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Hazard Mitigation Planning: 4/5/12

Hazard Mitigation Planning: 4/5/12. Who We Are . TEMA Mitigation Planning Josh Wickham (Middle & East TN) Planner Michael Caudill (West TN) Area Coordinator Craig Hanrahan Planning Supervisor TEMA Mitigation Grants Judy Huff State Hazard Mitigation Officer

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Hazard Mitigation Planning: 4/5/12

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  1. Hazard Mitigation Planning: 4/5/12

  2. Who We Are TEMA Mitigation Planning • Josh Wickham (Middle & East TN) Planner • Michael Caudill (West TN) Area Coordinator • Craig Hanrahan Planning Supervisor TEMA Mitigation Grants • Judy Huff State Hazard Mitigation Officer • Mary Lynn Gillingham, Donna Holden, & Billy Harper Grant Managers

  3. Presentation Agenda • Hazard Mitigation Planning • TEMA’s 3 Phase Approach: TMI • How Utilities Can Get Involved

  4. Pillars of Emergency Management

  5. Define Hazard Mitigation any sustained action taken to reduce or eliminate the long term risk to human life and property from hazards • Preparedness / Response • short-term fix • prepares humans to respond • Mitigation • long-term fix • can reduce property damage • project/program does much of • the response work itself

  6. Flooding: Lincoln County, TN

  7. Tornado: Lake County, TN

  8. Earthquake: Shelby County, TN

  9. Flooding: Bradley County, TN

  10. Define Hazard Mitigation Plan a single or multi-jurisdictional planning document that profiles specific hazard risks & vulnerabilities and then addresses & prioritizes potential mitigation projects that can reduce those specific vulnerabilities.

  11. How Did Mitigation Plans Come About? Prior to 2000:Reactive After 2000:Proactive Planning/Plans = Proactive Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000 this law is what requires state and local governments to prepare FEMA-approved HZMIT plans for eligibility to participate in hazard mitigation grant programs

  12. Mitigation Grant Program • Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) • Pre-Disaster Mitigation Program (PDM) • Flood Mitigation Assistance Program (FMA) • Repetitive Flood Claims Program (RFC) • Severe Repetitive Loss Program (SRL)

  13. Pass all approximately 40 Requirements = FEMA Approved

  14. Local Gov.- 5 year planning cycle State Gov.- 3 year planning cycle

  15. HZMIT Plan Components 1. Planning Process 2. Risk Assessment 3. Mitigation Strategy 4. Plan Maintenance

  16. 1. Planning Process • How the plan was prepared • What steps were taken to develop the plan • What existing data sources were reviewed • Who was involved in the planning process

  17. Committee List -who was involved Planning Process Steps -when meetings occurred -what tasks were completed by whom & when -how the planning process was conducted Public Involvement -how public was informed

  18. Review of Sources -data sources -existing local codes/plans

  19. Updates to Previous Plan -how each section was updated -why each section was updated or not

  20. 2. Risk Assessment Hazards • Profiling what hazards affect which areas • Describing previous hazard occurrences • Addressing the strength and probability of the hazards • Describing possible impacts the hazards could cause on the community’s businesses, environments, structures, critical facilities, and persons Vulnerabilities • Determining the community’s most vulnerable structures, populations, and infrastructure to hazard impacts Hazard Characteristic Describing Possible Impacts Determining Most Vulnerable Areas

  21. Gen. Description of Hazard -how hazard comes about, etc.

  22. Probability Extents & Hazard Scales -Intensity Scales -Worst Case Scenarios Previous Occurrences -Locations, Dates, Extents Deaths/Injuries, Property Damages

  23. Maps Hazard Event Descriptions -Past Impacts& Damages

  24. Risk Assessments

  25. Areas of Prime Concern

  26. Statistical Assessments

  27. 3. Mitigation Strategy • Determining goals/projects to reduce the most vulnerable areas identified • Describing funding sources, timeframes, and project management details • Placing a focus on cost-effectiveness of the mitigation projects • Prioritization of the projects

  28. Goals

  29. Project Prioritization -Methodology to prioritize projects by factors such as current resources, cost-effectiveness, community support, etc.

  30. Project Listing -Name of Project -Project Details: Responsible Agency, Possible Funding Sources, Timeframe -Project Priority Ranking

  31. Updates to Previous Plan -Status of Projects: completed, deleted, deferred and how/why

  32. 4. Plan Maintenance • How to keep the plan a living breathing document to be continually updated and implemented

  33. How will the plan be: -Monitored -Evaluated -Updated

  34. Presentation Agenda • Hazard Mitigation Planning • TEMA’s 3 Phase Approach: TMI • How Utilities Can Get Involved

  35. TEMA’s 3 Phase Approach An outreach initiative developed after the May 2010 Floods to promote, strengthen, and support statewide mitigation actions. Tennessee Mitigation Initiative

  36. TMI Phase 1: All Counties to have an FEMA-Approved HZMIT Planstatus: in progress

  37. HZMIT Plan Status: August 2010

  38. Phase 1 • Focus: • Assist Presidentially-Declared Disaster Counties Develop New Hazard Mitigation Plans First • Since all of West TN had plans, our strategy was to begin in Middle TN and work our way through East TN • Challenges: • A large amount of County EMA Directors are part-time, voluntary, or were fully immersed in the May 2010 flood recovery, that they therefore had little time to write a plan from scratch • A large amount of EMA Directors had knowledge of disaster preparedness, response, & recovery, but not mitigation • Mitigation plans require meeting lots of technical regulations that many local governments don’t have the training or resources needed to complete • Even with grants available, some counties couldn’t hire planning consultants because of the financial strain of the grant’s required local match

  39. Phase 1 Created the “HZMIT Tool Program”: a program designed to provide a no-cost, no-headache approach to assisting local governments in developing hazard mitigation plans VS.

  40. Step 1 of 3: Databases/Studies

  41. Step 2 of 3: Discussions/Fill in the Blanks

  42. Step 3 of 3: Simple Check List • Hold additional meetings where at least one is advertised in the newspaper to give the public a chance to participate • TEMA will not be present at these meetings • Choose Mitigation Projects; Prioritize Projects

  43. HZMIT Tool Shell

  44. HZMIT Plan Status: August 2010

  45. HZMIT Plan Status: April 2012 • 42 Plans approved for longer than • two years (compared to 8 in 2010) • 6 Plans in FEMA Review • 26 Plans between 60-90% complete • Approximately 75 Community • Assistance Workshops in Mid. & East • TN along with additional assistance • West TN

  46. Phase 1 Additional Goals • 1.1- Assist Local Governments in Enhancing Risk Assessment Data for previously Presidentially-Declared Disaster Hazards in TN • Flooding, Severe Storms, Hail, Straight-line Winds, Tornados, Winter Storms, Freezes

  47. Simplified Floodplain Maps #23

  48. HAZUS Flood Runs

  49. Phase 1 Additional Goals • 1.2- Inform Local Governments about Mitigation Grants during the Planning Process • creates more useful plans & planning upfront

  50. Phase 1 Additional Goals • 1.3- Promote the bringing together of two different professions into the local mitigation planning process • community developmentprofessionals • built-environment: highways, utilities, public works, code enforcement, community planning, etc. • emergency managementprofessionals • emergency services: fire, police, EMS, etc. TEMA asks County EMA Directors to get community development professionals involved; County EMA sets up the meetings and invites

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