Daily Operations Briefing Wednesday, February 19, 2014 8:30 a.m. EST
Disaster Amendments Amendment Effective Date Action A B C D E F G Debris Removal Emergency Protective Measures Road Systems & Bridges Water Control Facilities Public Buildings & Contents Public Utilities Parks, Recreational, & Other Amendment No. 3 to FEMA-3368-EM-GA February 14, 2014 Closes the incident period effective February 14
Joint Preliminary Damage Assessments Region IV IV V VI State / Location GA SC IN LA Event Winter Storm Feb 11-13, 2014 Winter Storm Feb 11-13, 2014 Winter Storm Jan 4-7, 2014 Winter Storm Feb 28-30, 2014 IA/PA Number of Counties Requested Complete Start End PA 15 1 2/18 TBD PA 19 0 2/19 - TBD PA 43 0 2/10 TBD PA 28 0 2/18 TBD
Open Field Offices as of February 19, 2014
National Weather Forecast
Active Watches/Warnings http://www.nws.noaa.gov/largemap.php
Precipitation Forecast 3 Day Day 1 Day 2 Day 3
River Forecast 7 Day http://water.weather.gov/ahps/forecasts.php
Significant River Flood Outlook http://www.hpc.ncep.noaa.gov/nationalfloodo utlook/
Convective Outlooks Days 1 3 Day 1 Day 2 http://www.spc.noaa.gov/products/outlook/ Day 3
Critical Fire Weather Areas Days 1 8 Day 1 Day 2 Day 3-8
Hazard Outlook: February 21 25 http://www.cpc.ncep.noaa.gov/products/predictions/threats/threats_ie.php
Space Weather NOAA Scales Activity (Range: 1/minor to 5/extreme) Past 24 Hours Current Next 24 Hours Space Weather Activity: Moderate Minor Moderate Geomagnetic Storms G2 G1 G2 Solar Radiation Storms None None None Radio Blackouts None None None HF Communication Impact Sunspot Activity http://www.swpc.noaa.gov/drap/global.html http://spaceweather.com/
February Tornadoes A tornado is part of a severe thunderstorm, and can occur at any place on Earth. Tornadoes are not limited to a specific geographic location and have been documented in every state of the U.S. Tornadoes may occur at any time of the day or year so there really is no national tornado "season. Most early spring tornadoes in the U.S. tend to occur in the south central and southeast U.S. Gulf States, such as Mississippi and Louisiana, are the frequent recipients of tornadoes from February to April. Late spring tornadoes generally spread farther north, including Kansas, Nebraska, and the Tennessee Valley. An average of 29 tornadoes occur in the U.S. in February each year. http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/data/cmb /images/tornado/clim/feb-avg-torn1991-2010.gif http://www1.ncdc.noaa.gov/pub/d ata/cmb/images/tornado/clim/torn adoes_bymonth.png
FEMA CONUS Commodity Readiness as of February 14, 2014 DECISION/REORDER POINT (ROP) Water Meals Cots Blankets Tarps Plastic Sheeting FEMA INVENTORY ESF-7 PARTNERS & PRIVATE SECTOR SHORTFALL DECISION/REORDER POINT (ROP) Generators 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Commodity Atlanta Ft. Worth Frederick Moffett Cumberland Selma & PPS FEMA Total (CONUS) Catastrophic Requirement Water 2,014,611 3,623,262 1,543,044 623,100 557,796 538,360 8,900,173 15,575,000 Meals 3,086,115 2,139,862 1,393,454 490,932 54,726 1,416,316 8,581,405 10,500,000 Cots 9,841 32,175 41,190 22,018 29,552 34,592 169,368 175,000 Blankets 395,355 208,492 215,409 53,864 501,886 184,988 1,559,994 350,000 Tarps 202,830 137,491 1,675 8,631 9,428 1,824 361,879 525,000 Plastic Sheeting 8,045 50,974 13,122 8,580 114,100 376 195,197 78,750 Generators 77 51 0 90 218 432 NOTES Catastrophic requirement based on supporting 1.75 million survivors for 3 days. Deliveries of 1.7M liters of water with RDD of mid June 2014 to avoid simultaneous expiration dates.
FEMA Pacific Commodity Readiness as of February 14, 2014 Water Meals Cots Blankets Tents FEMA INVENTORY ESF-7 PARTNERS & PRIVATE SECTOR SHORTFALL Plastic Sheeting Generators 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Commodity Hawaii Guam FEMA Total (Pacific) Catastrophic Requirement Water 311,750 179,372 491,122 476,000 Meals 154,400 84,000 238,400 238,000 Cots 6,617 2,787 9,404 10,750 Blankets 10,956 2,245 13,201 6,000 Tents 1,000 1,000 2,250 Plastic Sheeting 3,871 5,286 9,157 6,500 Generators 85 71 156 170 NOTES Hawaii requirement is based on supporting 11,000 survivors for 14 days. Guam requirement is based on supporting 6,000 survivors for 14 days. IAW the Region IX right sizing plan.
FEMA Readiness Deployable Teams/Assets Deployable Teams/Assets Resource Status Total Available Partially Available Not Available Deployed Activated Comments Rating Criterion FCO 41 20 49% N/A 2 19 FDRC 9 5 56% 0 0 4 US&R 28 26 92% 2 0 0 NV-TF1 (Yellow/Conditional) NM-TF1 (Yellow/Conditional) OFDC Readiness: FCO Green Yellow Red Type 1 3+ 2 1 Type 2 4+ 3 2 Type 3 4 3 2 FDRC 3 2 1 Green = Available/FMC Yellow = Available/PMC Red = Out-of-Service Blue = Assigned/Deployed National IMAT 3 3 100% 0 0 0 Regional IMAT 13 5 38% 0 3 5 MCOV 55 43 78% 0 12 0 Teams deployed to: TX, OK, SC, CA, GA Region V & X personnel shortages Region VII: personnel shortages & equip 12 not available transitioning/upgrade to new satellite system Green: 3 avail Yellow: 1 avail Red: 0 avail Individual N-IMAT red if 50% of Section Chiefs and/or Team Leader is unavailable for deployment. Green: > 6 avail Yellow: 4-6 teams available Red: > 8 teams deployed/unavailable R-IMAT also red if TL Ops/Log Chief is unavailable and has no qualified replacement. Green = Available/FMC Yellow = Available/PMC Red = Out-of-Service Blue = Assigned/Deployed
FEMA Readiness National/Regional Teams Resource Status Total Available Partially Available National/Regional Teams Not Available Deployed/ Activated NWC 5 5 100% 0 0 24/7 NRCC 6 369 94% 0 0 Not Activated HLT 1 1 100% 0 0 Not Activated DEST Not Activated Comments Rating Criterion Green = FMC Yellow = PMC Red = NMC RRCCs 10 10 100% 0 0 Not Activated RWCs/MOCs 10 10 100% 0 0 24/7