Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide - pg
Transcription
Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide - pg
MARYLAND Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide Maryland Emergency Management Agency TROPICAL CYCLONES TROPICAL CYCLONES The Eyewall: This is the region where the strongest winds get as close to the center of the storm as they can. The eyewall consists of a ring of tall intense thunderstorms that produce heavy rains and usually the strongest winds. Changes in the structure of the eye and eyewall can cause changes in the wind speed, which is an indicator of the storm’s intensity. The eye can grow or shrink in size and on occasion, double eyewalls can form. Tropical cyclones, a general term for tropical storms and hurricanes, are low pressure systems that form over the tropics and sub-tropics. These storms are referred to as “cyclones” due to their rotation. Tropical cyclones are among the most powerful and destructive meteorological systems on earth. On average it takes about five days for a tropical cyclone to reach its maximum potential intensity. Their destructive elements include very high winds, heavy rain, lightning, tornadoes, hail, and storm surge. There are four stages of tropical cyclone in order of development: The Spiral Rainbands: These are curved bands of clouds and thunderstorms trailing away from the eyewall in a spiral fashion. These bands are capable of producing heavy bursts of rain and wind, as well as tornadoes. There are sometimes gaps between spiral rainbands where no rain or intense wind is found. Tropical Wave: a low pressure trough of persisting winds that blow from east to west. Tropical Depression: a closed circulation with maximum sustained surface wind speed less than 39 mph. Tropical Storm: a closed circulation with a maximum sustained surface wind speed from 39-73 mph. Hurricane: a closed circulation maximum sustained surface wind greater than 74 mph. A Tropical Cyclone’s Size: Typical hurricane strength tropical cyclones are about 300 miles wide, although they can vary considerably. Size is not necessarily an indication of hurricane intensity. Hurricane Andrew (1992), the second most devastating hurricane to hit the United States, next to Katrina (2005), was a relatively small hurricane. However, the hurricane’s destructive winds and rains covered a wide swath. For a large system, hurricane-force winds can extend outward more than 150 miles. The area over which tropical storm-force winds occur is even greater, ranging as far out as 300 miles from the eye of a large hurricane. Hurricane Structure: The main parts of a tropical cyclone are the rainbands, the eye, and the eyewall. Air spirals in toward the center in a counter-clockwise pattern in the northern hemisphere and out the top in the opposite direction. In the very center of the storm, sinking air forms a mostly cloud free region called the “eye”. Hurricane Season: The National Weather Service (NWS) National Hurricane Center defines June 1 through November 30 as the Atlantic hurricane season. September is the most active month for tropical cyclones in Maryland. National Hurricane Center records show that on average, ten tropical cyclones develop each year over the three primary regions for development, the Atlantic Basin, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. Of these, on average, six storms strengthen to become hurricanes, and of these, two reach to a major hurricane intensity of category three or higher based on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. The Eye: The hurricane’s center is a relatively calm, What about Maryland? Generally, Maryland is spared generally clear area of sinking air and light winds that usually do not exceed 15 mph and is typically 20-40 miles across. An eye develops when maximum sustained wind speed exceeds 74 mph. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide from land falling hurricanes because of the orientation of the Mid-Atlantic coastline, as well as the State’s latitude. Because the coast of North Carolina extends out into the Atlantic, 2 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency TROPICAL CYCLONES storms trending up the coast tend to make landfall there or pass offshore. Most hurricanes approaching Maryland make landfall to the south and soon are downgraded to tropical storm or tropical depression status. However, a number of factors point to the potential for increased danger from severe tropical cyclones in Maryland. Steady population growth and continuing nearshore development are increasing the risk of human injury and property loss. There is also widespread agreement among climatologists that a gradual change in climate is occurring. Potential effects include the melting of polar ice, expansion of the oceans, and an overall rise in sea levels. The slow sinking of land in the Chesapeake region, due to the combined effects of ground water withdrawal and postglacial rebound, effectively doubles the global rate of sea level rise in Maryland’s coastal areas. These factors increase the vulnerability of coastal areas to storm surge. Active watches and warnings are contained within the text of the public advisory and in nearly all instances provide a 48-hour lead time for watches and a 36-hour lead time for warnings. Tropical Cyclone Impacts: Tropical cyclone hazards come in several forms: storm surge, high winds, flooding, and tornadoes. Storm Surge: The intensity of tropical cyclones is measured by wind velocity, although the greatest devastation is usually associated with storm surge and flooding. For example, Hurricanes Agnes (1972) and Fran (1996) produced some of the worst flooding ever recorded for western and central Maryland due to heavy rains. In terms of storm surge, the August 1933 storm was particularly destructive, generating a 7-foot surge and waves over 20 feet high that created the inlet now separating Ocean City from Assateague Island. NOAA/NWS Annapolis, MD, Isabel 2003 MEMA, Hurricane Isabel, Eastern Shore Flooding Advisories, Watches, and Warnings: The National Hurricane Center issues tropical cyclone advisories once a storm reaches the level of tropical depression. Advisories are issued every six hours; in the eastern time zone, advisories are issued at 5 and 11 a.m. and 5 and 11 p.m. The Center also issues intermediate advisories every three hours when coastal watches or warnings have been posted and every two hours when coastal watches or warnings have been posted and land-based Doppler radars have identified a reliable storm center. Additionally, special public advisories may be issued at any time whenever a significant change has been noted in the storm. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide Storm surge is an abnormal local rise in sea level. The storm surge is caused by the difference in wind and barometric pressure between a tropical system and the environment outside the system. The end result is that water is pushed onto a coastline. The height of the surge is measured as the difference from mean sea level and can reach over 25 feet in extreme circumstances. The most devastating storm surges occur just to the right of the eye of a landfalling hurricane. For coastal areas, the storm surge is typically the most dangerous and damaging aspect of the storm. 