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National Weather Service Flood Inundation Mapping A New Way A New Wayof Looking at Flooding Diane Cooper Hydrologic Services Program Manager NWS - Southern.

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Presentation on theme: "National Weather Service Flood Inundation Mapping A New Way A New Wayof Looking at Flooding Diane Cooper Hydrologic Services Program Manager NWS - Southern."— Presentation transcript:

1 National Weather Service Flood Inundation Mapping A New Way A New Wayof Looking at Flooding Diane Cooper Hydrologic Services Program Manager NWS - Southern Region Headquarters November 7, 2007

2 National Weather Service Today’s Topics History of NWS Flood Severity Inundation MappingHistory of NWS Flood Severity Inundation Mapping How Standards for the Maps were identified.How Standards for the Maps were identified. Online DemonstrationOnline Demonstration Funding for the project.Funding for the project.

3 National Weather Service Advanced Hydrologic Prediction Services (AHPS) Objectives More precise forecasts at many time-scales Information to make risk based decisions Easy product access Visually oriented products

4 National Weather Service Data Currently Available for All AHPS Points   3-tier, impact based, flood severity scale of minor, moderate, and major flooding categories.   Historical Crests information. Scroll down  Low Water Records.  Flood Impacts at particular stages. http://www.weather.gov/ahps/

5 National Weather Service Customers are telling us they…. are familiar with NWS flood severity categoriesare familiar with NWS flood severity categories find them usefulfind them useful do not want changes to the existing flood severity indicesdo not want changes to the existing flood severity indices BUT…..they need a more intuitive way to communicate a persons Risk from a Flood.BUT…..they need a more intuitive way to communicate a persons Risk from a Flood. Hence…..Flood Inundation graphics (maps)

6 Graphical Flood Impact Information Graphical Flood Impact Information Partnering with NC Floodplain Mapping Program Office, FEMA, and USGS to develop prototype user-requested graphics to better convey flood threat A 2-Dimensional Way to depict the 3-Dimensional (real life) impact We “add” an overlay to existing base maps

7 National Weather Service How Can this “New Way” of Displaying Information Help Decision Makers? "The problem for our emergency responders during flooding is that we rush over our floodplain maps but they are basically a 100 year storm event that rarely informs the expected flooding from a particular storm event." Floodplain Manager, Baltimore Area Provides a one stop shop for Emergency Managers, Fire, Police and General public to better understand the impact of a flood. Those individuals can make quicker and more informed decisions of : where to close roads, where to evacuate, where to sandbag for contingency planning or in the heat of the battle.

8 National Weather Service Demonstration of Web Page Goldsboro NC

9 National Weather Service What about FEMA’s Map Mod Program? FEMA is updating their FIRM’s( FEMA Flood Insurance Rate Maps) with a goal of:  Producing flood hazard layer in a seamless, county-wide GIS format that still provides flood severity information based on the probability of occurrence for a particular flood.  Providing maps and data in digital format (DFIRM) in adherence to established GIS Data Capture Standards Legacy FIRMS originally developed 30+ years ago. New DFIRMS, which incorporated any updated modeling. http://www.fema.gov/plan/prevent/fhm/mm_main.shtm

10 National Weather Service NOAA and FEMA Partnership Partnering to Communicate Flood Risk FEMA providing updated Digital Flood Insurance Risk Maps (DFIRMS) NWS developing inundation maps to show the potential area covered by flood waters at a given stage/flow They have identified ways to leverage each others ongoing activities and develop map inundation libraries at NWS service locations. Subcommittee on Hydrology Newsletter; Volume 1, Issue 2, March 2007 http://acwi.gov/hydrology/index.html Floods are a National Issue Goal provide maps that not only convey flood risk but also flood severity and damage impacts

11 National Weather Service Other Partners Involved USGS (provides the real-time and historical Gage information.) Corps of Engineers (mainly involved with Map Mod and the modeling component.) State and Local Communities (Assisting in Securing Funds and identifying potential locations) Water Shed Concepts through EarthData International (company that has been contract to identify the map guidelines and is producing the NWS component of the project.)

12 National Weather Service Partnering to Reduce Costs and Improve Efficiency Cost per county average for updating FIS and maps: ~$300 - 400 K Additional cost to complete one inundation map library as part of the FIS: $5 – 6 K (~1-2% cost increase) Cost doubles and time increases if inundation map library is created after FIS is completed: $11 - 12K Developing inundation libraries in conjunction with FIS yields significant user benefit for small incremental cost. Efficiency goes up Costs go down

13 National Weather Service What It Takes To Produce The Inundation Maps NWS Flood Severity Inundation Mapping Standards and Methodologies Contract #EA 133C- 05-CQ-1051 Task Order #2) Provides information including:  Standards for topographic and base data  Vertical Datums  Hydraulic modeling methods  Map Scales and layout

14 National Weather Service Mapped Locations and Short Term Activities. October 2007   17 Sites near Raleigh, NC. (Hurricane Floyd Funding) Summer 2008 35 NWS Southern Region forecast points in 4 Gulf Coast States (Hurricane Katrina Funding)

15 National Weather Service How Can We Expand to More Locations?   Hone in on Future FEMA Map Modernization Areas   Look for opportunities with Corps of Engineers downstream study areas   Identify areas of ongoing or planned Coastal Areas and Dynamic Modeling studies   Engage Local and State partners to identify higher profile locations an provide financial support for the project Once the Hydrologic and Hydraulic modeling is complete it is an extra 3 to 6K to produce these graphics for NWS AHPS.

16 National Weather Service Recent Media Coverage One minute Weather Channel Clip

17 National Weather Service Who Can I Contact To Learn More Brian Boyd, NWS – Morristown TNBrian.Boyd@noaa.gov Brian.Boyd@noaa.gov Jason Elliott, NWS – Huntsville, ALJason.Elliott@noaa.gov Jason.Elliott@noaa.gov James LaRosa, NWS – Nashville, TNJames.Larosa@noaa.gov James.Larosa@noaa.gov Gene Rench, NWS – Memphis, TNGene.Rench@noaa.gov Gene.Rench@noaa.gov Dave Reed NWS – LMRFCDave.Reed@noaa.gov Dave.Reed@noaa.gov Ben Weiger, NWS – Southern Region HQBen.Weiger@noaa.gov Ben.Weiger@noaa.gov Diane Cooper, NWS –Southern Region HQDiane.Cooper@noaa.gov Diane.Cooper@noaa.gov Victor Hom, NWS - HQ Victor.Hom@noaa.gov Victor.Hom@noaa.gov


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