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Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing Evening Briefing September 28, 2004 September 28, 2004

Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

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Page 1: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Hu

rric

ane

Jean

ne

Evening BriefingEvening BriefingSeptember 28, 2004September 28, 2004

Page 2: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

SEOC LEVEL

1Operational Hours

0700 – 2400or as missions require

Page 3: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Mike DeLorenzoDeder Lane

Up Next – Meteorology

SERT Chief

Page 4: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Meteorology

Ben Nelson

Page 5: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004
Page 6: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004
Page 7: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004
Page 8: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004
Page 9: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Impacts:

88.0 - I-75 will be closed.

86.5 - The railroad bridge at the gage site floods.

84.5 - U.S. 41 will be closed.

83.0 - Sewage treatment plant in jeopardy. Inform Florida State EOC at this height.

81.0 - Columbia county begins evacuation of residents. Route 441 is under water and closed. Area known as Suwannee Valley is inundated and secondary roads are closed. Flooding begins at Stephen F. Foster State Park.

Top 5 Historical Crests(1) 88.02 ft on 04/10/1973 (2) 85.40 ft on 04/10/1984 (3) 85.19 ft on 04/05/1948 (4) 84.86 ft on 02/27/1998 (5) 84.36 ft on 09/17/1964

Page 10: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004
Page 11: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Top 5 Historical Crests(1) 13.28 ft on 04/05/1960 (2) 12.05 ft on 10/10/1960 (3) 11.63 ft on 07/08/1934 (4) 11.17 ft on 09/26/1933 (5) 10.58 ft on 03/21/1998

Impacts:

9.0 - ARROWHEAD SUBDIVISION FLOODS WITH WATER IN HOMES

8.0 -

WATER APPROACHES HOUSE FOUNDATIONS IN ARROWHEAD SUBDIVISION

Page 12: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Impacts:

7.0 - Major flood damage in Sanford from water moving over sea wall around Lake Monroe

6.8 - Water begins moving over sea wall around Lake Monroe in Sanford and entering parking lot of Central Florida Regional Hospital

Top 5 Historical Crests(1) 8.50 ft on 10/15/1953 (2) 8.14 ft on 10/11/1960 (3) 7.32 ft on 10/13/1948 (4) 7.30 ft on 09/28/1945 (5) 7.19 ft on 09/21/1964

Page 13: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004
Page 14: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Rainfall Forecast: Tuesday PM – Wednesday PM

Page 15: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Rainfall Forecast: Wednesday PM – Thursday PM

Page 16: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Up Next – Information & Planning

Page 17: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

David Crisp

Information & Planning

Page 18: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

General Operating Objectives:

Issues:

Incident Action Planning Meeting 3:00 PM in Room 130d

Hurricane JeanneState/Federal Joint Incident Action Plan #6

State Emergency Response TeamOperational Period: 1400 09-28-04 to 1400 09-29-04

Deploy Selected Response TeamsProvide assets and commoditiesDevelop Flood evacuation planDevelop protective action recommendationsMonitor Fuel Plan for emergency response vehiclesMaintain a Task Force to address safety/security issues after storm Develop restoration process for Critical Infrastructure

Fuel Shortage Roads limited by flood conditionsShelteringHurricane Impacted InfrastructureLimited resources

Page 19: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Esc

ambi

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San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnionBradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Area of Impact

Severe Damage

Moderate Damage

Minimal Damage

Page 20: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Esc

ambi

a

San

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Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnionBradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

EOC Status

Full Activation

Partial Activation

Monitoring

Page 21: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Esc

ambi

a

San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnionBradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miami-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Energy Restoration

Less than 92% Restored

92 to 98% Restored

Greater than 98% Restored

Page 22: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Esc

ambi

a

San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnion

Bradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Shelters Open

Shelters On-standby

Shelters Closed

Shelter Status

Page 23: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Esc

ambi

a

San

ta R

osa

Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnion

Bradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. Lucie

Emergency Services

Requiring external services – mutual aid

Operating under Emergency Plans

Normal operations

Page 24: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Esc

ambi

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San

ta R

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Walton

Oka

loos

a

Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Suwannee

Hamilton

Lafayette

Dixie

Col

umbi

a

Gilchrist

Levy

Nassau

Duval

Baker

ClayUnion

Bradford

Alachua

Marion

PascoOrange

Seminole

St.

