Monday, February 25, 2019 8:30 a.m. EST
Significant Activity Feb 22-25 Significant Events: Severe Weather Tennessee Valley Tropical Activity: No activity affecting U.S. interests Significant Weather: High winds Great Lakes to Northeast Heavy snow possible Pacific Northwest to central CA and Northern Rockies/Plains Heavy rain and flash flooding possible northern CA Flooding/flash flooding possible Middle and Lower Mississippi valleys and Tennessee Valley Declaration Activity: None
Severe Weather Tennessee Valley FINAL Current Situation: The severe weather that produced heavy rain, hail and tornadic activity Sunday has passed out of the area. Over the past 14 days the majority of northern MS, AL, and GA along with the majority of TN and southern KY experienced 6-12 inches of rainfall. Flooding threat remains into early this week as run-off continues to flow into the main stem rivers. Lifelines: Safety & Security MS: approx. 300 homes with varying levels of damage across multiple counties; 30 businesses damaged Food, Water, Sheltering Shelters open/number of occupants: MS 2/17; TN 8/13; AL 5/8; KY 2/0 (ESF 6) TN: Van Leer Water System outage in Dickson County; boil water notice in effect for 200 customers Health & Medical MS: 2 confirmed storm-related fatalities (Pontotoc and Lowndes counties); 20 injuries TN: 1 confirmed fatality (Knox County) Energy: Minimal power outages across the region; restoration ongoing Transportation MS: 190 roads affected (16 inaccessible, 2 destroyed); 5 bridges damaged, 1 bridge destroyed TN/NC: Interstate 40 near TN/NC border closed with detour in place; road expected to be closed for one month; Interstate 24 eastbound in Davidson County, north of Nashville, closed due to mudslide Other states: local road closures due to debris, mudslides and flooding Guam State/Federal Response Joint PDAs started in MS; will begin this week for TN as flood waters recede MS & TN EOCs at Partial Activation KY EOC at Monitoring AL EOC at Normal Operations TN & AL Governors declared a state of emergency FEMA Region IV RWC at Steady State, continues to monitor; LNO deployed to TN EOC NWC at Steady State, continues to monitor
National Weather Forecast Mon Tue Wed
Precipitation Forecast Mon-Wed Mon Tue Wed
Significant River Flood Outlook
Winter Precipitation Outlook Forecast Snowfall Forecast Ice Accumulation
Long Range Outlooks Mar 2-6 6-10 Day Temperature Probability 6-10 Day Precipitation Probability
Disaster Requests & Declarations Declaration Requests in Process Requests APPROVED (since last report) Requests DENIED (since last report) 2 IA PA HM Date Requested 0 0 TX DR Severe Storms and Flooding X X X October 30, 2018 KS DR Severe Storms, Straight-line Winds, and Flooding X X November 14, 2018
Readiness Deployable Teams and Assets National and Regional Resources Strength: 12,965 IM Workforce Available: 4,363 / 34% Other: 3,319 Deployed: 5,283 East: Available N-IMAT West: Available Crisis: Available Assigned: 13 Regional IMAT Available: 4 (4-6 Teams) PMC / NMC: 4 Deployed: 5 N-ISB Teams (3 Teams) US&R (>66%) MERS (>66%) FCO ( 2 Type II/I) FDRC (=3) Team A: Available Team B: Available Team C: Available Assigned: 28 Available: 27 PMC / NMC: 1 Deployed: 0 Assigned: 36 Available: 35 PMC / NMC: 0 Deployed: 1 Assigned: 29 Available: 4 PMC / NMC: 1 Deployed: 24 Assigned: 13 Available: 3 PMC / NMC: 1 Deployed: 9 Cadres with 25% or Less Availability EHP 9% (39/460); ER 2% (1/57); FL 20% (33/164); HM 22% (244/1089); LOG 23% (305/1325); PA 11% (226/2134); SEC 21% (26/124)
FEMA Readiness Activation Teams Status Activated Team Activation Level Activation Times Reason / Comments NWC (5 Teams) Steady State NRCC (2 Teams) Available Primary - Blue Team HLT Available RWC / MOCs (10 Regions) Steady State RRCCs (10 Regions) Available Backup Regions: VIII, VI and I
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