1 / 52

Hurricane Jeanne

Hurricane Jeanne. Morning Briefing October 1, 2004. SEOC LEVEL 1 Operational Hours 0700 – 1900 or as missions require. SERT Chief. Eve Rainey Deder Lane. Up Next – Meteorology. Meteorology. Amber Dooley. Current Surface Chart. North Florida Rivers. Impacts:

africa
Download Presentation

Hurricane Jeanne

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hurricane Jeanne Morning Briefing October 1, 2004

  2. SEOCLEVEL1Operational Hours0700 – 1900or as missions require

  3. SERT Chief Eve Rainey Deder Lane Up Next – Meteorology

  4. Meteorology Amber Dooley

  5. Current Surface Chart

  6. North Florida Rivers

  7. Impacts: 88.0 - I-75 will be closed. 86.5 - The railroad bridge at the gage site floods. 84.5 - U.S. 41 will be closed. 83.0 - Sewage treatment plant in jeopardy. Inform Florida State EOC at this height. 81.0 - Columbia county begins evacuation of residents. Route 441 is under water and closed. Area known as Suwannee Valley is inundated and secondary roads are closed. Flooding begins at Stephen F. Foster State Park. Top 5 Historical Crests(1) 88.02 ft on 04/10/1973 (2) 85.40 ft on 04/10/1984 (3) 85.19 ft on 04/05/1948 (4) 84.86 ft on 02/27/1998 (5) 84.36 ft on 09/17/1964

  8. Impacts: 30.0 - MAJOR DAMAGE AND DISRUPTION TO THE COMMUNITY IS EXPECTED. ROADS WILL BE CUT OFF AND MANY HOMES WILL BE SURROUNDED BY WATER. BOAT WASH DAMAGE TO HOMES WILL BE SEVERE. 26.0 - DAMAGE TO HOMES AT LOW ELEVATION AS WELL AS BASEMENT AREAS UNDERNEATH HOMES ON STILTS IS LIKELY. Top 3 Historical Crests(1) 36.20 ft on 09/16/1964 (2) 32.98 ft on 02/26/1998 (3) 27.21 ft on 03/15/2003

  9. Central Florida Rivers

  10. Impacts: 9.0 - ARROWHEAD SUBDIVISION FLOODS WITH WATER IN HOMES 8.0 - WATER APPROACHES HOUSE FOUNDATIONS IN ARROWHEAD SUBDIVISION Top 5 Historical Crests(1) 13.28 ft on 04/05/1960 (2) 12.05 ft on 10/10/1960 (3) 11.63 ft on 07/08/1934 (4) 11.17 ft on 09/26/1933 (5) 10.58 ft on 03/21/1998

  11. Impacts: 7.0 - Water moving around sea wall around Lake Monroe rises into grassy areas around the sea wall and starts to encroach on Seminole Blvd. 6.8 - Water begins moving over sea wall around Lake Monroe in Sanford and entering parking lot of Central Florida Regional Hospital Top 5 Historical Crests(1) 8.50 ft on 10/15/1953 (2) 8.14 ft on 10/11/1960 (3) 7.32 ft on 10/13/1948 (4) 7.30 ft on 09/28/1945 (5) 7.19 ft on 09/21/1964

  12. Lake Okeechobee: 17.34’

  13. Rainfall Forecast: Friday AM – Saturday AM

  14. Current View of the Tropics Up Next – Information & Planning

  15. Information & Planning David Crisp

  16. Hurricane Jeanne State/Federal Joint Incident Action Plan #8 State Emergency Response Team Operational Period: 1400 09-30-04 to 1400 10-01-04 • Monitor Selected Field Teams • Provide assets and commodities • Monitor Flood evacuation plan • Develop protective action recommendations • Monitor safety and security issues • Develop restoration process for Critical Infrastructure • Transition to Recovery General Operating Objectives: Issues: • Shortage of fuel tenders • Infrastructure water, power, transportation, schools and healthcare systems • Roads limited by flood conditions • Hurricane Impacted Infrastructure • Limited resources • Unemployment compensation, electronic banking and food stamps Incident Action Planning Meeting 3:00 PM in Room 130d

  17. Holmes Jackson Escambia Santa Rosa Okaloosa Walton Nassau Washington Gadsden Calhoun Hamilton Jefferson Leon Bay Madison Duval Columbia Wakulla Suwannee Baker Liberty Taylor Union Clay Gulf Franklin Lafayette Bradford St. Johns Gilchrist Alachua Putnam Dixie Flagler Levy Marion Volusia Citrus Lake Seminole Sumter Hernando Severe Damage Orange Pasco Brevard Osceola Pinellas Polk Hillsborough Moderate Damage Indian River Manatee Hardee Okeechobee St. Lucie Highlands DeSoto Sarasota Martin Minimal Damage Glades Charlotte Lee Hendry Palm Beach Area of Impact Broward Collier Miani-Dade Monroe

