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BLAINE COUNTY MULTI-HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE

BLAINE COUNTY MULTI-HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE. Contractor: Tetra Tech, Inc. Daphne Digrindakis 406-475-2648. WHAT IS MITIGATION?.

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BLAINE COUNTY MULTI-HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE

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  1. BLAINE COUNTY MULTI-HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE Contractor: Tetra Tech, Inc. Daphne Digrindakis 406-475-2648

  2. WHAT IS MITIGATION? Mitigation is a sustainable action that will reduce or eliminate injury to citizens, damages to structures and allow continuity of critical society function. Types of mitigation projects include: • Property Protection • Structural • Prevention • Emergency Services • Natural Resource Protection • Public Education and Awareness

  3. WHY HAVE A MULTI-HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN? • Required by FEMA in order to receive mitigation funds after a declared disaster (HMGP), Public Assistance (PA) C-G. • $100 million available annually through competitive grants for hazard mitigation projects through: • Hazard Mitigation Assistance grant program (HMGP) • Pre-Disaster Mitigation (PDM) grants program • Flood Mitigation Assistance (FMA) grants program

  4. APROACH FOR2018 MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE • Review each section of the 2012 PDM Plan • Implement planning process for public involvement • (website: www.countypdm.com / password: Chinook) • Review recent plans and studies • Update hazard profiles and identify any new hazards • Update critical facilities • Update risk assessment • Update mitigation goals, objectives & projects • Update capability assessment • Update plan maintenance procedures • Formally adopt plan

  5. 2012 PLAN REVIEW SECTION 1.0 - INTRODUCTION Blaine County first completed a Pre-Disaster Mitigation (PDM) Plan in 2006. This PDM Plan was updated in 2012. Hazard Mitigation Plans must be updated every 5 years to remain eligible for disaster funding. Must be adopted by resolution by County and Cities. New FEMA guidance for completing PDM Plans in 2013. Multi-Hazard Mitigation Plan instead of PDM.

  6. 2012 PLAN REVIEWSECTION 2.0 - PLANNING PROCESS • Project Stakeholders • County and City of Chinook and Harlem staff, response personnel, school districts, medical, local organizations, state, federal, non-profits, businesses • PDM Planning Team • Jurisdictions wishing to adopt plan must participate • Conference calls/planning meetings • Review of Plans and Studies • Public Meetings • Project Website • www.countypdm.com. Password: Chinook • Plan Review

  7. REVIEW OF PLANS & STUDIES • Plans with Mitigation Considerations • County and City Growth Policies • Subdivision Regulations • Zoning Ordinances • Building Codes • Flood Mitigation Plan • Community Wildfire Protection Plan • Analyze Development Trends • Determine what hazards future development projects are exposed to.

  8. 2012 PLAN REVIEWSECTION 3.0 – COMMUNITY PROFILE • Physical Setting • Climate • Critical Facilities and Infrastructure • Water and Wastewater, Utilities, Fire Protection • Population Trends • Housing Stock • Economy and Socioeconomics • Land Use and Future Development

  9. 2012 PLAN REVIEWSECTION 4.1 – RISK ASSESSMENT • Natural, Man-Made, and Technological Hazards most likely to cause a disaster in the County. • Hazards that have the potential to cause fatalities/injuries or property damage. • Use Calculated Priority Risk Index (CPRI) to Re-Prioritize Hazards (see handout). • Probability - Highly likely to unlikely • Severity/Magnitude - catastrophic to negligible • Warning Time - < 6 hours to > 24 hours • Duration - < 6 hours to > one week

  10. 2012 PLAN REVIEWHAZARD IDENTIFICATION & RANKING Wildfire Hazardous Material Incidents Transportation Accidents Flooding Dam Failure Severe Winter Weather Severe Summer Weather and Drought Structure Fire

  11. 2018 MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE HAZARD PROFILES • Identify Additional Hazards to Include in Plan • Communicable Disease, Terrorism, Cyber Security • Profile 8 Hazards in Plan • Organized in Plan by priority • Some hazards can be combined into one profile • Lower priority hazards included in Plan appendix • Each Hazard Profile to Include • Description and History • Vulnerability and Area of Impact • Probability and Magnitude • Future Development • Implications of Climate Change

