Name Location Acres burned % Contained Est. Full ContainmentFMAG Structures Lost / Threatened Fatalities / Injuries Pine Creek Gallatin Park Counties Gallatin National Park 9,3005%0%N/A0 / 0 Fire began August 29, located 9 miles south of Livingston, MT Park Counties (pop 15,469) /Gallatin (pop 8,612) Forest area closure in effect – Paradise Valley West Boulder River to forest boundary in Paradise Valley to south of Livingston to George Lake & East of Tumble Creek drainage. Temporary flight restriction (TFR) in place to safeguard aerial fire operations. Mandatory & voluntary evacuations reported 195 personnel assigned for fire-fighting efforts SEOC not activated FEMA Region VIII monitoring Fire Perimeter as of Aug 18, 2012 (Source: InciWeb) Counties Affected

39 39 Disaster Requests & Declarations Declaration Requests in Process Requests APPROVED (since last report) Requests DENIED (since last report) 1Date Requested00 NE – DR WildfiresAugust 28, 2012

40 40 Declaration Amendment Number Effective Date Amendment Action Amendment No. 3 FEMA-4080-DR-LA September 1, 2012 Adds 4 parishes for IA (already designated for emergency protective measures) Amendment No. 4 FEMA-4080-DR-LA September 1, 2012 Appoints Michael J Hall as the FCO of record for this disaster Amendment No. 2 FEMA-4081-DR-MS September 1, 2012 Adding 4 counties for IA (already designated for emergency protective measures) Disaster Amendments

41 41 FMAG Requests and Declarations Action (since last report)TotalFMAG No. and State Requests DENIED0 Requests APPROVED0 Requests Expected Next 24 Hours0None as of 1200 September 1 As of September 1, 201220122011* FMAGs Approved3790 FMAGs Denied1528 * Cumulative FMAG figures as of this date in 2011

42 42 DeployedDetailedAvailableNot AvailableTotal 21212237 OFDC Cadre Member Status Total AvailableType 1Type 2Type 3Type 4 13* 2*821 As of: 08/31/12 * All Type 1 FCOs are available unless deployed to a Level 1 event PositionsOn BoardAvailableDeployedPending Hire 105320 Federal Coordinating Officer Federal Disaster Recovery Coordinator

43 43 Open Field Offices as of September 2, 2012 Disaster Relief Fund (as of September 1, 2012) Balance $1.418B

44 44 Joint Preliminary Damage Assessments

45 45 MCOV Fleet / Deployment Status Fully Mission Capable53 Partially Mission Capable0 Non-Mission Capable4 Total Not Deployed39 MCOV FLEET STATUSMCOV DISASTER SUPPORT DEPLOYMENTS Location Units Assigned Available FMC Deployed Committed PMCNMCDR-StateOPCON En Route Unit Prep Open Request Notes: DC Atlanta2112801 DR-4078-OK 100 DC Cumberland10 00 DR-4080-LA 10006 DC Ft Worth1521003 MS-4081-ISB 300 DC Moffett66000 MS-4081-JFO 400 Holliston, MA11000 00 Denver, CO22000 000 Bothell, WA22000 000 000 TOTAL57351804 TOTAL 18006 Included in above totals, units en route for turn-in. Data as of: 09/02/12 @ 0400

46 46 Mission Status State Total Deployed Operational Mobile DRCs Pending DRCs Awaiting Assignment Command and Control Maintenance DR-4078-OK 1 1 DR-4080-LA 10 442 MS-4081-ISB 3 12 MS-4081-JFO 4 4 TOTAL1820840 Data as of: 09/02/12 @ 0400 Operational Disaster Recovery Center – Vehicles currently supporting DRC operations Pending DRC – Vehicles scheduled to support DRC operations Awaiting Assignment – Vehicles deployed - awaiting or in-between missions Command and Control – Vehicles supporting a non-Individual Assistance mission Maintenance – Vehicles deployed, but requiring maintenance MCOV Operational Status

47 47 Active IA Disasters Data as of: 09/02/12 @ 0700 IN 4058-DR WV 4059-DR 4061-DR MI FL 4068-DR # of DRs Legend Open Registration Period (60 days from Declaration, unless extended) IHP Active – IHP Assistance period remains open (18 Months from Declaration) IHP Closing Within 60 Days 4 37 7 LA 4080 - DR