3 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency TROPICAL CYCLONES Strong southerly winds ahead of the hurricane can push tides well above normal levels, causing extensive tidal flooding along the length of the Chesapeake Bay. Storm surges of 5 feet or more can occur over central portions of the Bay, inundating sections of Dorchester and Somerset Counties. Associated excessive rainfall amounts across the lower Eastern Shore can cause significant crop damage and inland flooding. debris, such as wood and metal siding, and sending them hurling at high speeds into other structures. Tropical storm-force winds are strong enough to be dangerous to those caught in them. It is for this reason, emergency managers try to have their evacuations completed and their emergency response personnel sheltered before the onset of tropical storm force winds (39 mph). In a hurricane, the strongest winds usually occur to the right side of the hurricane. The winds associated with a hurricane usually decrease significantly within 12 hours after landfall. Nonetheless, winds can stay above hurricane strength well inland. Hurricane Hugo (1989) battered Charlotte, North Carolina, about 175 miles inland, with wind gusts to nearly 100 mph. The intensity of a landfalling hurricane is expressed in terms of categories, relating to wind speeds and potential damage as described in the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale below. High Winds: Hurricanes are known for their damaging winds and they are rated in strength by their wind speed. The wind experienced from a hurricane damages and destroys structures in two ways. First, many homes are damaged or destroyed when high winds lift the roof off of the structure. The process is called Bernoulli’s Principle, which states the faster the air moves across a structure, the pressure lowers on the exposed side of the roof creating higher pressure in the attic. This action is similar to that on the wing of an airplane. As wind flow and speed increase across the wing of an airplane, it acquires lift. In the case of a roof, the lift created pulls the roof free and it becomes airborne. With the roof gone, the walls can be more easily blown down by the force of the wind. HURRICANE CATEGORIES DAMAGE Category Wind Speed 1 74-95 mph Some damage 2 96-110 mph Extensive damage 3 111-130 mph Devastating Damage 4 131-155 mph Catastrophic Damage 5 156+ mph Catastrophic Damage Before the Hurricane Season: ✔ Know the hurricane risks in your area. ✔ Learn safe evacuation routes inland. ✔ Learn the location of designated shelters. ✔ Review needs and working conditions of emergency equipment, such as flashlights and battery-powered radios. ✔ Ensure that enough nonperishable food and water supplies are on hand. ✔ Obtain and store materials, such as plywood, necessary to secure your home properly. ✔ Clear loose/clogged rain gutters and downspouts. ✔ Keep trees and shrubbery trimmed. ✔ Determine where to move your boat in an emergency. ✔ Review your flood insurance policy. Courtesy of FEMA – Sabine, TX, heavily damaged as noted by blue roof The second way homes and structures are destroyed or damaged is by wind blowing the airborne roof and other Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 4 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency TROPICAL CYCLONES When in a Watch Area: ✔ Frequently listen to radio, TV, or NOAA All Hazards Weather Radio for official bulletins of the storm’s progress. ✔ Fuel and service family vehicles. ✔ Inspect and secure mobile home tie downs. ✔ Cover all window and door openings with shutters or other protective materials. ✔ Check batteries and stock up on canned food, first-aid supplies, drinking water, and medications. ✔ Secure lawn furniture and other loose and lightweight objects, such as garbage cans and garden tools. ✔ Have an extra supply of cash on hand. What to bring to a shelter: first-aid kit; medications; baby food and diapers; cards, games, books; toiletries; battery-powered radio; a charged cell phone; flashlight (one per person); extra batteries; blankets or sleeping bags; identification, valuable papers (insurance), and cash. Flooding: In addition to storm surge and high winds, tropical cyclones threaten the United States with their torrential rains and flooding. Even after winds have diminished, the flood potential from these storms can remain for several days after landfall. Since 1970, nearly 60 percent of the 600 deaths due to floods associated with tropical cyclones occurred inland from the storm’s landfall. Of that 60 percent, almost a fourth of tropical cyclone deaths occur when people drown in their cars or attempt to abandon their cars once it is too late. While storm surge is always a potential threat, more people have died from inland flooding during the 30-year period from 1970 to 1999. Intense rainfall is not directly related to the wind speed of a tropical cyclone. In fact, some of the greatest rainfall amounts occur from weaker storms that drift slowly or stall over an area. Inland flooding can be a major threat to communities hundreds of miles from the coast as intense rain falls from these huge tropical air masses. Plan to evacuate if you: ✔ Live in a mobile home. They are unsafe in high winds, no matter how well fastened to the ground. ✔ Live on the coastline, an offshore island, or near a river or a flood plain. ✔ Live in a high-rise. Hurricane winds are stronger at higher elevations. When in a Warning Area: ✔ Closely monitor radio, TV, or NOAA All Hazards Weather Radio for official bulletins. ✔ Complete preparation activities, such as putting up storm shutters, and storing loose objects. ✔ Follow instructions issued by local officials; Leave immediately if told to do so! ✔ If evacuating, leave early (if possible, in daylight). Stay with friends or relatives, at a low-rise inland hotel/motel, or go to a pre-designated public shelter outside of any flood zone. ✔ Mobile homes must be evacuated. ✔ Notify neighbors or a family member outside of the warning area of your evacuation plans. ✔ Put food and water out for a pet if you cannot take it with you. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 5 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency TROPICAL CYCLONES Courtesy of USGS Flooding Safety Rules ✔ Monitor the NOAA All Hazards Weather Radio or your favorite news source for weather information. ✔ If flooding occurs, get to higher ground. Get out of areas subject to flooding. ✔ Avoid areas already flooded, especially if the water is flowing fast. Do not attempt to cross flowing streams. ✔ Road beds may be washed out under flood waters. NEVER drive through flooded roadways. Turn Around Don’t Drown!TM If your vehicle is caught suddenly in rising water, leave it immediately and seek higher ground. ✔ Do not camp or park your vehicle along streams or other bodies of water, particularly during threatening conditions. ✔ Be especially cautious at night when it is harder to recognize flood dangers. Urban and Small Stream Advisory: Flooding of small streams, streets and low-lying areas, such as railroad underpasses and urban storm drains, is occurring. Tornadoes: Hurricanes also can produce tornadoes that add to the storm’s destructive power. Tornadoes are most likely to occur in the right-front quadrant of the hurricane. However, they are also often found elsewhere embedded in rainbands associated with the hurricane, well away from the center of the hurricane. Some hurricanes seem to produce no tornadoes, while others produce multiple ones. Studies have shown that more than half of the landfalling hurricanes produce at least one tornado. In general, tornadoes associated with hurricanes are less intense than those occurring in the Great Plains. When associated with hurricanes, tornadoes are not usually accompanied by hail or a lot of lightning. Tornado production can occur for days after landfall when the tropical cyclone remnants maintain an identifiable low pressure circulation. Tornadoes can develop at any time of the day or night during landfall; however, 12 hours after landfall, tornadoes tend to occur mainly during daytime hours. The Power of Water, Courtesy of NOAA Flash Flood or Flood Watch: Flash flooding or flooding is possible within the designated watch area — the public must be alert. Flash Flood or Flood Warning: Flash flooding or flooding has been reported or is imminent — take necessary precautions at once! Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 6 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency THUNDERSTORMS THUNDERSTORMS for citizens to be alert and prepared to go to safe shelter if such threats do develop or if a warning is issued. Warnings are issued by the responsible local weather forecast office when a severe thunderstorm or tornado has been sighted or indicated by Doppler weather radar. As in tropical cyclones, a thunderstorm is commonly characterized by lightning, winds of varying intensity, intense rainfall and sometimes hail. An estimated 2,000 thunderstorms occur in the world at any given moment. In terms of the relative frequency or intensity of thunderstorms across the United States, the risk to Maryland is somewhat lower than average. Kansas and Arizona experience the longest annual duration of thunderstorm events, and Florida experiences the greatest number of thunderstorm events and the highest lightning strike density. Over the 30-year period (1970-1999), the Maryland per year average was around 41 events. In recent years, this number has increased sharply to around 70 events and is most likely due to more complete reporting due to the introduction of Doppler Weather Radar. Frequency of thunderstorm events in Maryland is highest in central Maryland, including Anne Arundel, Baltimore, Carroll, Frederick, Montgomery, and Prince George’s Counties. Somerset County and Ocean City experience the lowest number of events per year. Thunderstorm Impacts: Thunderstorm hazards come in several forms: tornadoes, hail, lightning, high winds, heavy rain, and flash and riverine flooding. NOAA/NWS, 2001, College Park, MD Tornadoes: A tornado is a violently rotating funnel-shaped column of air extending from a thunderstorm cloud to the ground. Tornadoes can touch the ground with winds of over 300 mph. While relatively short-lived, tornadoes are intensely focused and are one of nature’s most violent storms. How Do Tornadoes Form? Courtesy of NOAA Watches and Warnings: The NWS’s Severe Storms Before thunderstorms develop, a change in wind direction and an increase in wind speed with increasing height creates an invisible, horizontal spinning effect in the lower atmosphere. Prediction Center prepares severe thunderstorm and tornado watches when weather conditions are such that a severe thunderstorm, capable of producing damaging winds of 58 mph or higher and/or hail one inch in diameter or greater, is likely to develop. A tornado or severe thunderstorm watch does not indicate an imminent tornado or gusty winds and large hail; rather, a watch is an advisory Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 7 Rising air within the thunderstorm updraft tilts the rotating air from horizontal to vertical. An area of rotation, 2-6 miles wide, now extends through much of the storm. Most strong and violent tornadoes form within this area of strong rotation. MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency THUNDERSTORMS Tornadoes can range from just several yards to over 2 miles in width. Tornadoes can destroy almost everything in their path. Although tornadoes normally travel on the ground for short distances, tornado tracks of 200 miles have been documented. Tornadoes are classified by their wind speed and the damage they create. The Enhanced Fujita Scale is a set of wind estimates, not measurements, based on damage. The scale uses 28 Damage Indicators (DIs), not shown in the scale below, with descriptions such as “Double-wide mobile home” or “Strip mall”. These are used along with Degree of Damage Indicators (DODs) to determine wind estimates as described in the scale. Different structures, depending on their building materials and ability to survive high winds, have their own DIs and DODs. July is the peak month for tornado activity in Maryland. Annually, Maryland averages 4.6 tornado events; however, in 1995 the single-season had 24 reported tornadoes. Two of Maryland’s most devastating tornadoes have struck La Plata. Although the tornadoes occured 75 years apart, the incidents raise the question of whether certain locations are more likely to be in the paths of tornadoes than others. Counties west of the Chesapeake Bay generally experience a higher frequency of tornadoes than those on the Eastern Shore. Anne Arundel, Charles, Frederick, and Prince George’s Counties rank as a high risk for tornado frequency. NOAA/NWS, 1998, Frostburg, MD LaPlata, MD, Supercell from the air Courtesy of NOAA ENHANCED FUJITA TORNADO INTENSITY SCALE Scale EF0 EF1 EF2 EF3 EF4 EF5 Wind Speed 65-85 mph 86-110 mph 111-135 mph 136-165 mph 166-200 mph > 200 mph Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide Frequency 53.5% 31.6% 10.7% 3.6% 0.7% 0.1% 8 Potential Damage Minor Moderate Considerable Severe Devastating Extreme MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency THUNDERSTORMS Tornado Safety What YOU Can Do! Before the Storm: ✔ Develop a plan for you and your family for home, work, school and when outdoors. ✔ Have frequent drills. ✔ Know the county in which you live, and keep a highway map nearby to follow storm movement from weather bulletins. ✔ Have a NOAA All Hazards Weather Radio with a warning alarm tone and battery back-up to receive warnings. ✔ Listen to radio and television for information. ✔ If planning a trip outdoors, listen to the latest forecasts and take necessary action if threatening weather is possible. NOAA/NWS If a Warning is issued or if threatening weather approaches: ✔ In a home or building, move to a pre-designated shelter, such as a basement. ✔ If an underground shelter is not available, move to an interior room or hallway on the lowest floor and get under a sturdy piece of furniture. ✔ Stay away from windows. ✔ Do not try to outrun a tornado in your car; get out of your car immediately and seek nearby safe shelter in a sturdy building. ✔ Mobile homes, even if tied down, offer little protection from tornadoes and should be abandoned. ✔ If in open country and no shelter is available, lie flat and face-down on low ground protecting the back of your head with your arms. Get as far away as possible from trees and cars, as they can be blown onto you. occasionally occur in Maryland. A thunderstorm with hail that affected several Maryland counties and caused $75 million in damage occurred on April 23, 1999. The storm originated in western Pennsylvania, then tracked across western Maryland, northern Virginia, and lower southern Maryland, producing up to grapefruit-sized hail. In general, central Maryland and westward into Washington County have a higher incidence of hail events. Eastern Shore counties and Allegany and Garrett Counties experience lower hail frequency. Hail can cause serious damage, notably to automobiles, aircraft, skylights, glass-roofed structures, livestock, and most commonly, farmers’ crops. Hail damage to roofs often goes unnoticed until further structural damage is seen, such as leaks or cracks. It is hardest to recognize hail damage on shingled roofs and flat roofs, but all roofs have their own hail damage detection problems. Metal roofs are fairly resistant to hail damage, but may accumulate cosmetic damage in the form of dents and damaged coatings. Hail: Hail is associated exclusively with thunderstorms. Its irregular shape results from a thunderstorm’s violent updrafts and downdrafts that cause repeated freezing and melting of ice. Hail varies in size and shape from pea-sized to coconutsized. The NWS issues a severe thunderstorm or tornado warning if hail 1 inch in diameter or greater is reported or indicated by Doppler Weather Radar. The greatest damage from hail is to crops, vehicles, and structures. The majority of hail events in Maryland occur in the months of May and June. Large hail events are most often associated with thunderstorms in the Midwest, but they can Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide Hail Safety Tips: If you are in a car: ✔ Stop driving. If you can see a safe place close by (like inside a garage, under a highway overpass, or under a service station awning), drive there as soon as you can. Make sure you pull completely off the highway. ✔ Do NOT leave the vehicle until it stops hailing. Your car will furnish reasonable protection. 