Joh

ns

Flagler

Putnam

Volusia

Bre

vard

Lake

Hernando

Citrus

Pin

ella

s

Hill

sbor

ough

Osceola

Polk

Sum

ter

Charlotte

DeSoto

Lee

Collier

Hardee

Hendry

Highlands

Okeechobee

Indian River

Palm Beach

Martin

Broward

Miani-Dade

Monroe

Glades

Manatee

Sarasota

St. LucieNo pressure/low pressure/boil water order

Normal pressure/boil water orders

Normal

Water

Page 25: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

General Operating Objectives:

Issues:

Incident Action Planning Meeting 3:00 PM in Room 130d

Hurricane IvanState/Federal Joint Incident Action Plan #21

State Emergency Response TeamOperational Period: 0700 09-29-2004 to 0700 09-30-2004

Identify Life Safety Support to the Affected Areas. Identify Life Sustaining Support to the Affected Areas.Coordinate positioning of response/recovery capabilities/assets/teams.Implement the restoration process for Critical Infrastructure.Assist counties in the recovery process.Develop a Temporary Housing Strategy.Establish coordinated Fed/State Public Information efforts for panhandle.

Fuel supply and distribution concerns Infrastructure Water, Power, Transportation, Schools, Healthcare systemsRe-entry into impacted areasMaintaining food, water, ice Maintaining securityMaintain Additional Distribution systemUnemployment compensation and electronic bankingMaintaining Mass Feeding

Page 26: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Esc

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San

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Walton

Oka

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Washington

Bay

HolmesJackson

Calhoun

Liberty

Leon

Franklin

Wakulla

Gadsden

Gulf

Jeff

erso

n

Madison

Taylor

Dixie

Hurricane Ivan Area of Operations

Up Next – ESF 1&3

Page 27: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 1&3Transportation & Public Works

Page 28: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 1&3 – Transportation & Public Works

ESF 1 and 3 AgenciesContinuing Support

of Charley, Frances, Ivan, DFO

Recovery Activities

Page 29: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 1&3 – Transportation & Public Works

Hurricane JeannePreparedness, Assessment, Response, Recovery

Emergency Responder Fuel Availability, Sites Evacuation Planning Liaisons, traffic counters

FDOT County EOC Liaisons 27 FDOT, CAP, WMD, NOAA, FHWA Staff in ESF-1/-3

MOT for SEOC, MERS Vehicles VMB, cones Toll Suspensions Statewide all bridges, roads

RECON Air and Ground Teams CAP, FDOT, FLNG Aerial Photography NOAA Variable Message Boards 268

Signals, Stoplights 2 countywide Generators for Traffic Signals 100 +

Debris Removal 3 requests Portable and Non-Portable Signs 245 +

Sandbags 120,000 Barricades and Cones 305 and 200

Food Distribution SWFWMD Flood Watch Team SJRWMD, SRWMD, SWFWMD, SFWMD

 

Page 30: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

• Unmet Needs –– None at this time

• Future Operations –– Support Hurricane Jeanne response activities– Continue support of Charley, Frances, Ivan, and DFO

recovery activities

ESF 1&3 – Transportation & Public Works

Up Next – ESF 2

Page 31: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 2Communications

Up Next – ESF 4&9

Page 32: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 2 – Communications• Current Operations –

– Coordinating cell phone, wireless air cards, etc delivery, phone line installations, relocating lines, analog phone and radio deliveries, etc

– Prioritizing and escalating of communications restorations with carriers in impacted counties

– Hurricane Frances (last update as counties are the same as Jeanne)

• 34,706 customer wireline outages reported in Hurricane Frances impacted areas

• 1,980 customer wireline repaired since 9/26/04 (Frances)

• approx. 1,030,761 services restored since Hurricane Frances (voice and data lines)

• 99.26% average of wireless coverage reported- Hurricane Frances

Page 33: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 2 – Communications• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Ivan• 26,534 customer wireline outages reported in Hurricane

Ivan impacted areas • 11,194 customer wireline reported down since 9/27/04

(Ivan) (customers continue to return home and report service troubles)

• 1,750 customers repaired since yesterday 9/27/04 (Ivan)• over 123, 000 lines repaired in Ivan already• 85% average of wireless coverage CAPACITY AVAILABLE

in the areas impacted by Hurricane Ivan• Escambia CO - 1 SAT COLT - 1 SAT COW- 2 COWs• Okaloosa CO EOC -1 SAT COLT (expected to be disabled

as cell site is coming back on air)• Ft. Walton Beach – 1 SAT COLT (expected to be disabled

as cell site is coming back on air)

