Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byDonna Skinner Modified over 9 years ago
1
Stoepher Session: F-4 830AM-1000AM Thursday, May 19, 2011 John F. Henz, C.C.M & Mat Mampara, P.E. Dewberry – Denver CO Dewberry – Fairfax VA
2
Family medical emergency I apologize for my abscence
3
Low-impact – minor inconvenience, small and local economic losses, etc. Moderate-impact – minor damage, some social disruption, etc. High-impact – damage, risks to health, broad economic impact, etc. Extreme-impact – Catastrophic losses, deaths, injuries, major social disruption, etc. DEFINING THE IMPACT OF WEATHER, Patrick McCarthy, http://ams.confex.com/ams/22WAF18NWP/techprogram/program_414.htm
4
Low-impact – minor inconvenience, small and local economic losses, etc. Moderate-impact – minor damage, some social disruption, etc. High-impact – damage, risks to health, broad economic impact, etc. Extreme-impact – Catastrophic losses, deaths, injuries, major social disruption, etc. DEFINING THE IMPACT OF WEATHER, Patrick McCarthy, http://ams.confex.com/ams/22WAF18NWP/techprogram/program_414.htm
5
1) People – individuals, families, workers, personal property, their work, lifestyles, health, etc. 2) Society – communities, healthcare, infrastructure, emergency response, etc. 3) Economy – transportation, recreation, tourism, agriculture, aviation, etc. 4) Environment – air, water, land
6
Deaths 1. Tri-State Tornado Outbreak: 747+ 2. Tupelo/Gainsville Outbreak: 436 3. Super Outbreak II: 341
12
Early snow melt and rains over northern plains drove a head of flooding down the Mississippi. Heavy rainfall preceded the tornado outbreak in the three days before April 27 During the tornado outbreak, numerous flash floods blocked roads, required evacuations and strained emergency services. Some examples:
18
1974 vs. 2011 Climate similarities: Record snows in upper plains, Mid-West and Eastern seaboard followed by rains & floods. Record tornado outbreak in April. Third high likelihood: a hurricane strike along the Gulf Coast in August or September?
21
Lessons to be learned: Plan for concurrent severe weather events especially severe weather, tornadoes and flooding in the same 24-72 hour window. Expect lingering economic and utility impacts including diminished electrical and water utility services. What are the other impacts?
22
1) Death/injury/stress/etc. 2) Property damage/destruction 3) Increased expenditures, changing plans 4) Inconvenience 5) Hazardous travel Morss, R.E., 2006: Defining “high-impact weather forecasts” in North America: Some ideas for discussion. Presentation, Workshop on North American THORPEX societal & economic research & applications, Boulder, CO.
23
1) Loss of power, water, sewers, roadways, etc. 2) reduced emergency response 3) Compromising performance/access of hospitals, family services, etc. 4) Reduced access to necessities (food, fuel, pharmacies, etc.) 5) Closures of schools, daycares, transit, churches, etc. Morss, R.E., 2006: Defining “high-impact weather forecasts” in North America: Some ideas for discussion. Presentation, Workshop on North American THORPEX societal & economic research & applications, Boulder, CO.
24
1) Reduced quality of product 2) Reduced quality of service 3) Delays 4) Increased costs 5) Loss of customers Morss, R.E., 2006: Defining “high-impact weather forecasts” in North America: Some ideas for discussion. Presentation, Workshop on North American THORPEX societal & economic research & applications, Boulder, CO.
26
Complying with or exceeding NFIP floodplain management regulations. Enforcing stringent building codes, flood-proofing requirements, seismic design standards and wind-bracing requirements for new construction or repairing existing buildings. Adopting zoning ordinances that steer development away from areas subject to flooding, storm surge or coastal erosion. Retrofitting public buildings to withstand hurricane-strength winds or ground shaking. Acquiring damaged homes or businesses in flood-prone areas, relocating the structures, and returning the property to open space, wetlands or recreational uses. Building community shelters and tornado safe rooms to help protect people in their homes, public buildings and schools in hurricane- and tornado-prone areas.
29
Complying with or exceeding NFIP floodplain management regulations. Enforcing stringent building codes, flood-proofing requirements, seismic design standards and wind-bracing requirements for new construction or repairing existing buildings. Adopting zoning ordinances that steer development away from areas subject to flooding, storm surge or coastal erosion. Retrofitting public buildings to withstand hurricane-strength winds or ground shaking. Acquiring damaged homes or businesses in flood-prone areas, relocating the structures, and returning the property to open space, wetlands or recreational uses. Building community shelters and tornado safe rooms to help protect people in their homes, public buildings and schools in hurricane- and tornado-prone areas. Is it enough or should we think “outside the box”?
30
Include planning for the occurrence of several sequential or concurrent high impact events: snow melt, heavy rains, winds, flooding, severe weather, hurricanes, tornadoes. Consider all the impacts: people, services, economy, utilities’ disruption, etc. Expect the unexpected.
32
John F. Henz, CCM jhenz@dewberry.com Denver CO Dewberry Innovative Solutions for Science and Engineering "Climate is what you expect; weather is what you get” - Robert A. Heinlein ? Mat Mampara, PE mampara@dewberry.com Fairfax VA for
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.