48 48 IA Registration Statistics NPSC Call Data for September 1, 2012 Total NPSC Calls Answered (Helpline + Registration Intake)8,440 Average time to answer call15 seconds Cumulative as of September 2, 2012 @ 0130 DR # - StateRegistrations Approved Applicants Total HA Approved Total ONA Approved Total IHP Approved 4068 - FL16,7816,153$61,925,288$7,579,853$69,505,141 4078 - OK572212$8,240,062$796,522$9,036,584 4080 - LA40,079309$1,147,926$159,881$1,307,808 4081 - MS545Due to the late declaration, MS IHP data is unavailable at this time Totals57,4326,674$71,313,276$8,536,256$79,849,532 24 hour change+37,105+339+$48,123,713+$5,432,052+$53,555,765

49 49 IHP Referral Status & Awards Data includes the 48 IHP Active DRs # Max Grants = Applicants awarded maximum IHP ($30,200 as of FY2012) Data as of: 09/02/12 @ 0400

50 50 Housing Inspection Statistics * Only displaying inspectors for DRs that currently have open registration periods Data as of September 2, 2012 @ 0400 DR # - State Inspectors Inspections Assigned Inspections Completed Inspection % Complete Turnaround Time (Days) 4068 - FL813,60513,32397.9%1.8 4078 - OK130330099.0%1.6 4080 - LA38624,3061,0394.3%0.8 4081 - MSDue to the late declaration, MS housing inspection data is unavailable at this time TOTAL39538,21414,66238.4%1.7 24 hour change+386+24,306+1,039-59.6%-0.1

51 51 IMAT Status National Teams TeamStatusTeamStatusTeamStatus BLUE (East) LA WHITE (Central) MS RED (West) LA Regional Teams TeamStatusTeamStatusTeamStatus Region I Region VOHRegion IX-1 Region II Region VI-1LARegion IX-2 Region III VARegion VI-2OKRegion X Region IV-1 NC (DNC)Region VII Region IV-2 FLRegion VIII = Assigned/Deployed = Out-of-Service = Available/Mission Capable = Available/Partially Mission Capable

52 52 Urban Search & Rescue INCIDENT SUPPORT TEAMS (Red-White-Blue) – Monthly On Call Rotation JANFEBMARAPRMAYJUNJULAUGSEPOCTNOVDEC WESTCENTRALEAST TeamStatusTeamStatusTeamStatus CA-TF1AvailableAZ-TF1AvailableFL-TF1Available CA-TF2AvailableCO-TF1AvailableFL-TF2Available CA-TF3AvailableIN-TF1AvailableMA-TF1Available CA-TF4AvailableMO-TF1AvailableMD-TF1Available CA-TF5AvailableNE-TF1AvailableNY-TF1Available CA-TF6AvailableNM-TF1Non-operationalPA-TF1 Conditionally Available CA-TF7AvailableNV-TF1 Conditionally Available VA-TF1Available CA-TF8AvailableTN-TF1 Conditionally Available VA-TF2Available WA-TF1AvailableTX-TF1 Cache Rehab OH-TF1Available UT-TF1Available = Assigned/Deployed = Out-of-Service = Available/Mission Capable = Available/Partially Mission Capable

53 53 RRCC / Regional Watch Center Status

54 54 National Team Status

55 55 TED-EX Exercise Highlights (30 day forecast) DateExerciseEventCapability Focus Target Audience/ FEMA Participation Location 8/22DHS FMD TTXFPC Animal Disease Emergency InteragencyTBD 8/30NLE 12FEMA AAC Multiple All FEMA FEMA HQ, Washington, DC 9/6DHS FMD TTXTTX Animal Disease Emergency InteragencyTBD 9/17-18NLE 12AAM Multiple Interagency Kellog Conference Hotel Gallaudet Washington, DC 9/18-20Ardent Sentry 13Post IPC-IPR Multiple InteragencyColorado Springs 9/26-27Amber WavesWorkshop Multiple IA/KS/MO State Departments of Health, Agriculture and Natural Resources; EPA; A-Team; FDA; FEMA; USDA; DOE/NNSA Kansas City As of August 23, 2012

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