Page 34: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 2 – Communications• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Ivan (continued)• LSA#5 Duke Field - 2 COWs 2- T1's installed, 49 lines

installed 60 ready-link wireless sets delivered and operational

• Santa Rosa Co – 1 SAT COLT- 1 COW• 1 Phone bank operational @ Milton High School is

operational (cafeteria) • 1 Phone bank operational at Gulf Breeze Middle school-• 1 Phone bank operational @ Jay Community Center, Jay,

Florida• 1 Phone bank operational @ to Tiger Point Lane Navarre• 1 EDICs and 1 MAC unit set up in Escambia County for

MED 8- EMS communications operation• 1 MAC Unit set up and operational in Santa Rosa Co for

MED 8 EMS comm. operation• Wireline and Wireless carriers continuing to work on

communications restoration

Page 35: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 2 – Communications• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Jeanne• 646, 951 customers reported OUT OF SERVICE in the areas

impacted by Hurricane Jeanne• 497,820 customer outages reports since yesterday 9/27/07 (more

customers able to report service troubles)• 239,205 customers restored since Jeanne (voice and data lines)• 77.33% average of wireless coverage reported - Hurricane

Jeanne• RIAT-Communications support personnel from ESF-2/STO

deployed in Indian River and St. Lucie Counties. Continuing support communications recovery at local EOC.

• more than 400 mobile generators • 110 fixed generators• Five (5) Satellite Cell-On-Light-Trucks (SatCOLTs)• Twenty (20) Cell-On-Wheels (COWs)• plus additional portable masts and cabinets.• 3000 Wireless Priority Service-enabled phones to emergency

responder customers in Florida

Page 36: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 2 – Communications• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Jeanne• Provisioned over 7000 customers with Priority Connect on their

Direct Connect service.• COWs on scene today 9/28/04 St. Lucie EOC, St. Lucie Sheriff's

Office, and Ft. Pierce Police Department. Installation etr 24 hours.

• State Law Enforcement Radio System (SLERS)– SLERS is operational with wide-area connectivity except as

follows:– Ft. Pierce site cluster is intermittent due to microwave link

problems; tower crew will begin repairs today.– Forty-Two (42) sites are on generator power 43 sites restored

since yesterday 9/27/04– Three (3)sites in the Escambia/Santa Rosa area are

operational with reduced coverage, awaiting parts or repairs by tower owners.

– Tower teams have begun microwave system today 9/28/04 repairs that are required on 6 links.

Page 37: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 2 – Communications• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Jeanne (continued)• State Law Enforcement Radio System (SLERS) - continued

– Drexel to Jessamine (Pasco County) link alignment/repairs completed, 5 links remaining.

– Generator refueling process continues. – Florida river flooding data reviewed, no SLERS sites in areas

of concern. – Marion Forest site (Marion Co.) T-1 connectivity has been

restored. Site is in wide-area connectivity– Moorehaven site (Glades Co.) T-1 connectivity has been

restored. Site is in wide-area connectivity– Yeehaw Junction relay site (Osceola Co.) generator was

repaired; site is up.• Unmet Needs –

– None at this time• Future Operations –

– Continue to support communications needs of LSA's, EOC, state, and county agencies.

Up Next – ESF 4&9

Page 38: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 4&9Firefighting and Search & Rescue

Page 39: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 4&9 – Fire Fighting & Search & Rescue

• Current Operations –– 20 missions working– Four missions demobilized– Three missions being worked at this time

• Unmet Needs –– None at this time

• Future Operations –– Monitor deployed resources– Fill any new request

Up Next – ESF 6

Page 40: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 6Mass Care

Up Next – ESF 8

Page 41: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

• Current Operations –– Salvation Army has 12 canteens operating in Escambia

County and 44 in the Jeanne area.– Salvation Army has 3 kitchen ready to start serving

tomorrow, Sep 29 in West Melbourne, Ft. Pierce and Port St. Lucie.

– Red Cross Chapters are catering food for disaster victims in Palm Beach, Okeechobee and Hillsborough Counties.

– Red Cross has 115 Emergency Response Vehicles operating in the State.