9 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency THUNDERSTORMS ✔ Stay away from car windows. Cover your eyes with something (like a piece of clothing). If possible, get onto the floor face down, or lie down on the seat with your back to the windows. Put very small children under you, and cover their eyes. If you are in a building: ✔ Stay inside until the hail stops. ✔ Stay away from the windows, especially those being struck by hail. ✔ Account for all family members, building occupants, pets, etc. ✔ Do not go outside for any reason. Large hail can cause serious or even fatal injuries. If you are outdoors: ✔ Seek shelter immediately. If you can’t find something to protect your entire body, at least find something to protect your head. ✔ Stay out of culverts and lowland areas that might fill suddenly with water. ✔ Trees are a last resort. It is common during severe storms for trees to lose branches. Also, large isolated trees attract lightning. The majority of lightning events in Maryland occur in the months of June and July. In general, central Maryland is at a higher risk for frequency of lightning strikes than the rest of the State, with the exceptions of Baltimore City and Howard County. The Eastern Shore, Cecil and Talbot Counties have a relatively higher frequency risk than the other counties. Lightning: Lightning is a visible flow of electrical current Lightning Safety Tips: Photographer: C. Clark Credit: NOAA Photo Library, NOAA Central Library; OAR/ERL/National Severe Storms Laboratory (NSSL) ✔ PLAN in advance your evacuation and safety measures. When you first see lightning or hear thunder, activate your emergency plan. Now is the time to go to a building or a vehicle. Lightning often precedes rain, so don’t wait for the rain to begin before suspending activities. ✔ IF OUTDOORS...Avoid water. Avoid the high ground. Avoid open spaces. Avoid all metal objects including electric wires, fences, machinery, motors, power tools, etc. Unsafe places include underneath canopies, small picnic or rain shelters, or near trees. Where possible, find shelter in a substantial building or in a fully enclosed vehicle such as a car, truck, or van with the windows completely shut. If lightning is striking nearby when you are outside, you should: • Crouch down. Put feet together. Place hands over ears to minimize hearing damage from thunder. • Avoid proximity (minimum of 15 ft.) to other people. between the earth and thunderstorm clouds, occurring when varying positive and negative charges build up in the atmosphere during a thunderstorm. Lightning typically generates temperatures hotter than the surface of the sun, 30,000°F to 50,000°F. When the bolt suddenly heats the air around it to such as extreme, the air instantly expands, sending out a shockwave we hear as the explosive sound of thunder. The diameter of a lightning bolt is about half an inch to an inch wide, but can be up to 5 inches wide. The average length of a lightning bolt from a cloud to the ground is 3 to 4 miles long. Lightning kills more people in the U.S. annually (an average of 90 and injures an average of 273) than any other natural disaster except floods. Since no agency requires reporting of lightning injuries, the true frequency of injury from lightning is difficult to determine. Lightning impacts property as well as people. In the 1990s, 15,000 lightninginduced fires caused widespread damage across the U.S., including the loss of over 2 million acres of forest. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 10 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency THUNDERSTORMS ✔ IF INDOORS...Avoid water. Stay away from doors and windows. Do not use the telephone. Take off head sets. Turn off, unplug, and stay away from appliances, computers, power tools, and TV sets. Lightning may strike exterior electric and phone lines, inducing shocks to inside equipment. ✔ SUSPEND ACTIVITIES for 30 minutes after the last observed lightning or thunder thunder. ✔ INJURED PERSONS do not carry an electrical charge and can be handled safely. Apply First Aid procedures to a lightning victim if you are qualified to do so. Call 911 or send for help immediately. ✔ KNOW YOUR EMERGENCY TELEPHONE NUMBERS, including 911. NUMBERS MEMA, Frederick County Flash Flood High Winds: Two basic types of damaging wind events The highest risk for heavy rain is in Frederick and Prince George’s Counties, and the lowest risk is in Somerset County. In general, southern Maryland, the lower Eastern Shore, and Allegany and Garrett Counties are at a lower risk for heavy rain than the rest of the State. Such heavy rainfall durations can result in flash or riverine flooding. other than tropical systems affect Maryland: synoptic-scale winds and thunderstorm winds. Synoptic-scale or large scale winds are high winds that occur typically with cold frontal passages or Nor’easters, and are uncommon in Maryland. When thunderstorm winds are over 58 mph, the thunderstorm is considered severe and a warning is issued. “Downbursts” cause the high winds in a thunderstorm. Downburst winds result from the sudden descent of cool or cold air toward the ground. As the air hits the ground, it spreads outward, creating a fast moving surge of high winds. Unlike tornadoes, downburst winds move in a straight line, without rotation. The majority of wind events in Maryland occur in June and July. In general, central Maryland is at greater risk for a wind event than the rest of the State, with Carroll, Frederick, Montgomery, Prince George’s, and Anne Arundel Counties all at high risk of wind events. Flash and Riverine Flooding: Two types of flooding are associated with rivers and streams: flash and riverine. Flash flooding results from a combination of rainfall intensity and duration and is influenced further by local topography and the ground’s capacity to hold water. Flash floods also can result from the sudden release of water from the breakup of an ice jam or a dam failure. Heavy Rain: A heavy rain event is defined by the NWS as rainfall that does not necessarily cause flooding but does cause locally significant damage, such as crop damage or roof collapse. In Maryland, most heavy rain events occur from May to September, due to thunderstorm activity. The greatest concentration of heavy rain events occur in June and July. There is considerable variation in the number of heavy rain events from year to year, with no distinguishable trend over time. Over the past 30 years, Maryland has recorded an annual average of nearly 18 events. The most heavy rain events ever recorded were 118 in 2000. