Emergency Preparedness - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

Emergency Preparedness

Description:

... from Alabama & Florida panhandle across eastern Tennessee & into New England ... Thousands of homes in the coastal area of Baldwin, Escambia and Santa Rosa were ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:51
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: RhondaC
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Emergency Preparedness


1
Emergency Preparedness
  • For Office, Facility, and Laboratory
    EmployeesTulane University
  • April, 2005

2
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
  • Emergency Action Plans
  • Risk Assessment
  • Hurricane Ivan September 2004

3
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Purpose
  • To describe the actions employees should take to
    ensure their safety if a fire or other emergency
    occurs.
  • Evacuation Plan
  • Required by the Occupational Safety Health
    Administration (OSHA)
  • Designed specifically for each area

4
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Preferred procedure for reporting an emergency
  • Contact Tulane Public Safety at their emergency
    numbers
  • Uptown Campus 865-5200
  • TUHSC 988-5555
  • TNPRC 985-871-6411
  • Hebert Center, Elmwood, and other campuses dial
    911 first

5
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Description of the alarm system to notify
    employees to evacuate and/or to take other
    actions
  • Systems may be different as per building
  • Some buildings do not have an alarm system
  • Fire code does not require all buildings to have
    a fire alarm system.
  • Hebert Center, TNPRC

6
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Evacuation policy, procedures, escape route
    assignments
  • Under what conditions an evacuation is necessary
  • How to evacuate
  • What routes to take
  • Evacuation Route Diagrams

7
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Procedures for employees who remain on site after
    the evacuation alarm sounds
  • Public Safety and Facilities Services respond
  • Utility systems may have to be shutdown

8
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Procedures to account for staff
  • Employees are to report to a post evacuation
    assembly area
  • Supervisors or DSRs will assess initiate a head
    count, assess visually who is present, or call
    roll
  • Report to Tulane Public Safety anyone who still
    may be in the building

9
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Duties, responsibilities, names of employees
    assigned with rescue and medical tasks
  • The fire department will initiate rescue
  • Not Tulane University staff
  • Do not go back into an untenable environment
  • Immediately Contact Public Safety for medical
    emergencies
  • Except for Hebert Center, Elmwood and other
    campuses dial 911

10
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • How will employees be informed of the plan
  • Training
  • OEP presents discusses the Plan to the DSR
  • DSR instructs staff on the elements of EAP

11
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Names, titles, departments, and phone numbers of
    employees who can be contacted for additional
    information or clarification on the plan
  • Representatives from OEP, OEHS, Facilities
    Services, Public Safety, DSR

12
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Elements
  • Key personnel who should be contacted during
    off-hours emergencies
  • OEP, OEHS, Facilities Services
  • Incident Notification Flowcharts developed for
    emergency occurrences
  • On OEP website at http//oep.tulane.edu/incidentfl
    owcharts.shtml
  • 30 flowcharts

13
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Incident
  • Notification
  • Flowchart
  • Fire -
  • Uptown
  • Campus

14
EMERGENCY ACTION PLANS
  • Review of EAP
  • Annually or after an event
  • Send changes to OEP
  • DSR reviews changes with staff

15
Risk Assessment
  • Establish program
  • Assess emergency preparedness needs for buildings
  • Involves all campuses
  • Cooperation with other depts
  • DSRs

16
Risk Assessment
  • Includes
  • Fire Safety, Alarm, Suppression
  • Utilities
  • Severe Weather
  • Emergency Preparedness Mgmt
  • Bomb Threat
  • Business Continuity
  • Security

17
Risk Assessment
  • Mitigation Flood Hazard High Wind
  • Homeland Security
  • Civil Disturbance
  • Hazardous Materials Waste
  • Communications
  • Evacuation EAP
  • WMD

18
Risk Assessment
  • Generate report
  • Address items of immediate concern
  • Initiate follow up
  • To be reviewed by the Emergency Preparedness
    Committee
  • Present to Administration

19
Risk Assessment
  • On going process
  • Assessment Team includes
  • OEP, OEHS, Facilities Services, Public Safety,
    DSRs

20
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Louisiana
  • Reached Category 5 three times
  • Category Three Hurricane (at landfall)
  • Highest sustained wind recorded in LA was 83 mph
    with gusts to 100 mph
  • Lower Plaquemines Parish suffered the greatest
    wind damage.

21
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Louisiana
  • Several schools and public govt buildings
    suffered roof damage.
  • 100 mobile homes had some wind damage, 30 mobile
    homes had major damage or were destroyed.
  • 55,000 without electric power
  • 3-5 feet storm surge in areas east of the
    Mississippi River, averaged. The highest was 7.6
    feet in St. Bernard Parish.
  • No tornadoes were reported.
  • Greatest storm rainfall was 2.5 inches in
    Plaquemine Parish.

