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Hurricane Jeanne

Hurricane Jeanne. Morning Briefing September 25, 2004. SEOC LEVEL 1 24 Hour Operations. State Coordinating Officer. Craig Fugate. Up Next – SERT Chief. SERT Chief. Mike DeLorenzo Deder Lane. Up Next – Meteorology. Meteorology. Ben Nelson.

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Hurricane Jeanne

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  1. Hurricane Jeanne Morning Briefing September 25, 2004

  2. SEOCLEVEL124 Hour Operations

  3. State Coordinating Officer Craig Fugate Up Next – SERT Chief

  4. SERT Chief Mike DeLorenzo Deder Lane Up Next – Meteorology

  5. Meteorology Ben Nelson

  6. Category 2 Hurricane Jeanne – 245 miles east of West Palm Beach

  7. 5-Day Rainfall Forecast

  8. Up Next – Information & Planning

  9. Information & Planning David Crisp

  10. Hurricane Jeanne State/Federal Joint Incident Action Plan #2 State Emergency Response Team Operational Period: 1400 09-23-04 to 1400 09-24-04 Deploy Selected Response Teams Identify/Pre positioning of assets/commodities Develop evacuation plan Develop protective action recommendations Develop Fuel Plan for emergency response vehicles Maintain communications with the counties Prepare for search & rescue operations Prepare to have distribution system in place in 72 hours Establish a Task Force to address safety/security issues after storm General Operating Objectives: Issues: Fuel Shortage – all three ports impacted Roads limited by flood conditions Sheltering Potential Double landfall by Hurricane Jeanne Weak Infrastructure Infrastructure impacted previously Limited resources Incident Action Planning Meeting 3:00 PM in Room 130d

  11. 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 Levy Marion Volusia Citrus Lake Seminole Sumter Hernando Vulnerable Population Orange Pasco Brevard Osceola Pinellas Polk Hillsborough 4,731,187 Indian River Manatee Hardee Okeechobee St. Lucie Highlands DeSoto Sarasota Martin Glades Charlotte Lee Hendry Palm Beach Broward Collier Miani-Dade Monroe

  12. Evacuation Status Nassau Hamilton Duval Vol 09-24 Vol 09-24 and Mand 09-25 Columbia Suwannee Baker Union Clay Lafayette Alachua 1000 Saturday MH & LLA Brevard 1200 Friday Beaches 0600 Saturday GP Duval 0700 Saturday PSN & MH 1200 Saturday GP Flagler 0900 Saturday BI, MH, LLA 1200 Saturday BI & MH Hendry 1400 Saturday Indian River 0800 Saturday BI & MH St. Lucie 0700 Saturday Martin 1200 Friday 0800 Zones A & B Marion Saturday Okeechobee 0800 Friday for Out of County 0800 Saturday MH & LLA Palm Beach 1200 Friday BI & MH 0800 Saturday for zones A & B Broward 1700 Friday Zone A & MH 0530 Saturday Miami-Dade 0700 Saturday Zone A Putnam 1500 Saturday MH & LLA St. John’s 0700 Saturday PSN 1200 Saturday Cat 1 & 2 zones Volusia 0700 Saturday Cat 1 zone Bradford St. Johns Gilchrist Alachua Putnam Dixie Flagler Levy Marion Volusia Citrus Lake Seminole Sumter Hernando Orange Pasco Brevard Osceola Hillsborough Pinellas Polk Indian River Manatee Hardee Okeechobee St. Lucie Highlands DeSoto Sarasota Martin Glades Charlotte Lee Hendry Palm Beach Broward Collier Miami-Dade Monroe BI-Barrier Island MH-Mobile Home LLA-Low Lying Area PSN-Special Needs

