1 / 34

2013 Hurricane Season

2013 Hurricane Season. Nueces County Office of Emergency Management. Overview. Storm History and Season Outlook Evacuation Authority & Decision Considerations Evacuation Orders, Zones & Routes Reentry Personal Preparedness Stay informed!. Texas Storm History. Major Hurricanes. Ike.

soren
Télécharger la présentation

2013 Hurricane Season

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. 2013 Hurricane Season Nueces County Office of Emergency Management

  2. Overview • Storm History and Season Outlook • Evacuation Authority & Decision Considerations • Evacuation Orders, Zones & Routes • Reentry • Personal Preparedness • Stay informed!

  3. Texas Storm History Major Hurricanes Ike Rita Total of 22 Hurricanes dating back to 1851 One every 8-9 years

  4. Texas Storm History Rita Ike Rita Ike False Sense of Security? Bret 5 Major Hurricanes in last 41 years One every 7.5 years

  5. 2/3rd of Activity Occurs During this Time! 1/3rd of Activity Occurs During this Time 2nd Hurricane Typically forms around August 21st

  6. 2013 Hurricane Outlook • Three climate factors that strongly control Atlantic hurricane activity are expected to come together to produce an active or extremely active 2013 hurricane season. • A continuation of the atmospheric climate pattern, which includes a strong west African monsoon, that is responsible for the ongoing era of high activity for Atlantic hurricanes that began in 1995 • Warmer-than-average water temperatures in the tropical Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea • El Niño is not expected to develop and suppress tropical formation in the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean Sea.

  7. Where will storms strike? NOAA’s seasonal hurricane outlook is NOT a hurricane landfall forecast; it does not predict how many storms will hit land or where a storm will strike ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

  8. Important NHC Phrases • Hurricane Watch issuance times extended to 48 Hours • Hurricane Warning issuance times extended to 36 Hours

  9. Do you have a PLAN for these phases? • Preparations prior to the Hurricane Season. • When a tropical storm or hurricane enters the Gulf of Mexico. • When there is a Tropical Storm or Hurricane Watch hoisted for South Texas. • When there is Tropical Storm or Hurricane Warning hoisted for South Texas.

  10. Evacuation Authority • The County Judge or the Mayor may order the evacuation of all or part of the population from a stricken or threatened area under the jurisdiction of the official if the action is necessary for the preservation of life or other disaster mitigation, response, or recovery. • The County Judge or the Mayor may control ingress to and egress from a disaster area under the jurisdiction and authority of the local official and control the movement of persons and the occupancy of premises in that area. • The jurisdiction and authority of the County Judge includes the incorporated and unincorporated areas of the county; and to the extent of a conflict between decisions of the County Judge and the Mayor, the decision of the County Judge prevails.

  11. Storm Threat Analysis • Storm Intensity • Storm Size • Forward Motion • Cone of Error • Forecast Confidence • Anticipated Storm Surge Inundation • Decision Timing • Behavior Assumptions • Occupancy • Availability of Resources

  12. Who is at highest risk?~180,000 permanent residents in the storm surge zone!

  13. Clearance TimesMany considerations… • Standard Scenario • Worst Case Scenario • Evacu Lane • Contraflow • Rapid Response • Medium Response • Long Response • High Occupancy • Low Occupancy

  14. Evacuation Orders • Evacuation orders will be phased starting with the most at-risk areas first (Zone A- Island) • These orders will be coordinated between the evacuating City and the County to alleviate confusion with the public. • Each “order” will define who needs to leave and when. • There is a coordinated countywide effort to assist those that cannot self evacuate. • Any RTA bus stop throughout the County will get you to the appropriate evacuation hub.

