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Hurricane Katrina

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 Parking. Safety Briefing. SEOC LEVEL 1 0800 – 1800. EOC Staffing.

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Hurricane Katrina

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  1. Hurricane Katrina

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

  3. Fire Medical Stress Severe Weather Parking Safety Briefing

  4. SEOCLEVEL10800 – 1800

  5. EOC Staffing • STATE COORDINATING OFFICER – Craig Fugate • SERT CHIEF – Michael 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 – FEMA

  7. FEMA Up Next – SERT Chief

  8. SERT Chief Michael DeLorenzo Up Next – Meteorology

  9. Meteorology Ben Nelson

  10. Hurricane Ophelia – 75 mph Winds

  11. Hurricane Ophelia Afternoon Radar Loop

  12. Friday PM Weather Map

  13. Saturday AM Weather Map

  14. Monday AM Weather Map

  15. Up Next – Information & Planning

  16. Information & Planning David Crisp Up Next – Operations

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

  18. Holmes Jackson Escambia Santa Rosa Okaloosa Walton Gadsden Nassau Washington 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 Panhandle Area of Operations Levy Marion Volusia Response Indicators Citrus Lake Seminole Sumter Hernando Orange Pasco Sheltering Brevard Osceola Pinellas Polk Hillsborough Indian River No Shelters Open or on Standby Manatee Hardee Okeechobee St. Lucie Highlands DeSoto Sarasota Martin Shelters on Standby Glades Charlotte Lee Hendry Palm Beach Shelters Open Broward Collier Miani-Dade Mississippi 92 ARC shelters open, 9,506 Monroe

  19. Mississippi Operational Summary

  20. Mississippi Operational Summary

  21. Mississippi Updates 5 DRC are operational EMAC – 39 States, 16,596 personnel, $259,522,859 1289 of 1368 water systems water systems are operational Multi-agency Staging Area established for donations Burn ban – Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, ,George, Stone & Pearl River

  22. Planning Considerations Focus response efforts on: South Florida Panhandle Task Force Florida – Mississippi Shelterees from other states Tropical Storm Ophelia Keep the emergency worker safe. Emergency workers must go through “check-in.” Anticipate - What resources will likely be needed.

  23. Planning Considerations Fuel will be limited. Communicate – communicate – communicate. Unsafe and unsanitary work environment. Emergency workers should go through Debrief and Decontamination. Determine what resources are needed to handle Tropical Storm Ophelia. Report status information to ESF5. Up Next – Operations

  24. Operations Up Next – ESF 1&3

  25. Hurricane Katrina State IAP #21 Operational Period: 0700 09-16-05 to 0700 09-17-05 Up Next – ESF 1&3

  26. ESF 1&3 Transportation & Public Works Up Next – ESF 2

  27. ESF 2 Communications Up Next – ESF 4&9

  28. ESF 4&9 Firefighting and Search & Rescue Up Next – ESF 6

  29. ESF 6 Mass Care Up Next – ESF 8

  30. ESF 8 Health & Medical Up Next – ESF 10

  31. ESF 8 – Health & Medical • Current Operations • Mississippi has located all their active Tuberculosis cases and has confirmed that all are in Mississippi and receiving treatment. • Faith-based and FEMA-approved shelters are still open in Escambia, Okaloosa, and Bay. CHDs are providing support to some shelters. • Louisiana Hospital Association provided a list of patients transferred out of state that they are attempting to locate. Information copied to AHCA. • As of 9/15/05: 119 Florida health and medical staff are currently deployed to Mississippi. • 71 personnel are en-route from Stennis to Tallahassee. • 384 ESF8 personnel have been deployed since the beginning of this mission including 140 Emergency Medical Services (EMS) personnel. • Florida ESF8 anticipates no additional personnel will be deployed to Mississippi. • 203 open ESF8 EMAC missions as of 9/15/05. • ESF8 Operations to transition to OEO Office Monday, 9/19. • Environmental Health issues in Mississippi: • Preliminary hospital/ED surveillance indicated no significant problems with bloody diarrhea, CO poisoning, or meningitis/encephalitis. • Conducting follow up and new assessments of Mississippi shelters, feeding sites, and food establishments

