By John Cornelison on
10/21/2011 11:31 AM
Hazus is a nationally applicable standardized methodology that contains models for estimating potential losses from earthquakes, floods, and hurricanes. Hazus uses Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology to estimate physical, economic, and social impacts of disasters.
HAZUS-MH is software developed by FEMA that analyzes risk from natural hazards in communities. Although Hazus-MH itself is free, it requires the users to have ArcGIS with ArcView license level.
Existing HAZUS-MH runs for Vashon (i.e. those for our 2005 Earthquake Study,...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/21/2011 10:37 AM
|
By John Cornelison on
10/21/2011 9:56 AM
In addition to helping maintain Vashon CERT’s generators at the local fire stations each month, Vashon’s Dennis Schroeder has been a volunteer at the Real Change newspaper for the past five years, as well as serving on its Board of Directors for a two-year term. For those who may not know, Real Change is the street newspaper that is sold in Seattle and the surrounding areas by homeless and low-income people. The mission statement...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/21/2011 8:11 AM
|
By John Cornelison on
10/18/2011 9:36 AM
|
By John Cornelison on
10/17/2011 8:31 PM
Thanks to King County’s Dave Nichols for spotting this infographic by the Digital Surgeons depicting where FEMA’s funds have gone this...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/17/2011 8:27 PM
KING 5 News reported today a swarm of earthquakes in recent weeks around Mount Rainier: nothing especially exciting, but an alert that it IS an active volcano!
Read the full story here. For the latest view of regional quakes, always visit www.pnsn.org/req2/.
|
By John Cornelison on
10/17/2011 5:46 PM
If you appreciated my 14 March post that mentioned the ABC site showing before & after images of some tsunami scenes, you’ll likely also appreciate this somewhat similar set of photos from the Sacramento Bee that show 3 sequential images shot from the same perspective – of maybe a dozen different scenes. Thanks to Cathy Rogers & Jill Watson for alerting us to these. ...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/15/2011 7:09 AM
Prepare. Plan. Stay Informed.
The first ever nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System will occur on Nov 9 at 2 pm ET and last for about 3 minutes, according to Damon Penn, of National...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/15/2011 4:57 AM
A posting to the northwest DStar email list reports that a new Amateur Radio organization is being formed in Tukwila that will help to foster volunteerism, offer radio and emergency management training and build a sense of community.
The purpose of the club is to:
Volunteer radio skills, equipment and experience to the Tukwila Office of Emergency Management to provide volunteer resources, that in turn will work with the Tukwila Fire and Police in a civilian capacity
Train those interested in becoming licensed radio operators and help them achieve their radio licensing goals
Build a sense of Community by hosting monthly club meetings to introduce club members to new technology, best practices, equipment discussions and anything...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/14/2011 8:27 AM
Do you want to see your name in print? Give Linda, Susan or Barbara your recipe(s) before the 21st and your name and recipe(s) will be included in the VIFR Cookbook. Hope to have available for the holidays, if not VIFR will make up gift certificates. If interested in purchasing a cookbook let us know and we can get an idea of how many to order. To those that have already submitted recipes – Thank you! Barbara, Linda and Susan See my earlier post (at http://vashoneoc.org/Blogs/VashonPreparedness/tabid/164/EntryId/105/Submit-a-Recipe-to-Support-Vashon-Explorers.aspx) for a copy of the entry...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/13/2011 11:36 AM
Over the last year Debi Richards, the Vashon Chamber of Commerce’s Executive Director has been thinking about how to encourage businesses to get better...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/13/2011 10:21 AM
On Saturday October 22, starting at 9:00am and running till 12:00 noon, VashonBePrepared is holding an introduction to all the various partners in the local disaster preparedness effort and how they serve when activated for an emergency. A number of the groups will be there at main fire station (either the Emergency Operations Center or Penny Farcy, depending on number of participants) so you can get more specifics on the organizations’ goals and style. Expanding from the previous EOC 101 courses, there still will be a good introduction to the basics of our EOC operations. Jan Milligan, VashonBePrepared’s Volunteer Coordinator is organizing the effort and would appreciate knowing who is coming to plan for space and refreshments!...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/12/2011 6:40 PM
The following is from FEMA: The Department of Homeland Security recently announced the release of the country's first-ever National Preparedness Goal. The goal is the first deliverable required under Presidential Policy Directive (PPD) 8: National Preparedness, which was released in April 2011. The goal sets the vision for nationwide preparedness and identifies the core capabilities and targets necessary to achieve preparedness across five mission areas laid out under PPD 8: prevention, protection, mitigation,...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/12/2011 2:26 PM
|
By John Cornelison on
10/12/2011 9:23 AM
