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David Halstead, DirectorDavid Halstead, DirectorDivision of Emergency ManagementDivision of Emergency Management
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137 - Wildfires of 1998 105 - Deepwater Horizon (2010) 90 - Hurricane Andrew (1992) 86 - 2004 Hurricane Season,
Charley, Frances, Ivan and Jeanne
36 - Hurricane Katrina, EMAC
support to Mississippi (2005) 29 - Operation Haiti Relief (2010) 27 - Tropical Storm Fay (2008)
Record Consecutive Days of Activation
Record Consecutive Days with No Oil Escaping from Deepwater Horizon
28 – No Oil Since July 15 at (1530)
Florida Branch Operations• Branch 1 (Escambia & Santa Rosa)
– Bayou Chico Staging Area (Pensacola)
• Branch 2 (Okaloosa & Walton) – Henderson Beach State Park (Destin)
• Branch 3 (Bay) – Miracle Strip Staging Area (Panama
City)
• Branch 4 (Gulf, Franklin, Wakulla & Jefferson)– Port St. Joe
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Personnel were also deployed to Area Command New Orleans, Unified Command Mobile and Florida Peninsula Incident Command (Miami).
Total Florida Booming Throughout
• ACP Deployed (Tier 1&2): 475,600 feet• Supplemental Boom (Tier 3): 315,461 feet
• TOTAL: 791,061 feet
10Perdido Bay Boom
BP Funding for Florida EffortsTotal: $168.9 million• $50 million for state response and
supplemental booming strategies• $32 million for tourism• $68 million for Business and Individual Claims• $8.8 million for local government claims• $100,000 for Volunteer Florida• $10 million for Florida Institute of
Oceanography11
Small Business Administration Loans
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SBA Applications
Issued Accepted Declined Approved
754 255 101 49
Loan amount approved: $4,773,000.00
Bridge Loan Program
Accepted Declined Approved
90 13 77
Loan amount approved: $1,895,000.00
Deepwater Horizon Response By the Numbers
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182 Relocated Loggerhead turtle nests
200 Approximate miles of Florida’s coastline impacted throughout the event
542 Total visibly oiled wildlife recovered along Florida’s coast by wildlife responders
Over 700 reconnaissance flights conducted covering Florida’s coastline
Over 8,000 total number of reconnaissance reports received
Housing Strategy• Shelters (Schools that must be reopened)• Big box stores utilized as interim shelters• Large Arenas or complexes may be a temporary
option• Tents may also fall in this category• Temporary Housing (what insurance does not
cover)– Rental properties– Foreclosures– Group sites (Trailers)
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Temporary Housing Is ……….
•(act of) Return to normal daily activities in a temporary location
•(physical) A housing unit intended for temporary inhabitation after a disaster
A necessary stage in post-disaster recovery
Disaster Housing Assistance Program
Stafford Act –Title IV, Sec. 408 – Assistance to Individuals and Households
Applicants are Eligible to Receive Assistance for the following:
•Temporary Housing
•Repairs
•Replacement
Vision and Goals
Vision
A housing effort that engages all levels of government and the nonprofit and private sectors so that when disaster strikes our counties:
We collectively meet the urgent housing needs of disaster survivors and
Enable individuals, households, and communities to rebuild and restore their way of life
Goals•Support individuals, households, and communities in returning to self-sufficiency
•Affirm and fulfill fundamental disaster housing responsibilities and roles •Increase our collective understanding and ability to meet the complex needs of disaster survivors and affected communities
•Build capabilities to provide a broad range of flexible housing options
•Better integrate disaster housing assistance with related community support services and long-term recovery efforts
Fuel Supply
• Industry Practice is “Just in Time” delivery• Since 2004, the Industry has committed to
increasing inventories during hurricane season– No specific quantity given– Anti-Trust laws & regulations limit inventory data
coordination• Motivations to meet this commitment:
– Terminals need sufficient fuel to meet evacuation demand and still maintain structural hurricane minimums due to storm surge or high winds
Fuel Supply
• Port Everglades• Port of Tampa• Port of Jacksonville• Barge supplies the Panhandle• Limiting factors
– Power generation at the Ports (Corrected)– Power generation at the gas stations– Fuel trucks
Fuel Supply
• Motivations cont’d– Shipping disruptions from large storms are not
uncommon; larger inventories add supply/demand flexibility
– Meet demands in the event of an extended port closure due to hurricane damage (i.e., contractual obligations)
– A terminal without fuel is at a distinct competitive disadvantage
Fuel Supply
• Industry committed to meeting emergency fuel priorities:– Emergency Responders– Healthcare Facilities– Evacuation/Re-entry Routes & Corridors– Other critical facilities as accessible
• Recommendation– Encourage your agency’s procurement staff to have
“Firm” fuel contracts; fuel suppliers are contractually obligated to provide fuel to entities with firm contract