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide NOAA/NWS Allegany County, 1996 Flood 11 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency THUNDERSTORMS More than half of all flash flood deaths occur when motorists are trapped in their cars by rapidly rising water. Over the past 30 years, Maryland has averaged two riverine flooding events annually. These events typically occur during the thunderstorm season, between May and September. On average, nearly half of the flash flood events in Maryland occur in June and July. In contrast to the intense rainfalls that typify flash flooding events, riverine flooding is caused by persistent moderate or heavy rain over one or more days, sometimes combined with snowmelt, causing a river to slowly rise and overflow its banks. Rivers may take several days or even weeks to rise over their banks, providing enough warning for people to move to higher ground. River floods can last for weeks and can inundate very large areas or entire regions. Nationally, flooding is the most common, most destructive, and deadliest natural hazard. Nearly 90 percent of Presidential Disaster Declarations involve flooding. Annual flood damage nationwide averages $6 billion. Flooding is a persistent concern in Maryland, a coastal state with over 12 percent of its surface area in floodplains and nearly 8,000 miles of tidal shoreline associated with the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries. The frequency of flash flood events is greatest in Frederick and Montgomery Counties, followed by Allegany, Carroll, Garrett, and Anne Arundel Counties. The frequency of riverine flooding by jurisdiction shows Frederick and Garrett Counties are at the highest risk for riverine flooding, approximately one event every three years with Montgomery and Washington Counties the next highest at risk. Photographer: Mike Berna Photographer: Mike Berna Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide Flood Safety Tips: ✔ Monitor the NOAA All Hazards Weather Radio or your favorite news source for vital weather related information. ✔ If flooding occurs, get to higher ground. Get out of areas subject to flooding. This includes dips, low spots, canyons, washes, etc. ✔ Avoid areas already flooded, especially if the water is flowing fast. Do not attempt to cross flowing streams. Turn Around Don’t Drown™ ✔ Road beds may be washed out under flood waters. NEVER drive through flooded roadways. Turn Around Don’t Drown™ ✔ Do not camp or park your vehicle along streams and washes, particularly during threatening conditions. ✔ Be especially cautious at night when it is harder to recognize flood dangers. 12 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency WINTER HAZARDS WINTER HAZARDS Maryland’s three western counties, particularly Garrett County, can experience lake-effect snow originating from Lake Erie. Unlike Nor’easters and their associated Atlantic moisture, lake-effect snow is associated with small to moderate amounts of Great Lakes moisture being uplifted and deposited as heavy snow. Allegany and Garrett Counties experience the highest risk for snow. Washington, Frederick, Carroll, and Baltimore Counties and Baltimore City are at a medium-high snow risk. The four contiguous counties on the lower Eastern Shore, (Dorchester, Somerset, Worcester, and Wicomico) have a low risk for snow. The NWS issues winter storm warnings when snowfall is expected to accumulate more than 4 inches in 12 hours. Severe snow storms can significantly slow traffic and commerce, causing power outages, disrupting communications, and causing buildings to collapse. Hazards associated with winter involve dangers due to exposure to cold, snow, sleet, ice, and wind chill. Snow: Many of the major winter storms that affect Maryland are known as “Nor’easters” because they are accompanied by strong northeast winds. The storms often form in the Gulf of Mexico, intensify, and move up the coast. High pressure systems over the Maritime Provinces of Canada deliver the cold air to Nor’easters that result in winter precipitation. NOAA/NWS Veteran’s Day Storm 1987 The heaviest snow with a Nor’easter often occurs in a band 50 to 100 miles wide. Precipitation along this band typically changes from snow in the west to a transition area of freezing rain and sleet then finally to rain in the east. Counties west of the Chesapeake Bay are more likely to experience snow or mixed precipitation. Eastern Shore counties are more likely to experience rain, as warmer easterly winds off the ocean erode the cold air dam. Courtesy of You Tube, ice damage to trees and power lines. Ice: A “pure ice” storm is rare in Maryland, where near- freezing temperatures are more likely to produce a mix of rain, freezing rain, sleet, and snow. Freezing rain is rain that falls onto a surface with a temperature below freezing, causing it to form a coating or glaze of ice. Sleet is defined as raindrops that freeze into ice pellets before reaching the ground. Sleet usually bounces when hitting a surface and typically does not stick to objects, though it can accumulate like snow and become a hazard to motorists. The term “ice storm” is used by the NWS to describe a storm that produces a significant accumulation of ice during a freezing rain event. An accumulation of a quarter inch or more of ice is termed “glaze” and can trigger a winter storm warning. Repair crews responding to power outages, Feb. 2010 Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 13 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency WINTER HAZARDS Winter Safety Tips ✔ Keep ahead of advancing winter weather by listening to the media and monitoring NOAA All Hazards Weather Radio. ✔ An ice storm will take down power lines, knocking out electricity. Check battery-powered equipment before the storm arrives. ✔ Check your food and stock an extra supply. Include food that requires no cooking in case of power failure. If there are infants or people who need medication, make sure you have a supply of the proper food and medicine. Make sure pets and animals have shelter and a water supply. ✔ If appropriate, check your supply of heating fuel. Fuel carriers may not be able to reach you due to closed roads. ✔ Be careful when using fireplaces, stoves, or space heaters. Proper ventilation is essential to avoid a deadly build-up of carbon monoxide. Don’t use charcoal inside as it gives off large amounts of carbon monoxide. Keep flammable material away from space heaters and do not overload electric circuits. ✔ Dress for the conditions when outdoors. Wear several layers of lightweight, warm clothing; layers can be removed to prevent perspiring and subsequent chill. Outer garments should be tightly woven, waterproof and hooded. For the hands, mittens, snug at the wrists, offer better protection than fingered gloves. ✔ Don’t kill yourself shoveling snow. It is extremely hard work for anyone in less than prime physical condition. It can bring on a heart attack, a major cause of death during and after winter storms. ✔ Your automobile can be your best friend or worst enemy during winter storms. Get your car winterized before winter arrives. The following items should be checked: ignition system, cooling system, fuel system, battery, lights, tires, heater, brakes, wipers, defroster, oil, and exhaust system. Keep water out of your fuel tank by keeping it full. ✔ If you travel often during winter, carry a winter storm kit in your car. It should include: flashlight, windshield scraper, paper towels, extra clothes, matches/candles, booster cables, compass, maps, sand, chains, blankets, and high calorie non-perishable food and water. ✔ Winter travel by car is serious business. If