22
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Louisiana
  • State Police estimated that 600,000 persons
    evacuated southeast Louisiana including New
    Orleans
  • I-10 West was set into Contraflow
  • No direct fatalities, 4 elderly residents of
    southeast LA died during the evacuation
  • Total dollar damage 15.8 million
  • 75 wind related
  • 25 storm surge related

23
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Other Areas
  • Widespread flooding
  • 10 inches of rain on Caribbean Islands caused
    extensive flooding and mud slides
  • 16.2 inches in Tobago, 13.33 inches in western
    Cuba, 12.14 in Grand Cayman.
  • Across Jamaica, gt25 inches with 28.37 inches at
    Ritchies
  • In USA, rainfall was 3-7 inches from Alabama
    Florida panhandle across eastern Tennessee into
    New England

24
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Other Areas
  • 113 tornadoes
  • 45 (highest) in Virginia over a 3 day period
  • Storm surge of 10-15 feet along the coast from
    Destin westward to Mobile Bay
  • Storm surge of 6-9 feet from Destin eastward to
    St. Marks
  • Severe storm surge flooding of 8-10 feet with
    20-30 ft waves causing more than 5-8 feet of
    water to cover Grand Cayman

25
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Other Areas
  • 92 deaths
  • 39 (highest) in Grenada
  • 25 in USA - caused by tornado (7), storm surge
    (5), fresh water floods (4), mud slides (4) wind
    (3), surf (2)
  • Indirectly responsible for 32 deaths in USA
  • Storm surge of 10-15 feet along the coast from
    Destin westward to Mobile Bay
  • Storm surge of 6-9 feet from Destin eastward to
    St. Marks
  • Severe storm surge flooding of 8-10 feet with
    20-30 ft waves causing more than 5-8 feet of
    water to cover Grand Cayman

26
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Other Areas
  • Quarter-mile section of I-10 bridge system across
    Pensacola Bay collapsed into the bay
  • Caused by severe wave action and 10-14 storm
    surge
  • US Highway 90 Causeway across the bay was heavily
    damaged
  • Perdido Key was essentially leveled
  • Severe damage to or destruction of numerous
    beachfront homes, apartments, and condominiums

27
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Other Areas
  • Thousands of homes in the coastal area of
    Baldwin, Escambia and Santa Rosa were damaged or
    destroyed.
  • Cleanup efforts in Escambia County resulted in
    debris piles that were more than ¾ mile long and
    70 feet high.
  • At one point, 1.8 million people were without
    power in 9 states.
  • Destroyed millions of acres of woodlands
    forests

28
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Other Areas
  • Timber damaged was valued at 610 million on 2.7
    million acres
  • Offshore oil industry operations in the Gulf of
    Mexico were severely disrupted
  • Normal daily flow of oil and natural gas was
    disrupted for more than 4 weeks.
  • 7 platforms were completely destroyed.
  • Estimated US loss was 14.2 billion

29
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University
  • Monday, September 13, 2004, 300 p.m. - first
    meeting of the Emergency Operations Group (EOG)
    and Event Management Team (EMT)
  • Mayor to make statement at 600 p.m. to
    consider evacuation
  • Weather report presented
  • Status of dept storm preparation discussed
  • To post message on emergency website

30
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University
  • September 13, 2004, 600 p.m. meeting of EOG
    EMT with President Cowen
  • Mayor orders voluntary evacuation
  • Cancel classes
  • Complete storm preparation
  • Order buses
  • Away Team to leave for Jackson State University
    (JSU)
  • Email faculty, staff, students as to status of
    university
  • New message on emergency website

31
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University - September 14,
    2004
  • University to close
  • Evacuate remaining students to JSU
  • 140 students transported
  • To bring supplies bedding, clothing, toilet
    articles, medications, money, etc

32
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University - September 14,
    2004
  • Police, TEMS, HRL accompany students to JSU
  • Total of 24 TU staff members

33
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University - September 15,
    2004
  • Reily Center opened
  • Served as Shelter
  • Registration
  • 200 essential staff family members housed

34
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University - September 15,
    2004
  • Reily Center served as Emergency Operations Center

35
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University - September 15
    16, 2004
  • Meetings held with President Cowen at the EOC

36
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University - September 16,
    2004
  • Final meeting at EOC TU facilities sustained
    minimal damage
  • EOC closed at 1015 a.m.
  • Students return from JSU

37
Hurricane Ivan September 13-18, 2004
  • How It Affected Tulane University Lessons
    Learned
  • Essential staff
  • Sheltering of family members
  • Publish the Administrative Hurricane Plan
  • Employee preparation of their work areas
  • Tulane AlertLine information
  • Transport of students to airport

38
Emergency Preparedness
  • Questions

39
EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
  • For emergency information, call the Tulane Alert
    Line
  • 862-8080 or 1-877-862-8080 or
  • Visit the website http//emergency.tulane.edu/
  • Louis MayerTulane University Office of Emergency
    Preparedness(504) 862-8427
  • lmayer_at_tulane.edu

40
Tulane UniversityOffice of Environmental Health
Safety (OEHS) www.som.tulane.edu/oehs(504)
988-5486
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com