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George Crawford, Washington Emergency Management - July 31, 2007 UW Educational Outreach – Tsunami Science & Preparedness Program (Su 07) Sponsored by NOAA and USAID under the U.S. Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System Program Page 1 Issues You will Face When a Disaster Hits
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George Crawford, Washington Emergency Management - July 31, 2007 UW Educational Outreach – Tsunami Science & Preparedness Program (Su 07) Sponsored by NOAA and USAID under the U.S. Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System Program Page 2 Disaster Recovery Plans, systems and institutions in place to accelerate disaster recovery, actively engage communities in the recovery process and minimize environmental, social, cultural and economic impacts Community-driven recovery concepts planned in advance Public/Private coordination systems in place Immediate and long term recovery issues addressed Monitoring and evaluation of recovery progress # 1 issue in Katrina – Lack at all levels of government to communicate with the public # 1 issue in Katrina – Lack at all levels of government to communicate with the public
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George Crawford, Washington Emergency Management - July 31, 2007 UW Educational Outreach – Tsunami Science & Preparedness Program (Su 07) Sponsored by NOAA and USAID under the U.S. Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System Program Page 3 What’s our pre-catastrophe reality? Is government prepared to effectively respond? Post-Katrina national survey: Public lacks confidence in government to prepare for, respond to disaster All disasters are local Coastal social science surveys how level of preparedness is low
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George Crawford, Washington Emergency Management - July 31, 2007 UW Educational Outreach – Tsunami Science & Preparedness Program (Su 07) Sponsored by NOAA and USAID under the U.S. Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System Program Page 4 What happens after a disaster? Immediate response: Save lives, protect property. Recovery: The community will have a new, different “normal” after the disaster. Figure out how to better mitigate, prepare for, respond and respond for the next disaster Recognize politics will play a role – as early as initial response
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George Crawford, Washington Emergency Management - July 31, 2007 UW Educational Outreach – Tsunami Science & Preparedness Program (Su 07) Sponsored by NOAA and USAID under the U.S. Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System Program Page 5 Individual Impacts Thousands displaced from homes Emergency Shelter Short-term housing Long-term housing Post-Disaster Stress Missing or lost family, friends, pets Real property losses Loss of personal possessions Social disruptions NOTE: Largest impact on tourist! Temporary Housing for Katrina victims at D'Iberville Middle School, MS
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