the storm exceeds or tests your driving ability, seek available shelter immediately. ✔ Plan your travel. Try not to travel alone; drive in a convoy when possible. ✔ Drive carefully and defensively. Pump your breaks when trying to stop on snow or ice covered roads. Source: NWS, 2001. Wind-Chill Temperature Index. Even small accumulations of ice can be hazardous, making walking and driving extremely dangerous. Significant accumulations of ice can down trees and utility lines, resulting in loss of power and communication. To produce this amount of ice, freezing rain usually has to fall for several hours. Generally, the pattern for frequency of ice events has western and central Maryland at a high to medium-high risk and southern Maryland and the Eastern Shore at a lower risk for ice events. Extreme cold: NOAA defines extreme cold events as events with temperatures that are “much colder than normal for a given location,” based on the location’s climate zone. Exposure to extreme cold temperatures, even for a short period of time, can result in hypothermia, frostbite, or even death. Wind greatly increases the dangers of frostbite and hypothermia by drawing heat from the body, which decreases skin temperature and eventually body temperature. The windchill index attempts to quantify the cooling effect of wind with the actual outside air temperature to determine a wind-chill temperature that represents how cold people and animals feel, based on the rate of heat loss from exposed skin. A wind-chill index of minus 5 indicates that the combined effects of wind and temperature on exposed flesh are the same as if the air temperature alone were 5 degrees below zero, even though the actual temperature could be much higher. The NWS issues a wind-chill advisory when wind-chill temperatures are potentially hazardous, and a wind-chill warning when the situation can be life-threatening. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 14 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency DROUGHTS AND EXTREME HEAT DROUGHTS AND EXTREME HEAT Although the simplest definition of drought may be “an extended period of dry weather,” there are actually four different types of drought. Meteorological drought: The departure of measured precipitation from normal. Due to climatic differences, what is considered a drought in one location may not be a drought in another. Agricultural drought: The amount of moisture in the soil no longer meets the needs of a particular crop. Hydrological drought: Surface and subsurface water supplies below normal. Socioeconomic drought: The situation that occurs when physical water shortages begin to affect people. NOAA/NWS, 1999 Middle River Watershed Fish Kill the “heat index,” a measure of how hot the weather actually feels when the effects of temperature and humidity are combined. The higher-risk counties average about two events per year, whereas the lower-risk counties experience as few as one event every three or four years. The lower risk is in the southern Eastern Shore and Garrett County. This is most likely due to the southern Eastern Shore counties’ close proximity to the Atlantic Ocean and Chesapeake Bay, and Garrett County’s higher elevation. The highest risk for extreme heat is in the eastern part of Maryland, from Cecil to Talbot and Caroline Counties. Droughts: Droughts can cause damage not only to crops, but also to livestock and wildlife. During a prolonged drought, land values can decrease and unemployment can increase. Water restrictions implemented during a drought can have a negative economic impact on water-dependent businesses. Maryland generally experiences average to higher-than-average stream flow. However, it is normal for Maryland to experience drought cycles. The risk for drought is higher in the central and western part of the State and is lowest on the lower Eastern Shore. The highest drought risk is in Allegany, Baltimore, Carroll, Frederick, Harford, Howard, Montgomery, and Washington Counties. Somerset, Wicomico, and Worcester Counties, and Ocean City experience the lowest drought risk. Crop damage caused by drought is the highest in Allegany and Carroll Counties. The crop damage pattern for Maryland indicates that areas in eastern and southern Maryland are at a lower risk than the rest of the State. HIGH Extreme Heat: Extreme heat is an easily overlooked but 80°F - 90°F Fatigue possible with prolonged exposure and physical activity. 90°F - 105°F Sunstroke, heat cramps and heat exhaustion possible. 105°F - 130°F Sunstroke, heat cramps, and heat exhaustion likely, and heat stroke possible. 130°F or greater Heat stroke highly likely with continued exposure. Heat Wave Safety Tips nonetheless, serious hazard, particularly for certain at-risk populations, such as the elderly, the very young, and people with mental illness and chronic diseases. However, even young and healthy individuals can succumb to heat if they participate in strenuous physical activities during hot weather. In addition to posing a hazard to people, livestock, and crops, extreme heat can cause water shortages, fire hazards, increased energy demands, and damage to infrastructure. Episodes of extreme heat are typically characterized by high temperature and high humidity. The NWS has devised Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide Possible Heat Disorder: ✔ Slow down. Strenuous activities should be reduced, eliminated, or rescheduled to the coolest time of the day. Individuals at risk should stay in the coolest available place, not necessarily indoors. ✔ Dress for summer. Lightweight, light-colored clothing reflects heat and sunlight, and helps your body maintain normal temperatures. ✔ Put less food in your body. Foods (like proteins) that increase metabolic heat production also increase water loss. 15 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency DROUGHTS AND EXTREME HEAT Wild Fires/Brush Fires: Wildfires are a hazard associated with prolonged drought and fueled by natural cover, including native and non-native species of trees, brush and grasses, and crops. While available fuel, topography, and weather provide the conditions that cause wildfires to spread, most wildfires are ignited by people through criminal or accidental misuse of fire and lightning strikes. Lightning is responsible for only 2 percent of all wildfires in Maryland, which is below the estimated national average of 8.4 percent. Wildfires pose serious threats to human safety and property in rural and suburban areas. They can destroy crops, timber resources, recreation areas, and habitat for wildlife. Wildfires are commonly perceived as hazards of the western part of the country; however, wildfires are a growing problem in the wildland/urban interface of the eastern United States, including Maryland. Wildfires are a growing natural hazard in most regions of the United States, posing a threat to life and property, particularly where native ecosystems meet developed areas. ✔ Drink plenty of water or other non-alcohol fluids. Your body needs water to keep cool. Drink plenty of fluids even if you don’t feel thirsty. Consult a physician before increasing consumption of fluids if you: (1) have epilepsy or heart, kidney, or liver disease, (2) are on a fluid restrictive diet, or (3) have a problem with fluid retention. ✔ Do not drink alcoholic beverages. ✔ Do not take salt tablets unless specified by a physician. ✔ Spend more time in air-conditioned places. Air conditioning in homes and other buildings markedly reduces danger from the heat. If you cannot afford an air conditioner, spending some time each day (during hot weather) in an air-conditioned environment