  12. 2018 MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE RISK ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGY • GIS layers of hazard areas • Some hazards have uniform exposure across county • Analyze buildings at risk from various hazards • Critical facility locations and insured values. • Dept. Revenue parcel data of locations and values of commercial & residential properties. Linked to NRIS Structures database with locations of building stock. • Using GIS – intersect building stock/critical facilities with hazard areas • Determine number and value of buildings at risk • Population exposure – total in hazard area, over 65, under 18

  13. 2018 MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE HAZARD-BY-HAZARD REVIEW For Each Hazard: • What significant hazard events have occurred since last PDM Plan update? • Where are the problem areas in the County? • Has County received any FEMA grants to complete mitigation projects? • What mitigation projects has County completed since last PDM Plan was completed? • Capability limitations for completing mitigation projects?

  14. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEWSECTION 4.2 - WILDFIRE • Typically occur in summer due to low rainfall, high temperatures, low humidity and thunderstorms. • More than 50 fires over 100 acres 1990-2011. • 1990 Veterans Fire – 22,420 acres from burning dump • 1991 Blaine C Fire - 9,300 acres from lightning • 2006 Maggie Fire - 8,000 acres from lightning • 2006 Howard Fire - 5,154 acres from lightning • 2012 Outhouse Fire – 12,00 acres from railroad • Vulnerability to agricultural economy & WUI • Future Development • Subdivision regulations require consideration of placement of structures, on-site water supply, ingress/egress, covenants

  15. WILDFIRE HAZARD AREA

  16. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEW SECTION 4.3 - HAZARDOUS MATERIAL INCIDENTS • Chemicals and petroleum products at fixed facilities and regularly transported through area via highways, railroads, pipelines. • Five haz-mat spillsin Blaine County 1993-2011. • Meth labs a concern.

  17. HAZARDOUS MATERIAL INCIDENT HAZARD AREA

  18. CHINOOKHAZARDOUS MATERIAL INCIDENT HAZARD AREA

  19. HARLEMHAZARDOUS MATERIAL INCIDENT HAZARD AREA

  20. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEWSECTION 4.4 - TRANSPORTATION ACCIDENTS • Highway Accidents • About 2,500 vehicles on U.S. Highway 2 between Chinook and Harlem each day. • 695 accidents with 31 fatalitiesbetween 2002-2011. • Railroad Accidents • BNSF, Amtrak – 35 trains/day through Chinook • 1975-2011 in Blaine County • 24 accidents at RR crossings with 6 fatalities • 18 derailments or collisions with 1 fatality and 39 injuries • Trains block crossings hindering emerg. response • Aviation Accidents • Nov. 1992 – USAF cargo planes collided north of Harlem with 13 fatalities.

  21. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEWSECTION 4.5 - FLOODING • Riverine floods, ice jams, flash floods • Mid-Winter/Spring due to snowmelt and heavy rains • History • 1880, 1888, 1899, 1906, 1912, 1923, 1943, 1952, 1953, 1978, 1986 • Milk River, 30-Mile Creek • FEMA disaster declarations in 1986, 1996, 2011 • Floodplain Management • DFIRMs available for portions of Blaine County. • NFIP in County, Chinook, and Harlem. • Do not participate in CRS program.

  22. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEWSECTION 4.5 - FLOODING • Losses: 1969-2004 • 2 fatalities; $2.5M property damage; $8.3K crop damage • Vulnerability to Property within Flood Hazard Area • Future Development • Subdivision regulations prevent development in floodplain.

  23. FLOOD HAZARD AREA

  24. CHINOOK FLOOD HAZARD AREA

  25. HARLEM FLOOD HAZARD AREA

  26. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEWSECTION 4.6 - DAM FAILURE • 3 High Hazard Dams in Blaine Co. and one in Hill Co. that could impact Blaine Co. residents • Dry Fork Dam on Dry Fk Creek, Anita Dam on Battle Creek, BR-12 Dam on 15-Mile Creek, and Fresno Dam on Milk River • Losses • BR-12 and upstream dam on same drainage failed in 2011. • Anita dam failed in 1997 due to poor construction. • Vulnerability to Property within Inundation Areas • Future Development • Subdivision regulations do not require disclosure of dam inundation areas.

