Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Hurricane Katrina. Please move conversations into ESF rooms and busy out all phones. Thanks for your cooperation. Silence All Phones and Pagers.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Hurricane Katrina. Please move conversations into ESF rooms and busy out all phones. Thanks for your cooperation. Silence All Phones and Pagers."— Presentation transcript:

1 Hurricane Katrina

2 Please move conversations into ESF rooms and busy out all phones. Thanks for your cooperation. Silence All Phones and Pagers

3 Fire Medical Stress Severe Weather Safety Briefing

4 SEOC LEVEL 1 24 Hour Operations

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

6 State Coordinating Officer Craig Fugate Up Next – SERT Chief

7 Mike DeLorenzo Up Next – Meteorology SERT Chief

8 Meteorology Ben Nelson

9 Category 1 Hurricane Katrina – 75 mph Sustained Winds

10 Hurricane Katrina – 9 AM

11

12

13

14 SFWMD 24 Hour Rainfall Totals

15 Katrina Impacts in SE Florida and Keys 95 mph wind gust at Key Biscayne 87 mph wind gust at the NHC Doppler Radar Rainfall Estimates of 5-9 inches from Perrine southward. Rainfall maximum of 11.61 in Cutler Ridge Additional rainfall of 1-4 inches possible today Possible Tornado touchdown in Marathon with damages to aircraft.

16

17

18 Forecast Weather Map – 8 PM Sat

19 Hurricane Katrina – 7 AM

20 Forecast Exit of TS Force Winds

21 Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Fri – 8 AM Sat

22 Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Sat – 8 AM Sat

23 Rainfall Forecast: 8 AM Sun – 8 AM Mon

24 Forecast Onset of TS Force Winds Up Next – Information & Planning

25 David Crisp Information & Planning Up Next – Operations

26 Escambia Santa Rosa Walton Okaloosa Washington Bay Holmes Jackson Calhoun Liberty Leon Franklin Wakulla Gadsden Gulf Jefferson Madison Taylor Suwannee Hamilton Lafayette Dixie Columbia Gilchrist Levy Nassau Duval Baker ClayUnion Bradford Alachua Marion Pasco Orange Seminole St. JohnsFlagler Putnam Volusia Brevard Lake Hernando Citrus Pinellas Hillsborough Osceola Polk Sumter Charlotte DeSoto Lee Collier Hardee Hendry Highlands Okeechobee Indian River Palm Beach Martin Broward Miani-Dade Monroe Glades Manatee Sarasota St. Lucie Vulnerable Populations 1,839,673 Area of Operations

27 TypeMinorModerateSevereDestroyedTotal Residential119,35629,4381,586339150,719 Other2,4381,25926363,967 Total121,79430,6981,849344154,685 HAZUS Model Forecast Displaced Households 13,627

28 Two hit storm - Focus response efforts on south Florida, plan for Panhandle hit. Residual effects from the 2004 Hurricane Season and Hurricane Dennis. Evacuation during inclement weather. Fuel availability. Lengthy impact period. Severe flooding – related issues. Assessment reporting. Planning Factors

29 EOC Activation Status

30 Local State of Emergency

31 Government & School Closings

32 Up Next – Operations Shelters

33 Leo Lachat Operations Up Next – Emergency Services

34 Operating Objectives Operational Period: 0700 08-26-05 to 0700 08-27-05 Mission: To support county operations and the provision of public information. Areas of Operation: Florida Keys and Southern Florida General Operating Objectives: 1. Continue Activation Level 1. 2. Support Evacuation Operations. 3. Support Human Services operations. 4. Continue Logistical operations. 5. Implement and monitor Search and Rescue Planning. 6. Prepare for severe flooding. Planning Assumptions: 1.Evacuation in inclement weather that will inhibit response. 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. Up Next – Emergency Services

35 Emergency Services Up Next – Human Services

36 Emergency Services Current Issues ESF 4 & 9 Mobilizing DOF Red IMT to State LSA DOF IMT (Type 3) on site at old Badcock Warehouse (Live Oak) 1 Strike Team (5 ALS Fire Rescue Units and 1 Leader) mobilizing to Miami-Dade County when Tropical Storm Force winds subside ESF 8 2 Miami-Dade Hospitals w/o power ( Jackson South and Homestead Hospital) 2 Nursing Homes flooded (Miami Shores and Gulf Crest) ESF 10 Brief Regulatory liaison Conduct State Park assessments in Keys

37 Up Next – Human Services Emergency Services Current Issues (continued) ESF 16 Waterway assessments will be undertaken as soon as weather/wind conditions permit safe flights Regional State Law Enforcement available at first light for response and assessments New Construction overpass at NW 97th Ave collapsed onto SR-836/Dolphin Expressway closing segment to traffic 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 Prepare to respond and support counties in South Florida Preparing for second hit it Panhandle