  32. ESF 8 – Health & Medical • Unmet Needs • Continued need for better information on demobilization numbers, times, and dates to facilitate the demobilization processing. • Future Operations • Disengagement of all ESF 8 operations in Mississippi by September 29th Up Next – ESF 10

  33. ESF 10 Hazardous Materials Up Next – ESF 11 Up Next – ESF 11

  34. ESF 11 Food & Water Up Next – ESF 12

  35. ESF 11 – Food & Water • Current Issues • 4-person ESF 11 LSA team at Stennis. Working missions. • 2 demobilized and en route to Tallahassee • 151 trucks of water delivered into storage • 50 trucks additional trucks due within 24 hrs. • 39 trucks of ice delivered into storage • Unmet Needs • None at this time • Future Operations • Monitor staffing and resource requirements at Stennis • Demobilize LSA team members as appropriate Up Next – ESF 12

  36. ESF 12 Energy Up Next – ESF 13 Up Next – ESF 13

  37. ESF 12 – Energy • Current Issues • Fuels • Panhandle Bulk Fuels (Ports of Pensacola, Niceville, Freeport and Panama City). • 8.6 million gallons available for distribution, 6.2 million gallons within 3 days, 10.5 million gallons within 9 days • Retail • Escambia County: 75% of the facilities surveyed reported having plenty of fuel, while 17% were low and 8% were out. • Santa Rosa County:  83% of the facilities surveyed reported having plenty of fuel and 17% were out. • Okaloosa County:  72% of the facilities surveyed reported having plenty of fuel, while 14% were low and 14% were out. • Washington and Walton Counties:  75% of the facilities surveyed reported having plenty of fuel, while 13% were low and 12% were out. • Bay County:  55% of the facilities surveyed reported having plenty of fuel, while 36% were low and 9% were out. • Holmes County: 75% had plenty of fuel, 25% were low.  • Jackson and Calhoun Counties:  83% of the facilities surveyed reported having plenty of fuel, and 17% were low. 

  38. ESF 12 – Energy • Current Issues • Along I-10 corridor: In Escambia County, 85% of the facilities surveyed had plenty of fuel, while 15% were low. From Santa Rosa County to Jackson County: 38% of the facilities surveyed reported having plenty of fuel, while 38% were low and 24% were completely out. • Electricity (see Tracker #238 for details) • Mississippi - 6 counties receiving Florida assistance. • Total outages - 9,513 (Hancock - 850, Harrison - 2,300, Pearl River - 4,713 and Stone - 1,650. All Co-op customers.) • 4.0% of the 6 counties outages • Cannot receive power - 26,226 • See EMAC Mississippi Tracker #2378 for information on how evacuees from other states that are moving into Florida can receive financial help with security deposits for electricity, natural gas and propane. • Unmet Needs • None at this time • Future Operations • Continue supporting fuel and electricity issues on Katrina and EMAC-Mississippi. Up Next – ESF 13

  39. ESF 13 Military Support Up Next – ESF 14

  40. ESF 13 – Military Support • Current Issues • 758 Soldiers & Airmen on Title 32 for Katrina • Cost: $2,627,221 • Joint Task Force ENGINEERS (MS): 73 Airmen & Soldiers (202d RHS & 269th EN Co) • Task Force 1-265th conducting security/HA missions in Bay St. Louis and Hancock County. • Support from 708th CS Co, 144th Trans Co, 146th SC Bn, A/161st Med Co • Task Force Spoon: 10 Soldiers (Cooks) at Gulfport, MS • Task Force 83 (FL)/SQM: Forward Logistics Element (FLE) Pensacola Armory • Unmet Needs • None at this time • Future Operations • Sustain current operations Up Next – ESF 14

  41. ESF 14 Public Information Up Next – ESF 15

  42. ESF 15 Volunteers & Donations Up Next – ESF 16

  43. ESF 15 – Volunteers & Donations • Current Issues • De-briefed 1 team member returning from MS • Volunteer Hotline call volume continues to decrease • Unmet Needs • None at this time • Future Operations • Acting as advisors to The Corporation for National & Community Service Up Next – ESF 16

  44. ESF 16 Law Enforcement Up Next – ESF 17

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