  15. TxDOT Evacuation Routes

  16. Nueces CountyHurricane Reentry Plan A A A A A A a

  17. Purpose • To provide uniform guidance for personnel who may require early reentry prior to the retraction of the local evacuation order. • To promote and facilitate the timely reentry of essential personnel to speed the recovery of affected jurisdictions within Nueces County and its economy. • A key component of continuity of government…deliberate plans to ensure the continuation of essential functions through a wide range of incidents and requires a collaborated and concerted effort to coordinate… agencies that provide critical services to assist first responders in the execution of their duties and those in direct support of critical infrastructure/key resources.

  18. General Approach • Guidance for required agency credentials & proof of residency • Four Tiers • Tier 1- Traditional First Responders • Tier 2- Mass Care & Damage Assessment • Tier 3- Restoration of Essential Services • Tier 4- Business Owners & Residents • Issuance of Reentry Letters • Procedure for Evacuation Exemption

  19. Who gets a letter? • Exempt Organizations • Tier 2 Personnel ** Letters will only be issued on a standardized letterhead that has been mutually agreed upon **

  20. Evacuation Exemption • Organizations approved for exemption may include essential government personnel, first responders and limited private organizations in direct support of critical infrastructure/key resources. • The organizations are considered self sufficient and remain at their own risk. • Approval by Emergency Management Director on a case-by-case basis.

  21. Required Agency Credentials All personnel working in the impact area shall carry proper credentials and identification on their person at all times. • State recognized identification card • Agency identification with photo. • Tier 2 Level Essential Personnel Authorization Letter and/or company designation letter detailing the employee essential function and to the extent possible defining the geographic area where work is to be performed.

  22. Proof of Residency Proper identification for resident access should include one or more of the following: • current state issued driver’s license or identification card • utility bill • mortgage deed • property tax documents • or any governmental document which includes an address or other means that identifies the location of their property.

  23. Requesting Tier 2 Authorization and/or Evacuation Exemptionwww.co.nueces.tx.us/emergency • County Reentry Plan • Quick Reference Pages • 2013 Request Form

  24. Personal Preparedness Benefits of Being Prepared • Helps reduce fear and anxiety • Helps reduce the impact of disasters • Communities, families and individuals know what to do to survive & recover

  25. Consider what could happen in your… Think about: Probability AND Potential Impact • House? • Workplace? • School? • Neighborhood? • City? • County? • Region? • During travel?

  26. Building a Family Disaster Plan • Knowing the protective measures for specific hazards • Recognizing warning systems and signals • Evacuating from a disaster area • Incorporating community, school and other plans • Identifying escape routes

  27. Building a Family Disaster Plan • Completing a family communications plan • Shutting off utilities • Obtaining appropriate insurance • Preparing for special needs • Caring for animals • Learning/refreshing safety skills

  28. Disaster Supplies Kit • Food & Water (1 gallon of water per person per day!) • First Aid, Medication & Hygiene • Communications & Lighting • Transportation & Document Bag Items • Home Safety, Comfort Items, Pet Supplies • Special Considerations • Power loss, medical needs, post disaster hazards

  29. Recovery Considerations • Returning Home: Is it still there, where you left it? Structural/water damage? • Aiding the injured of displaced • Health issues- sanitation & stress • Safety issues • Emotional

  30. Transportation Assistance Registry • 2-1-1 Texas/United Way HELPLINE is the information resource before, during and after a disaster. • People who will require transportation assistance during an evacuation are urged to call 2-1-1 as soon as possible and sign up with the Transportation Assistance Registry

  31. Emergency Notification Systems • 826-INFO (4636)  • Reverse Alert • Social Media • Nixle (Text “YES” to 888777) • Dialogic (reverse 911) • KLUX 89.5 FM.  • NOAA Alert Radio • Emergency Alert System

  32. Official Sources of County Info www.co.nueces.tx.us Facebook: NuecesOEM Twitter: NuecesOEM PUBLIC NOTICES

  33. Danielle Hale Emergency Management Coordinator Nueces County Judge Loyd Neal 901 Leopard St. #303 Corpus Christi, TX 78401 Danielle.hale@co.nueces.tx.us 361-888-0513

More Related