38 Human Services Up Next – ESF 4&9 Up Next – Infrastructure

39 Human Services Current Issues ESF-6: Shelter Operations 1,363 Meals have been fed 35 shelters open with a population of 2001 evacuees County breakdown Broward County: 19 Shelters with 1007 evacuees Collier County: 2 Shelters with 42 evacuees Glades County: 1 shelter with 0 evacuees Martin County: 2 Shelters with 67 evacuees Miami-Dade: 1 Shelter with 200 evacuees Okeechobee County: 1 Shelter with 20 evacuees Palm Beach County: 9 Shelters with 666 evacuees

40 Human Services Up Next – Infrastructure Current Issues (continued) ESF-11: 15 trucks of ice 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 ESF-17: Monitoring for animal issue requests 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 the shipment water and ice from the storage facilities into the impacted areas ESF-15: Continue to coordinate and manage volunteer operations and donations ESF-17: Anticipate response to animal related issues due to flooding and prepare to support possible requests for mosquito control.

41 Infrastructure Up Next – Logistics

42 Infrastructure Current Issues ESF1&3 Traffic Counters activated Water management Districts contacted, staff have arrived SFWMD reports 12” rainfall, emergency pumps functioning and discharging under emergency guidelines Army Corp of Engineers contacted, staff have arrived Sandbag inventory requested by district Aerial and ground recon underway Debris clearance teams at work State & Federal roads clear; except 997 Ave and 836 (Dolphin Expwy) MIA closed; Port Everglades closed ESF2 Supporting recon missions Monitoring impact to communications infrastructures (trk 42) Activating conference call lines Supporting liaison deployment SLERS system 100% operational. Deployed two ESF-2 personnel LSA at south Florida Fairground. Deployed 14 cell phones. Activated 4 conference lines. Process service agreements for LSA communications set-up

43 Infrastructure Current Issues (continued) ESF12 - FUEL Supplies in the impacted area are at normal or above normal status. Product is being distributed in area as normal. Refueling schedule may be 2 hours behind normal delivery (presumably due to traffic). Major haulers are sending additional carriers into the region to provide support. Panic buying in Miami-Dade area created long lines. Some retail outlets have run out of 87 octane (perhaps 10% of outlets) maybe half of those are out of all grades. Local EOCs have been spot checked and report adequate fuel for first responders. ESF 12 - 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. FPL reports Miami Dade-705,000, Broward-489,000, Palm Beach- 23,000, Monroe-4,500 (co-op), Homestead-16,425 customers out of power as of 6:45 AM. [Friday (8/26/05)] FPL reports that in addition to their 3,028 workers, 4,122 out of state workers are in the state with more to come into their 11 staging areas. Progress Energy Florida has out of state crews coming in from Kentucky, Virginia and Ohio.

44 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.

45 Logistics Up Next – Recovery Up Next – EMAC Mutual Aid

46 Current Issues State LSA is being established at the South Florida Fairgrounds today, Friday 8/26/05 Staffed by FDEM, FLNG, FL DoF, DOACS, DoH and DMS personnel. FEMA will assign a Type III Federal IMT to support federal assets at State LSA Showers and feeding for LSA and truck personnel is being provided Prepared to establish 30 County PODs Saturday 8/27/05 staffed by FLNG personnel Some may transition to Comfort Stations on Monday or go under county staffing management State Mobilization Area continues to operate at the State Farmers Market in White Springs Logistics

47 Up Next – EMAC Mutual Aid Current Issues (continued) Water continues to be being uploaded from Live Oak Warehouse, and Ice being uploaded from Polk County ice houses tonight, and are enroute after midnight to the State LSA. FHP providing escort services for water trucks from State Mobilization Area to State LSA beginning after midnight. FEMA continues the staging of resources at Homestead ARB, Lakeland Regional Airport and Saufley Field Tracker Messages: #175 & 187: Forecast Models #202: Logistics IAP and Planning Meeting 9:00 AM Unmet Needs None at this time Future Operations Planning for re-landfall in the Panhandle Logistics

48 EMAC Mutual Aid Up Next – Finance & Administration

49 EMAC Mutual Aid Up Next – Finance & Administration Current Issues Unmet Needs Future Operations

50 Finance & Administration Up Next – Public Information

51 Finance & Administration Up Next – Public Information Current Issues Assisting with deployment of staff Issued several Purchase Orders for equipment for 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 field staff, LSA's and EOC

52 Public Information Up Next – Recovery

53 Public Information Up Next – Recovery Current Issues Unmet Needs Future Operations

54 Recovery Up Next – SERT Chief

55 Recovery Up Next – SERT Chief Current Issues Unmet Needs Future Operations

56 SERT Chief Mike DeLorenzo

57 Next Briefing August 26 at 1830 PM ESF Briefing


Download ppt "Hurricane Katrina. Please move conversations into ESF rooms and busy out all phones. Thanks for your cooperation. Silence All Phones and Pagers."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google