  18. Hurricane Ivan State/Federal Joint Incident Action Plan #23 State Emergency Response Team Operational Period: 0700 09-30-2004 to 0700 10-01-2004 General Operating Objectives: Identify Life Safety Support to the Affected Areas. Identify Life Sustaining Support to the Affected Areas. Coordinate positioning of response and recovery capabilities/assets/teams. Implement the restoration process for Critical Infrastructure. Assist counties in the recovery process. Develop a Temporary Housing Strategy. Issues: Fuel supply and distribution concerns Infrastructure Water, Power, Transportation, Schools, Healthcare systems Re-entry into impacted areas Maintaining food, water, ice Maintaining security Maintain Additional Distribution system Unemployment compensation, electronic banking and food stamps Maintaining Mass Feeding Incident Action Planning Meeting 3:00 PM in Room 130d

  19. Holmes Jackson Escambia Santa Rosa Okaloosa Washington Walton Gadsden Calhoun Jefferson Leon Bay Madison Wakulla Liberty Taylor Gulf Franklin Dixie Hurricane Ivan Area of Operations

  20. Indicators of Response 88% 89% Up Next – Operations

  21. Operations Chief Up Next – Emergency Services

  22. Emergency Services

  23. EMERGENCY SERVICES BRANCH: OCT. 1, 2004

  24. ESF 4 & 9: Fire/Rescue

  25. Division of Forestry

  26. ESF 8: Health & Medical

  27. ESF 10: Hazardous Materials

  28. ESF 16: Law Enforcement Up Next – Human Services

  29. Human Services Up Next – ESF 4&9

  30. Human Services • Current Operations – • 38 shelters - 2000+ evacuees • Feeding - 13 kitchens + 3 commercial catering units • USDA food meals - 1M+ (Ivan & Jeanne) • Baby food & supplies - 63,000 cases (all storms) • Water & Ice - in reasonably good supply • Dairy farms hit hard in Okeechobe, St. Lucie & Martin Counties • ESF 17 working carcass disposal issues & assistance issues • DRCs - 31 open • $62M+ in donations • Unmet Needs – • Being addressed as identified • Future Operations – • Continue mass feeding • Continue sheltering • Continue Vol & Donations Support Up Next – Infrastructure

  31. Infrastructure

  32. Infrastructure • Current Operations – • Providing assistance with traffic control equipment & restoration, debris clearance, flood-fighting, and emergency telecom connections & service • Supporting fuel requests for State & County Emergency Response Operations • 1,080 customers reported without electrical service in H. Ivan impacted areas (down from 20,586 in one day) • ETR: Msg# 1191 • 435,300 customers reported out in the H. Jeanne impacted areas (down from 3.5 million in four days) • ETR: Msg# 2402 • Unmet Needs – • Diesel and gasoline fuel supply and distribution, especially tenders • Future Operations – • Continue to monitor transportation, flood-fighting, electricity, fuel and telecom system • Transition to recovery Up Next – Military Support

  33. Military Support Up Next – ESF 8

  34. Military Support • Current Operations – • 2570 Guardsmen on State Active Duty • TF 417 conducting Humanitarian/Security missions in Panhandle • TF's 32 & 53 conducting missions in Red and Yellow Zones (Jeanne impact area) • Debris removal, flood support in Winter Haven, help schools get open in St Lucie/Indian River • TF Phoenix Supporting LSA operations in Ocala and West Palm Beach • LNOs still in affected counties • Aircraft and crews supporting recon and logistics missions • EMACs w/LA ARNG (205th Eng Bn and Provisional Spt Sqd); • AV from GA departed, AL departs 2 Oct, KY departs 4 Oct; Comm from MO dropped from 4 to 2 systems

  35. Military Support • Unmet Needs – • None at this time • Future Operations – • Continue Security, Humanitarian and LSA Operations. • Staff and support Aviation request as needed • Right mix of Equipment and Troops, continue to stand down units and handoff to follow on personnel Up Next – Logistics

  36. Logistics Up Next – Finance & Administration

  37. Finance & Administration Up Next – Public Information

  38. Public Information Up Next – Recovery

  39. Recovery Up Next – SERT Chief

More Related