provides some protection. ✔ Don’t get too much sun. Sunburn makes the job of heat dissipation that much more difficult. Know These Heat Disorder Symptoms SUNBURN: Redness and pain. In severe cases swelling of skin, blisters, fever, headaches. First Aid: Ointments for mild cases if blisters appear and do not break. If breaking occurs, apply dry sterile dressing. Serious, extensive cases should be seen by a physician. HEAT CRAMPS: Painful spasms usually in muscles of legs and possibly in the abdomen and heavy sweating. First Aid: Firm pressure on cramping muscles, or gentle massage to relieve spasm. Give sips of water. If nausea occurs, discontinue. HEAT EXHAUSTION: Heavy sweating, weakness, skin cold, pale and clammy. Pulse thready. Normal temperature possible. Fainting and vomiting. First Aid: Get victim out of sun. Lay victim down and loosen clothing. Apply cool, wet cloths. Fan or move victim to air-conditioned room. Provide sips of water. If nausea occurs, discontinue. If vomiting continues, seek immediate medical attention. HEAT STROKE (or sunstroke): High body temperature (106° F or higher). Victim has hot dry skin, rapid and strong pulse, and possibly unconsciousness. First Aid: HEAT STROKE IS A SEVERE MEDICAL EMERGENCY. CALL 911 TO SUMMON EMERGENCY MEDICAL ASSISTANCE OR GET THE VICTIM TO A HOSPITAL IMMEDIATELY. DELAY CAN BE FATAL. Move the victim to a cooler environment and reduce body temperature with cold bath or sponging. Remove clothing. Use fans and air conditioners. If the temperature rises again, repeat the process. Do not give fluids. Persons on salt restrictive diets should consult a physician before increasing their salt intake. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide Courtesy of Maryland Wildland Fire Crew members (MDS#1) from the Blackerby Fire, Grangeville, ID, 2005. However, because fire is a natural (and often beneficial) process, fire suppression can lead to more severe fires due to the buildup of vegetation, which creates more fuel. In addition, the secondary effects of wildfires, including erosion, landslides, introduction of invasive species, and changes in water quality, are often more disastrous than the fire itself. The U.S. Geological Service, in conjunction with the U.S. Forest Service and other partners, provides tools and information by identifying wildfire risks and ways to reduce wildfire hazards, providing real-time firefighting support, and assessing the aftermath of wildfires. The goal is to build more resilient communities and ecosystems. 16 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency TIDAL AND COASTING FLOODING/ EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS TIDAL and COASTAL FLOODING Rip currents can be killers. The United States Lifesaving Association estimates that the annual number of deaths due to rip currents on our nation’s beaches exceeds 100. Rip currents account for over 80 percent of rescues performed by surf beach lifeguards. The greatest safety precaution that can be taken is to recognize the danger of rip currents and always remember to swim at beaches with lifeguards. Coastal or tidal flooding is the inundation of land areas along the coast by waters over and above normal tidal action, originating from oceans, back bays, sounds, or other bodies of water. The NWS issues a coastal flood watch when conditions are favorable for tidal flooding or storm-induced flooding along coastal areas within 12 to 36 hours. A coastal flood warning is issued when tidal flooding or storm-induced flooding is occurring, imminent, or highly likely along coastal areas within 12 hours. Learn How to Swim! When at the beach: ✔ Whenever possible, swim at a lifeguard-protected beach. ✔ Never swim alone. ✔ Learn how to swim in the surf. It’s not the same as swimming in a pool or lake. ✔ Be cautious at all times, especially when swimming at unguarded beaches. If in doubt, don’t go out. ✔ Obey all instructions and orders from lifeguards. Lifeguards are trained to identify potential hazards. Ask a lifeguard about the conditions before entering the water. This is part of the job. ✔ Stay at least 100 feet away from piers and jetties. Permanent rip currents often exist along side these structures. ✔ Consider using polarized sunglasses when at the beach. They will help you to spot signatures of rip currents by cutting down glare and reflected sunlight off the ocean’s surface. ✔ Pay especially close attention to children and elderly when at the beach. Even in shallow water, wave action can cause loss of footing. Courtesy of Wunderground, Ocean City, MD, Flooding from 2009 Nor’easter Coastal flooding typically occurs when a slowmoving coastal storm generates persistent easterly winds. Sometimes, strong high-pressure systems located over eastern Canada or the Canada Maritimes combine with coastal storms to generate very persistent, strong northeasterly winds for several days, which can produce significant coastal flooding. In Maryland, tidal flooding can occur along the Chesapeake Bay and coastal bays and their tidal tributaries, as well as the Atlantic shore. Because the Chesapeake Bay is shallow and long, astronomical tides take more than 12 hours to move from one end of the Bay to the other. Coastal flooding is a common annual event for Maryland coastal communities, particularly from late fall through early spring, when Nor’easters are most prevalent. EARTHQUAKES and TSUNAMIS Earthquakes: An earthquake is the sudden shaking of the ground caused by a release of energy stored in the earth’s crust. Once a critical threshold is reached within the earth’s crust, the stored energy is released as the rock ruptures and slippage occurs along the fault line. Earthquake frequency is low for all Maryland jurisdictions. Howard County has the highest frequency rate with 0.126 earthquakes per year, due to the swarms of tremors that occurred in the 1990’s. Based on recent earthquake activity in Howard County and in nearby areas in adjacent states, Rip currents are powerful, channeled currents of water flowing away from shore. They typically extend from the shoreline, through the surf zone, and past the line of breaking waves. Rip currents can occur at any beach with breaking waves, including the Great Lakes. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 17 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS Maryland is rated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as having a moderate earthquake potential. Tsunamis: The term tsunami comes from the Japanese, meaning “Harbor” and “wave”. Tsunamis are sometimes referred to as tidal waves. In recent years, this term has fallen out of favor, especially in the scientific community, because tsunami actually has nothing to do with ocean tides. Tsunami and tides both produce waves of water that move inland, but in the case of a tsunami, the inland movement of water is much greater and lasts for a longer period, giving the impression of an incredibly high tide. NOAA/NWS Tsunami damage Tsunami Warning System (TWS): is a system to detect until a reliable model is able to predict which earthquakes will produce significant tsunamis, this approach will produce many more false alarms than verified warnings. As in weather forecast and warning, no system can protect against a very sudden tsunami. A devastating tsunami occurred off the coast of Hokkaido in Japan as a result of an earthquake on July 12, 1993. As a result, 202 people on the small island of Okushiri, Hokkaido lost their lives, and hundreds more were missing or injured. This tsunami struck just three to five minutes after the quake, and most victims were caught while fleeing for higher ground