  27. DAM INUNDATION HAZARD AREA

  28. CHINOOK DAM INUNDATION HAZARD AREA

  29. HARLEM DAM INUNDATION HAZARD AREA

  30. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEW SECTION 4.7 - SEVERE WINTER WEATHER • Snow, blizzards, extended cold, high winds • Losses: 1960-2006 • $1.1 million in property damage, $2.6k in crop damage • Building lost in 2011 due to high winds • 2012 springtime blizzard downed power lines leaving >10,000 people without power. • Vulnerability • Vehicle accidents, interruption of power, isolation • Future Development • Building codes require commercial buildings to withstand snow load of 30 pounds/sf and 75 mph wind load

  31. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEW SECTION 4.8 - SEVERE SUMMER WEATHER & DROUGHT • Thunderstorms, wind, hail, lightning, tornados, microbursts • Losses from severe weather: 1960 to 2004 • $3.7 million in property damage; $4.8 million in crop damage • Economic loss due to severe drought in 2007. • Vulnerability • Agricultural producers; lower yields, reduced inventory • Increase in wildfire risk. • Future Development • Building codes require commercial building design to withstand 75 mph and 90 mph gusts. • Impacts from drought could affect groundwater availability.

  32. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEW SECTION 4.9 - STRUCTURE FIRE • History • 1949 - Chinook Post Office. Rebuilt and burned again along with grocery store. • 1930 and 1959 - Grain elevator fires in Chinook and Harlem • 1968 - Harlem block with Civic Center. • 1968 - Harlem grade school • 1980 - Chinook – 300 block of Indiana St. • 2001 and 2008 - Mission Parochial School in Hayes • Losses • 40 fires between 2001 to 2011 • $205K in property loss

  33. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEW SECTION 4.10 - RISK ASSESSMENT SUMMARY • Vulnerability Assessment Tables • Hazard Composite Maps • Future Development • Empty Lots on Meadowlark Lane • Multi-Purpose Building at Fairgrounds • Sidewalks in Turner

  34. CHINOOK COMPOSITE HAZARD AREA & FUTURE DEVELOPMENT

  35. HARLEM COMPOSITE HAZARD AREA & FUTURE DEVELOPMENT

  36. 2012 PDM PLAN UPDATESECTION 5.0 - MITIGATION STRATEGY • See Handout • 9 Goals • 21 Objectives • 60 Projects (Actions)

  37. 2018 MITIGATION PLAN UPDATEMITIGATION STRATEGY • Determine Status of Projects from 2012 Plan • Complete, Retain/Reword, Delete, Ongoing • Identify New Projects • Focus on mitigation – not response or preparedness • Consider Development Trends • Project Implementation Details • Responsible Agencies and Partners • Potential Funding Sources • Timeframe • Progress Made • Planned Activities • Project Prioritization Factors • Cost, Feasibility, Population Benefit, Property Benefit

  38. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEW SECTION 6.0 – CAPABILITY ASSESSMENT • Capabilities to Implement Mitigation Projects • Blaine County DES • LEPC • Blaine County Fire Council • Funding Opportunities • FEMA – HMPG, PDMC, FMA • BLM – National Fire Plan • HUD – CDBG Program • USDA, USDOT, Others

  39. 2012 PDM PLAN REVIEW SECTION 7.0 - PLAN MAINTENANCE • Plan Monitoring, Evaluation & Updating • LEPC should review Plan annually • DES should apply for Plan update grant • Monitoring Progress of Mitigation Activities • Responsibility of LEPC • Implementation through Existing Programs • Growth Policies • CWPP • Codes, Regulations Ordinances • Continued Public Involvement • Plan on County Website

  40. 2018 MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE SCHEDULE • Planning Team Conference Calls/Meetings – Dec, Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, as needed • Public Meeting to review draft risk assessment and mitigation strategy – May 2018 • Stakeholder review of Draft Plan (30 days) – May/June 2018 • Revision to address stakeholder comments – June 2018 • Submit to Montana DES (30 days) & FEMA (60 days) for approval – June/July/Aug 2018 • Additional revision if necessary – Aug 2018 • Submit to County, Cities of Chinook and Harlem for adoption – Sept 2018

  41. THANK YOUQUESTIONS?

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