According to 1st Alert, 79% of families have a fire escape plan, but 51% have never practiced it, and 29% have only done so once. The National Fire Protection Association recommends practicing your emergency escape routes twice annually. Other fire safety organizations promote monthly drills – as a way to bolster reaction times during a real emergency. This likely should also hold for other preparedness plans for Vashon families – and businesses. A Red Cross recent survey...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/11/2011 9:36 AM
Seattle Chapter, American Red Cross, is Sponsoring an Amateur Radio General Class Licensing Course The course meets on Monday nights starting October 24, 2011 at 6:30 PM and continues through November 21, 2011. Class hours are generally from 6:30 PM to 9:30 PM. The course is at the Seattle Red Cross, 1900 25th Ave., South, Seattle, WA 98144, room 130 (lower level). The course is built to give you confidence in passing the licensing test and knowledge and...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/7/2011 4:17 PM
While last winter didn’t seem that cold (skiing was NOT as epic as I had hoped or the dramatic forecasts had predicted), it did have lots of rain and this year is likely to be colder and wetter than average also. According to the national Climate Prediction Center’s announcement yesterday, it looks like a wetter, but not necessarily colder winter...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/7/2011 3:48 PM
Thanks to Steve Allen for installing a new automatically activated alert system this afternoon at the North End Fire Station. The system has been improved gradually overtime and no longer relies on monthly volunteers swapping out manually charged batteries for instance. The new system is actually located inside the fire station and so has a trickle charger that will keep the batteries topped off. ...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/7/2011 2:42 PM
On September 30th, King County Executive Dow Constantine presented the citizens of Vashon and the organizations that comprise VashonBePrepared with his 2011 Award for Community Preparedness as noted in the King County press release and my comments on...
|
By John Cornelison on
10/7/2011 1:51 PM
Sept. 30, 2011
Two King County organizations honored...
|
By John Cornelison on
9/30/2011 6:17 AM
After years of championing the cause, Atmospheric Scientist Cliff Mass, should certainly be happy as Washington’s first coastal Doppler radar site opened yesterday. The new site at Langley Hill is already operational and photos can be viewed on this site. Congratulations to all for their help in getting this huge project finished! This should help improve the accuracy of longer range weather forecasting in the Puget Sound dramatically.
|
By John Cornelison on
9/29/2011 9:49 PM
UPI reports that the Seismological Society of America said yesterday that the 2 mile complex sedimentary basin underlying Seattle can amplify earthquake shaking in a way not well modeled. Existing models assume more uniform rock substrates – ours will take more study to properly model. Recent measurements by UW seismologists have...
|
By John Cornelison on
9/23/2011 2:43 PM
According to the Herald Tribute, Paine Field is the 1st non-military federal staging area to receive certification to launch evacuations or medical treatment for disasters anywhere in the U.S. See the Press release here.
|
By John Cornelison on
9/23/2011 2:35 PM
"Public Health Preparedness: 2011 State-by-State Update on Laboratory Capabilities and Response Readiness Planning," is the latest report by the CDC’s Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response that evaluates the nation’s ability to respond to public health emergencies such as disease outbreaks and natural disasters. This report focuses on public health laboratories, which are critical for identifying and understanding health threats and disease outbreaks, and response readiness planning, which...
|
By John Cornelison on
9/23/2011 7:12 AM
|
By John Cornelison on
9/21/2011 11:32 AM
Connect to https://connect.hsin.gov/pets/ 1:50 pm (PST?) on Thursday, Sept. 22, 2011. (Enter as a guest.) No registration is required, and the webinar is free. From the home to the farm, pets, livestock, and animals are an important part of our lives. However, when it comes to preparing for disasters, they can pose some unique challenges and it's important that they are included in emergency and disaster preparedness, response, and recovery. If you are part of an organization that does work in the...
|
By John Cornelison on
8/26/2011 4:48 AM
|
By John Cornelison on
8/23/2011 12:27 PM
The region between Richmond and Charlottesville in Virginia received a 5.9 magnitude earthquake at 1:51 p.m. on Tuesday. Colorado got a 5.3 quake near Trinidad just before Noon. The only larger quakes since 1882 were from human activity: explosives or drilling – pumping waste underground that apparently lubricated the fault line! The USGS reports there was no correlation between the two quakes. Social media (Twitter) carried many reports on these…
|
By John Cornelison on
8/13/2011 11:58 AM
The Associated Press came to this week’s 5th Annual Hazus conference held at the federal building and wrote up a nice piece citing (yet again) that we are not ready for the huge quakes possible from any number of faults, but especially the Seattle and Cascadia faults:
Of particular worry to government agencies - and emergency planners like Schelling - is the 680-mile long Cascadia fault line, which runs just 50 miles off Washington's shore. Scientists have found that a big 8.0 to 9.0 earthquake has hit that fault line about every 500 years. The last one struck in 1700.
According to a 2005 study that used Hazus data, such a strong earthquake would level parts of the region, bringing landslides,...
|