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Published byMarianna Shields Modified over 9 years ago
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Chatham County Hazard Mitigation Plan Update Steering Committee Meeting August 13, 2009
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2 Agenda Introductions Mitigation Planning Plan Update Chapter 1 Chapter 2 –Hazard exercise Chapter 3 Next Steps Important Dates
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Plan Update Reorganization and reformatting of plan in accordance with state guidance Significant portions of chapters 1-3 complete. –Addition of hazards Today’s meeting –Review progress to date –Review hazard profiles –Qualitative ranking of hazards 3
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Chapter 1 More recent and additional census data has been added. Addition of a summary of critical facilities and buildings/structures. Description of planning process to date. 4
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Chapter 2 Updated hazard information Additional hazards considered New risk assessments Need to update land use and development trends 5
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Coastal Hazards and Storms Five hurricanes since 1979 Want to include accurate accounting of historical events Coastal storms include: –Tropical depressions –Tropical storms –Hurricanes –Nor’easters
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Updated Information NCDC data U.S. Landfalling Hurricane Probability Project Critical infrastructure inventory NOAA data 7
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High Wind Hurricane Risk 2009 Probabilities Probability of 1 or more named storms making landfall1.5 percent Probability of 1 or more Hurricanes making landfall0.6 percent Probability of 1 or more Intense Hurricanes making landfall0.2 percent Probability of Tropical Storm Force Wind Gusts >= 40mph8.7 percent Probability of Hurricane Force Wind Gusts >= 75mph2.4 percent Probability of Intense Hurricane Force Wind Gusts >= 115 mph0.9 percent 8
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High Wind Hurricane 50 Year Probabilities Probability of 1 or more named storms making landfall56.4 percent Probability of 1 or more Hurricanes making landfall30.5 percent Probability of 1 or more Intense Hurricanes making landfall9.4 percent Probability of Tropical Storm Force Wind Gusts >= 40mph99.5 percent Probability of Hurricane Force Wind Gusts >= 75mph74.6 percent Probability of Intense Hurricane Force Wind Gusts >= 115 mph39.5 percent 9
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Risk Assessment Results Most severe damage in coastal areas Non-coastal areas can be affected by flooding, tornadoes, and high wind Potential impact: 113,067 structures/buildings with total value of $45 billion Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 10
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Tornado Vortex of high wind with strong damage potential 23 tornadoes recorded since 1955 All buildings at risk; however, not all buildings in county likely to be impacted in one tornado event 11
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Updated Information Hazard frequency tables Tornado scenario utilized to show potential damage Critical infrastructure data updated 12
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Previous Tornado Touchdowns 13
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Risk Assessment Results All of Chatham County at risk for up to an EF-5 tornado event Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 14
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Sample Tornado Track 15
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Impacted Properties from Tornado Scenario Use TypeTotal PropertiesTotal Value Chatham County Agricultural $109,179,020 Commercial 52$44,918,920 Historic Industrial 24$80,125,010 Residential 648$64,623,300 Transitional Utilities 1$47,713 V 16
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Rainwater Flooding Flooding can occur almost anywhere 43 percent of the county is in the100-year flood plain (1 percent chance of reaching flood elevation in any year) One quarter of critical infrastructure in the county is potentially affected by flooding 17
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Updated Information Repetitive Flood Loss Properties (RLs) Properties within flood plain identified Critical facilities within flood plain identified Current land and facility values updated 18
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Floodplain 19
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Risk Assessment 29,511 buildings/structures in the county within the 100-year floodplain, for a total value of almost $14 billion Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 20
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Critical Facilities in Relation to Floodplain 21
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Storm Surge Accompanies hurricanes & tropical storms Much of the county, particularly in coastal areas, is potentially exposed to storm surge SLOSH model is used to estimate storm surge 22
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Updated Information NHC SLOSH modeling maps, now including data for category 4 and 5 hurricanes Repetitive Loss Properties in storm surge zones Critical infrastructure and facilities identified Properties located within surge zones 23
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Potential Surge Zones 24
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Critical Facilities Located in Storm Surge Zones 25
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Risk Assessment $38 billion total value of buildings at risk Critical infrastructure affected Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 26
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Fire Fire was not addressed in 2005; is being added in update Need to incorporate data on fire occurrences & risk 27
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Risk Assessment Results Risk assessment: Fire Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 28
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Chapter 3 New hazards being addressed in update: technological hazards –Hazardous materials incidents –Terrorism –Transportation incidents 29
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30 Hazardous Materials Incident Hazardous materials incidents are being incorporated into the mitigation plan update Hazardous materials can be explosives, flammable or combustible substances, toxic releases, & waste materials. They are most often released as a result of transportation accidents or in manufacturing or storage facilities. Can cause property damage & human health hazards, depending on substance
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Scenario for discussion A call was made to 911 around 2:30 on a Wednesday morning regarding a tractor trailer that was leaking a product and creating a cloud. The truck was at a truck stop on Hwy 21 in Port Wentworth at I-95. The truck was supposedly carrying a mild, non-toxic, non-caustic soap solution. One police officer was affected by the plume and was transported to the hospital for respiratory irritation. Hwy 21 (an artery into Savannah and a major trucking lane) was shut down for almost 3 hours while the incident was managed. Seventy-one people were evacuated, and one hotel was told to "protect in place". 31
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Scenario continued The product was actually a strong sodium hydroxide solution (caustic alkaline) that was reacting with the aluminum transportation tank holding the product. Sodium hydroxide causes burns, irritation, and can be toxic if inhaled on ingested. This incident was no-fault to the driver. He was sleeping in the truck at the time. There was no act of negligence by anyone on-scene and no intent to harm (criminal act). 32
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Risk Assessment Risk assessment: hazardous material incident Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 33
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Terrorism Terrorism is being added to the mitigation plan update Hard to predict or gauge actual risk Fortunately, no historical data in Chatham County 34
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Risk Assessment Risk assessment: Terrorism Difficult to quantify risk because of range of possible incident types, locations & impacts Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 35
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Transportation Incident Transportation incident being incorporated into the mitigation plan update Chatham County has a range of transportation modes & hubs, including airports, rail, roadways, and the Savannah River 36
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Risk Assessment Results Risk assessment: Transportation incidents Exercise: –Risk to people: low/med/high –Risk to buildings: low/med/high –Risk to infrastructure: low/med/hi 37
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Next Steps Incorporate additional local data Respond to Steering Committee, CEMA, county & municipal official, and public comments Capability Assessment Survey Chapters 4 and 5: Mitigation Strategies 38
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Important Dates Municipality Meetings – August 14 Steering Committee Meeting #3 – September 15 LEPC Meeting Presentation – September 16 Review plan draft Steering Committee Meeting #4 – January 19 –Project Closeout
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