  13. Number of Buildings Damaged Grand Total 1,210,357

  14. Displaced Households Displaced Households 141,791 Short Term Shelter 36,332

  15. Hurricane Ivan State/Federal Joint Incident Action Plan #17 State Emergency Response Team Operational Period: 0700 09-25-2004 to 0700 09-26-2004 Monitor First Response Plan Identify Life Safety Support to the Affected Areas Identify Life Sustaining Support to the Affected Areas Position response capabilities/assets/teams as required Restoration of Critical Infrastructure Assist counties in the recovery of the Public Education Systems. Develop a Temporary Housing Strategy. General Operating Objectives: 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 Commodity items for Responders Unemployment compensation and electronic banking Maintaining Mass Feeding Incident Action Planning Meeting 3:00 PM in Room 130d

  16. Up Next – Operations

  17. Operations Chief Up Next – Emergency Services

  18. Emergency Services

  19. Emergency Services • Current Operations for Ivan – • ESF 8 • 4 DMATs: Pensacola (3) & Navarre • 223 medical staff deployed; 1868 patients seen to date • 2 CISD teams deployed (Calhoun County & Santa Rosa County • 16 medical facilities evacuated 175 patients • All SNS shelters for Ivan have been closed • ESF 10 • Continue hazardous materials response actions in Gulf Breeze area. • Hurricane debris staging (solid waste) areas identified in Tracker 3752. • Assessing beach erosion damage. • Continuing to assess the conditions of solid waste facilities. • ESF 4&9 • 22 dispatchers • 2 MAC Units • 1 Liaison, 1 PIO • 1 Mobile Command Unit to be demobilized (9/25)

  20. Emergency Services • Current Operations for Ivan (continued) – • ESF 16 • 673 LEOs deployed • Fulfilling all tasked missions • Hurricane Jeanne • Current Operations for Jeanne – • ESF 8 • 1 DMAT staged, 11 on alert • ESF 4/9 • 3 SAR teams staged (Tampa, Miami (2) • 1 Joint Management Team in Lakeland • Unmet Needs – • None at this time Up Next – Human Services

  21. Human Services Up Next – ESF 4&9

  22. Human Services • Current Operations – • Staffed for 24 hour operations • Shelters - 5 open, 389 evacuees • Feeding - 486,000+ meals -9/25 , 3M+ MREs • Ice/water - in reasonable supply for Ivan • Cases of Baby food - 22,000 • Community Relations Team - initial group deployed yesterday in panhandle • DRCs- 4 open, still looking for up to 6 additional locations • Preparing to meet the needs of Jeanne impacted counties • Unmet Needs – • Being addressed as identified • Future Operations – • Expand Community Relations for Ivan • Establish more DRCs • Anticipate an expansion of Community Relations and DRCs for Jeanne Impacted counties • Continue feeding operations & small sheltering operations for Ivan and commence operations for Jeanne • Volunteer assistance with dry-ins and general relief efforts for Ivan, anticipate similar operations for Jeanne • Rotate staff Up Next – Infrastructure

  23. Infrastructure

  24. Infrastructure • Current Operations – • Supporting fuel requests for State & County Emergency Response Operations • 83,382 customers reported out (Ivan): • Escambia – 45% out • Holmes – 0 % out • Santa Rosa – 37% out • Walton – 0% out • Okaloosa – 0% out • Jackson – 0% out • Washington – 0% out • Bay – 0% out • Fuel availability along evacuation routes better than pre-H. Frances • Ports on east coast maintaining hurricane levels; fuel supply disruption anticipated • Identifying state agency vehicle fueling sites to serve first responders (FDOT, FHP, etc.) • Unmet Needs – • Diesel and gasoline fuel supply and distribution, especially tenders • Future Operations – • Continue to monitor transportation, flood-fighting, electricity, fuel and telecom system • Monitoring & preparing for Hurricane Jeanne Up Next – Military Support

  25. Military Support Up Next – ESF 8

  26. Military Support • Current Operations – • Strength: 3,607 • Sustaining operations in panhandle • Conducting preparation for support of Hurricane Jeanne • Completing redeployment of forces to East Coast • Unmet Needs – • Coordinating EMAC to obtain airlift assets based on demand • Future Operations – • Sustain operations in panhandle • Deploy forces in support of recovery operations Up Next – Logistics

  27. Logistics Up Next – Finance & Administration

  28. Finance & Administration Up Next – Public Information

  29. Public Information Up Next – Recovery

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