– 17 of the 80 panel vans requested from FEMA arrived today in Orlando.

– 35 8 head shower trailers were deployed in support of Ivan

– 6 8 head shower trailers will go into operation in the Jeanne area tomorrow

– 2 portable laundry facilities deployed in the Ivan area.

ESF 6 – Mass Care

Page 42: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Up Next – ESF 8

• Unmet Needs –– Portable, insulated food storage containers, Jeanne ARF

#6• Future Operations –

– 9 Southern Baptist and ARC kitchens are arriving on location today and tomorrow in Brevard, Martin, Indian River, St. Lucie, Highlands, and Sumter Counties.

ESF 6 – Mass Care

Page 43: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 8Health & Medical

Up Next – ESF 10

Page 44: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 8 – Health & Medical• Current Operations –

Ivan– 2 DMAT teams and 6 NDMS/HHS staff augmentees in

Escambia and Navarre Beach, Santa Rosa as of 9/28/04 3:00 pm.

– 172 additional professional staff deployed to affected areas

– All special needs shelters for Ivan are no longer open; SNS clients have been discharged to other facilities/locations as appropriate.

Page 45: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 8 – Health & Medical• Current Operations –

Jeanne– DMATs: 2 teams in Martin and Brevard Counties and 9 teams

on alert as of 9/28/04 3:00 am– 1 DCHAT is enroute to Polk County– 3 EMAC teams (48 staff) are staged in Lake City– 37 additional DOH staff deployed to affected areas– Additional deployed resources: 1,333 oxygen canisters, 44

hand washing stations, 209 portalets, and 20,700 cans of DEET.

– 353 of regions in 26 counties have a boiled water notice in effect as of 9/27/04 5pm

– 27 Special Needs Shelters are open with approximately 1,098 patients in residence as of 9/28/04 2:00pm.

– Needs assessment for outpatient blood banks has been completed

– 26 medical facilities evacuated 604 patients as of 9/28/04 1:00 pm

Page 46: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 8 – Health & Medical• Unmet Needs –

– None at this time

• Future Operations –– Ivan:

• Continue to monitor and support medical facility needs.• Respond to local health care services experiencing surge

capacity overload.– Jeanne:

• Continue to position response teams and resources in affected areas.

• Continue to work on returning special need shelter patients to suitable housing alternatives.

• Continue to monitor and support medical facilities. • Continue to monitor staffing needs for impacted medical

facilities.

Up Next – ESF 10

Page 47: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 10Hazardous Materials

Up Next – ESF 11

Page 48: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 10 – Hazardous Materials• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Ivan• Continue hazardous materials response actions in Gulf Breeze,

Pensacola Beach & Perdido Key areas• Federal & State responders working response incidents.• DEP personnel continue staffing ESF10 desks at Escambia and

Santa Rosa Counties.• DEP Northwest District operating Citizen's Information Hotline

(850) 595-4572 or (850) 595-3483. The information hotline can provide assistance in:

– Debris Removal– Open Burning– Petroleum Storage Tank Systems– Drinking Water and Wastewater Facilities– Beach Restoration– Coastal Construction– Asbestos Cleanup– Wetlands Issues

• DEP Regulatory District Office in Pensacola remains closed due to storm damage - a temporary field office has been established in an Escambia County Office Building.

Page 49: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 10 – Hazardous Materials• Current Operations (continued) –

– Hurricane Jeanne• Conducted damage assessments & responded to a wide

range of storm related oil and hazardous material incidents• Pratt & Whitney conducting cleanup on estimated 250,000

gallon spill of JP-8 (jet fuel) at their facility near Jupiter - spill contained in berm surrounding storage tank

• DEP issued Emergency Final Order for 12 initially impacted counties

• Supporting cleanup at Pahokee Marina where over 20 boats were sunk.

• DEP/BER cleaning up hazardous waste storage site after roof was damaged

• DEP personnel staffing ESF 10 desk in Highlands county• Conducting coastal beach assessment on Florida East

Coast• Conducting overflight with U.S. EPA of phosphate facilities

Page 50: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 10 – Hazardous Materials• Current Operations (continued) –

– Hurricane Jeanne• Assessing status of Domestic Wastewater Facilities (>3300

hookups)– 108 operational– 135 unconfirmed– 41 operational with followup needs

• Assessing status of Drinking Water Facilities (>3300 hookups)– 11 operational – 1 non-operational– 92 no response

Page 51: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 10 – Hazardous Materials• Unmet Needs –

– None at this time• Future Operations –

– Continue response to Hazardous Materials incidents and fuel spills from sunken vessels.

