Emergency Management Blogs

Emergency Management Blog - Rick Wimberly & Lorin Bristow Alerting and Warning
Alerts & Notifications

by Rick Wimberly & Lorin Bristow: Best practices for emergency notification programs

Subscribe via RSS | About this Blog | Contact Rick Wimberly & Lorin Bristow

Congressional Hearing Hears Warning Concerns
July 30, 2010
Bookmark and Share

Latest Blog Posts RSS

Emergency Management Blog - Eric Holdeman: Disaster Zone Emergency Management Is a Complicated Profession
Feb 11 It is no longer possible for one person to know everything about emergency management.…
Emergency Management Blog - Eric Holdeman: Disaster Zone Relationships are key--before the disaster
Feb 11 Neil Clement's story below says it all about having important relationships in place before an event.…
Emergency Management Blog - Gerald Baron: Crisis Comm Tweet breaking news? How news organizations are struggling with this
Feb 09 Great tips on how to manage social media, website, releases…

A senior National Weather Service official last week told a Congressional sub-committee that "dramatic improvement" is needed in the way flood information is communicated. Gary Carter, Director of Hydrologic Development of the National Weather Service said, "This really needs to be moved to a whole new level...where when we update a precipitation forecast, every one of our partners and the public see it instantly."

Carter was called before Congress to testify about the recent Nashville-area floods and concerns that flood warnings were issued too late, and not communicated well. Among others testifying to the Appropriations Sub-Committee of Energy and Water Development was the head of the Nashville Chamber of Commerce who said hundreds of millions of dollars of damage could have been avoided, had warnings been issued and communicated sooner.

Nashville area Congressman Jim Cooper was sharply critical of The Army Corps of Engineers. He told the hearing that the Corps after-action report was "putting a cheerful face on some really ugly facts. The Corps admits to no less than 27 categories of problems with their performance during the 2010 flood, so it's hard to see how the Corps can give itself any kind of passing grade."

Whit Adamson, President of the Tennessee Association of Broadcasters, asked for Congressional support for funding for modernization of the Emergency Alert System (EAS) in Tennessee. He said the upgrades required by the FCC and FEMA are "very expensive". Broadcasters, he said, need help with equipment purchases and funding for EAS training. In his written testimony, he pitched a statewide notification program that would span beyond EAS into telephone, text, and other alerting means. (Full disclosure: Galain is one of the co-authors of the plan.)

As we posted earlier, we saw the floods up close since we live in the Nashville area. We know first-hand how earlier and more effective warnings would have helped. It's pretty clear in this situation that there was a break-down in communications between the feds as the flood waters approached. The after-action report makes that clear. Local officials and FEMA have received high marks for their response. The community rallied. However, there are holes in the state's alert and warning system that need to be plugged.

All the best,

Rick
Top

Comments


Add Your Comment

You are solely responsible for the content of your comments. We reserve the right to remove comments that are considered profane, vulgar, obscene, factually inaccurate, off-topic, or considered a personal attack.




Latest Emergency Management News

Emergency Management January 2011/Illustration by Tom McKeith.
Emergency Management Is a Complicated Profession (Opinion)

It’s no longer possible for one person to have all the information available on emergency management and homeland security.
StormReady Communities Mitigate the Effects of Severe Weather

With its record of federally declared disasters, 2011 exhibited the need for StormReady communities.
Was 2011 the Costliest Year for Emergencies?

With more than 90 federally declared disasters, 2011 was the year of the billion-dollar disaster.

4 Ways to Get EM

Subscribe to Emergency Management MagazineFollow Emergency Management on TwitterSubscribe to Emergency Management HeadlinesSubscribe to Emergency Management Newsletters


Blog Archives