and secure places after surviving the earthquake. While there remains the potential for sudden devastation from a tsunami, warning systems can be effective. The first part of a tsunami to reach land is called a drawback. Drawback occurs when water along the shoreline recedes dramatically, exposing normally submerged areas. This happens because the fault sinks suddenly during the earthquake, causing the overlaying water to surge outward with the wave at its front. Drawback begins before the wave arrives. If the slope of the coastal seabed is small, drawback can exceed hundreds of meters. People unaware of the danger sometimes remain near the shore to satisfy their curiosity or to collect fish from the exposed seabed. Drawbacks can serve as a brief warning. People who observe drawback can survive only if they immediately run for high ground or seek the upper floors of nearby buildings. tsunamis and issue warnings to prevent loss of life and property. It consists of two equally important components: a network of sensors to detect tsunamis and a communications infrastructure to issue timely alarms permitting timely evacuation of coastal areas. There are two distinct types of tsunami warning systems: international and regional. Both depend on the fact that, while tsunamis travel at up to 500 mph in open water, earthquakes can be detected almost at once as seismic waves travel with a typical speed of nearly 12,000 mph. This allows time for a possible tsunami forecast to be made and warnings to be issued to threatened areas, if warranted. Unfortunately, For additional information on these and other natural hazards, you may visit NOAA’s Severe Weather Watch Page at http://www.noaawatch.gov/themes/severe.php. Information on storm tracking and naming conventions are a few examples of information contained in the NOAA Watch and Learn website. Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 18 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency RADIO FREQUENCIES & EMERGENCY ALERT SYSTEM NOAA radio frequencies 162.400 MHz (Baltimore) 162.475 MHz (Hagerstown) 162.400 MHz (Heathsville) 162.500 MHz (Gregg Knob) 162.400 MHz (Moorefield) 162.500 MHz (Sudlersville) 162.425 MHz (Frostburg) 162.550 MHz (Lewes) 162.475 MHz (Salisbury) 162.550 MHz (Manassas) 162.475 MHz (Philadelphia) Emergency Alert System (EAS) County Allegany Allegany Allegany Allegany Anne Arundel Anne Arundel Anne Arundel Baltimore Metro Baltimore Metro Baltimore Metro Calvert Calvert Calvert Calvert Caroline Caroline Carroll Carroll Cecil Cecil Charles Charles Charles Dorchester Dorchester Dorchester Frederick Frederick Frederick Garrett Garrett Garrett Garrett Garrett Harford Harford Harford Call Letters WFRB WFRB WKGO WTBO WBAL WHFS WNAV WBAL WIYY WPOC WPRS WMDM WPTX WSMD WCEI WEMD WZBA WTTR WJSS WXCY WMDM WPRS WWGB WCEM WCEM WSCL WFMD WXTR WFRE WFRB WFRB WKHJ WMSG WWHC WHFC WBAL WXCY AM/FM FM AM FM AM AM FM AM AM FM FM FM FM AM FM FM AM FM AM AM FM FM FM AM FM AM FM AM AM FM FM AM FM AM FM FM AM FM County Dial Howard Howard Howard Kent Kent Montgomery Montgomery Montgomery Ocean City Prince George's Prince George's Prince George's Prince George's Queen Anne's Queen Anne's Queen Anne's Queen Anne's Somerset Somerset Somerset Somerset Somerset St. Mary's St. Mary's St. Mary's Talbot Talbot Washington Washington Wicomico Wicomico Wicomico Wicomico Worcester Worcester 105.3 560 106.1 1450 1090 99.1 1430 1090 97.9 93.1 104.1 97.7 1690 98.3 96.7 1460 100.7 1470 1330 103.7 97.7 104.1 1030 106.3 1240 89.5 930 820 99.9 105.3 560 104.5 1050 92.3 91.1 1090 103.7 Call Letters WBAL WIYY WPOC WCTR WKHS WGTS WPGC WXLE WWFG WBIG WMAL WPGC WILC WCEI WEMD WCTR WNAV WBEY WOLC WQHQ WESM WSCL WKIK WMDM WPTX WCEI WEMD WJEJ WAYZ WQHQ WSCL WTGM WLVW WQHQ WSCL AM/FM AM FM FM AM FM FM FM AM FM FM AM FM AM FM AM AM AM FM FM FM FM FM AM FM AM FM AM AM FM FM FM AM FM FM FM Dial 1090 97.9 93.1 1530 90.5 91.5 95.5 1600 99.9 100.3 630 95.5 900 96.7 1460 1530 1430 96.9 102.5 104.7 93.1 89.5 1560 97.7 1690 96.7 1460 1240 104.7 104.7 89.5 960 105.5 104.7 89.5 For more information . . . Call your local emergency management office. State: Maryland Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) 877-MEMA-USA (877-636-2872) • 410-517-3600 www.mema.state.md.us County Phone Allegany ................................301-777-5908 Anne Arundel ......................410-222-0600 Baltimore ..............................410-887-5996 Calvert ...................................410-535-1623 Caroline ................................410-479-2622 Carroll ...................................410-386-2290 Cecil .......................................410-996-5350 Charles ..................................301-609-3402 Dorchester ...........................410-228-1818 Frederick ..............................301-600-1746 Garrett ..................................301-334-7619 Harford ..................................410-638-4900 Howard...................................410-313-6030 Kent ........................................410-778-3758 Montgomery .......................240-777-2300 Prince George’s .................301-883-3308 Queen Anne’s .....................410-758-4500 St. Mary’s ..............................301-475-4200 Somerset ...............................410-651-0707 Maryland Natural Hazards Preparedness Guide 19 Talbot ......................................410-770-8160 Washington ..........................240-313-4394 Wicomico .............................410-548-4820 Worcester .............................410-632-1311 Municipal Phone Baltimore City ......................410-396-6175 City of Annapolis.................410-216-9167 Ocean City ...........................410-723-6619 MEMA – Maryland Emergency Management Agency MEXICO 96 95 W Galveston 93 Lake Charles 94 92 LOUISIANA Gulfport Pensacola ALABAMA Mobile Cozumel 85 W 83 WV 80 W MD VT CT Boston NH MA RI TURKS & CAICOS IS. 72 71 69 66 Bermuda Anguilla VIRGIN ISLANDS 64 63 Antigua 62 61 60 W Trinidad Tobago Grenada St. Vincent St. Lucia Martinique Dominica Guadeloupe St. Croix 65 W Cape Sable San Juan 67 VENEZUELA PUERTO RICO 68 Currcao Cape Cod 70 W Santo Domingo HAITI DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Atlantic City COLUMBIA 74 Y NC MENT AGE GE LONGITUDE (in degrees) 75 W 73 Port-au-Prince Guantanamo 76 NYC NJ Ocean City Cape Hatteras Norfolk DE NEW YORK PENNSYLVANIA Washington DC VIRGINIA Nassau 77 Camagüey 78 JAMAICA Balboa 79 Kingston Cape Romaine Wilmington NORTH CAROLINA SOUTH CAROLINA 81 CUBA Charleston Savannah Jacksonville Cape Canaveral Miami W. Palm Beach FLORIDA 82 PANAMA CAYMAN ISLANDS Havana Key West Ft. Myers Tampa GEORGIA 84 COSTA RICA NICARAGUA 86 AS Belize City Puerto Cortés 87 HONDURAS 88 M 89 EL SALVADOR 90 W HA 91 GUATEMALA BELIZE Campeche Merida New Orleans MISSISSIPPI TRACKING THE HURRICANE TEXAS Corpus Christi 97 Veracruz Brownsville Tampico 98 Alcapulco 101 100 99 W BA MA Governor Martin O’Malley’ Lt. Governor Anthony G. Brown MEMA Executive Director Richard Muth 59 58 57 56 55 W 54 53 52 51 49 N 50 W 48 47 46 45 W 44 43 42 41 40 N 39 38 37 36 35 N 34 33 32 31 30 N 29 28 27 26 25 N 24 23 22 21 20 N 19 18 17 16 15 N 14 13 12 11 10 N 9 8 7 LATITUDE (in degrees) You can track the path of the hurricane using locational information provided by NOAA Weather Radio or TV weather channels. Using the Hurricane Tracking Map, find the longitude and latitude of the storm and put an "X" on that spot*. Every few hours, mark the spot of the new longitude and latitude, and you can see the progress of the storm. NCY MAN A GE *One important note: thus the impact of an average storm can extend 125 miles on either side of the location. LAND EME R RY