– Continue followup of drinking water, wastewater, & solid waste facilities.

– Continue to assess and provide input for generator needs at wastewater and drinking water facilities.

– Fuel supply outlook:• 254.5 million gallons for 3 days• 284.5 million gallons for 9 days

Up Next – ESF 11

Page 52: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 11Food & Water

Up Next – ESF 12

Page 53: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 11 – Food & Water

• Current Operations –– Hurricane Frances – Ivan – Jeanne

• USDA food for 866,000 meals• Commercial food for 22,500 meals• Baby food and formula – 54,675 cases• Baby Supplies – 3,493 cases

– Two LSA teams deployed

• Unmet Needs –– None at this time

• Future Operations –– Continue monitoring inventories– Support efforts of mass care organization

Up Next – ESF 12

Page 54: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 12Energy

Up Next – ESF 13

Page 55: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 12 – Energy• Current Operations –

Power– IVAN

• Total outages - 34,937 customers.• Cooperative outages - 1,579 customers.• Gulf Power outages - 33,358 customers.

Approximately 15,000 of the 33,358 may not be able to take service; this is being researched by GPC.

• Outage updates on Tracker #997, ETR updates on Tracker #1191.

• Outage percentages are Escambia 16% and Santa Rosa 17%.

• The estimated time of restoration by GPC is: 100% back in service that can take service, for Escambia and Santa Rosa by midnight October 2.

• GPC personnel - 1,968 line and 1,100 tree trim.

Page 56: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 12 – Energy• Current Operations (continued) –

Power– JEANNE

• Total outages - 1,267,389 currently from a peak of 3,400,000.

• FPL outages - 578,600 (14% of customers).• TECO outages - 122,900 (20% of customers).• PEF outages - 281,425 (18% of customers).• Outage updates on Tracker #819, ETR updates are

now available and will be posted in Tracker ASAP.• Municipalities outages - 165,750 (14% of customers).• Cooperatives outages - 118,713 (13% of customers).

Page 57: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

• Current Operations (continued) –Fuel– Fuel supply to the Panhandle is by truck from ports and tank farms in

FL, GA. & AL. – Port of Pensacola not accessible by water due to channel

obstructions. Delivery of replacement product is being handled by tanker trucks.

– Petroleum companies report higher inventories.– Five of eight major petroleum companies report that the following

amounts of fuel will arrive in the state:– 107.2 million gallons within 72 hours.– 137.2 million gallons within 9 days.

– The Internal Revenue Service has extended their tax waiver statewide through October 5 for "Red Dye" diesel.

– All ports are open for land and sea traffic.– Inventories for gasoline and diesel: Fuel supplies returning to normal

levels at port terminals and to distributors statewide. Almost all retail outlets that are closed are so because of storm damage or electricity outage. Diesel volumes at Port Everglades have been restored with yesterday's arrival and offloading of 3 tanker ships. One ship bearing diesel is scheduled to arrive today (9/28).

ESF 12 – Energy

Page 58: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

• Unmet Needs –– None at this time

• Future Operations –– Continue restoration of power as weather

permits.– Continue to work with suppliers and vendors to

get an adequate fuel supply to the needed locations.

ESF 12 – Energy

Up Next – ESF 13

Page 59: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 13Military Support

Up Next – ESF 14

Page 60: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Military Support• Current Operations –

– Strength: 4,022– Supporting Security and humanitarian efforts– Working EMAC – Active 7, Cancel 4– LSA Palm Beach and Ocala are established and

will be operational NET 281200Sept04• Unmet Needs –

– None at this time• Future Operations –

– Continue Security, Humanitarian and LSA Operations.

– Staff and support Aviation request as needed.

Up Next – ESF 14

Page 61: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 14Public Information

Up Next – ESF 15

Page 62: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 15Volunteers & Donations

Up Next – ESF 16Up Next – ESF 16

Page 63: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 16Law Enforcement

Up Next – ESF 17

Page 64: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 16 – Law Enforcement

• Current Operations –– 425 state and local law enforcement currently

deployed.– Security missions, traffic control, controlling

access to barrier islands and enforcement of exclusion zones.

• Unmet Needs –– None at this time

• Future Operations –– Continue to respond to missions as requested.

Up Next – ESF 17

Page 65: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 17Animal Protection

Up Next – Finance & Administration

Page 66: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 17 – Animal Protection• Current Operations –

– ESF17 established at University of Florida, Osceola County Extension Office, Osceola Heritage Park, 1921 Kissimmee Valley Lane, Kissimmee

– FDACS Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement performing initial impacted dairy industry assessment in Okeechobee, St. Lucie, Martin County area.

– Assessment and Response teams deploymed from ICP– HSUS liaison (SART participant) assigned to ICP– Florida Animal Control Association liaison (SART participant)

assigned to ICP– 6. University of Florida, IFAS Extension (SART participant)

assigned to ICP– Florida Veterinary Medical Association (SART participant)

compiling information for veterinary volunteers– Attempting to contact County ESF17 Coordinators in impact

area

Page 67: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

ESF 17 – Animal Protection• Current Operations (continued) –

– University of Florida, College of Veterinary Medicine (SART participant) team on standby with Veterinary Response Team

– Preliminary information from the dairy industry: All dairies are on electrical generators in impact areas: Some dairies report barns down and will be moving cattle to other dairies for milking. Feed mills without power in impact area. Widespread flooding

• Unmet Needs –– Generators for dairy and poultry industry

• Future Operations –– Rapid Assessment and Response– Work with private contractors and counties to supply electrical

generators to impacted animal industry

Up Next – Finance & Administration

Page 68: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Finance & Administration

Up Next – Logistics

Page 69: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Finance & Administration

Up Next – Logistics

• Current Operations –– PO's issued for equipment for Ocala LSA and

various office supplies & repairs– Deployment of Finance & Operations staff to

Indian River County• Unmet Needs –

– None at this time• Future Operations –

– Support EOC, DFO, LSA's in any purchasing or deployment needs

– Continue to track costs of four events

Page 70: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Logistics

Up Next – RecoveryUp Next – EMAC Mutual Aid

Page 71: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

EMAC Mutual Aid

Up Next – Recovery

Page 72: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

EMAC Mutual Aid• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Ivan EMAC Resources Deployed• 21 States supplying personnel• 46 teams and 254 personnel assigned Personnel State Assignment

1 AK SEOC 4 AK Health & Med 1 AL TBD 4 AL SEOC 1 AR Orlando DFO 9 CA Orlando DFO 4 CA SEOC 5 CO Tallahassee 10 GA Santa Rosa 28 GA Escambia 34 GA Leon LSA 15 IA SPSN 18 IL Santa Rosa 2 KY Orlando DFO 1 LA Tallahassee 1 MD Escambia

Personnel State Assignment 1 MI SEOC 1 MO Panhandle 1 MS EMAC A-Team 1 ND SEOC 1 NH SEOC 6 NY SEOC 31 OK Santa Rosa 25 TN Orlando DFO 41 TX Walton,

Oskaloosa,Santa Rosa

2 TN Brevard 3 UT EMAC A-Team 1 VT EMAC A-Team 1 WI SEOC

Page 73: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

EMAC Mutual Aid• Current Operations –

– Hurricane Jeanne• 7 states supplying 28 personnel

working in 8 teams– Hurricane Ivan

• 18 States supplying 190 personnelworking in 28 teams

– Tropical Storm Bonnie and Hurricanes Charley assignments are complete

• Unmet Needs –– 2 REQ-A’s in progress

• Future Operations –– Continue EMAC support to the State of Florida

Up Next – Recovery

Page 74: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Recovery

Up Next – SERT Chief

Page 75: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Recovery• Disaster Recovery Centers

– 29 currently open– working toward a total of 41

• Advance Recovery Liaisons– 14 ARL's on-site in 9 counties– 5 enroute to 3 counties

• Community Relations– Big emphasis today is getting people ready to transition

over to Martin and Indian River Counties tomorrow.• Preliminary Damage Assessments

– 20 counties were started today– 13 more counties on schedule to get started tomorrow

• Applicant Briefings– Same schedule as planned but now combining all

disasters to same briefings

Up Next – SERT Chief

Page 76: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

SERT Chief

Mike DeLorenzo

Page 77: Hurricane Jeanne Evening Briefing September 28, 2004

Next Briefing

September 29 at 0730Branch Chief Briefing