Public Meeting 28 November Presented by: Deepa Srinivasan, Vision Planning and Consulting, LLC Dr. Michael Scott, ESRGC, Salisbury University

Similar documents
Section 2. Introduction and Purpose of the LMS

A Flood Mitigation Plan for the Non-Tidal N.J. Section of the Delaware River Basin. Warren County Planning Workshop (2 nd Meeting) March 7, 2007

Hazard Mitigation & Resiliency

FLOODPLAIN MANAGEMENT PLAN 2015 ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT

CAPABILITY ASSESSMENT

C APABILITY A SSESSMENT

SOUTH CENTRAL REGION MULTI-JURISDICTION HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN. Advisory Committee Meeting September 12, 2012

Dade County Natural Hazard Mitigation Plan

FEMA FLOOD MAPS Public Works Department Stormwater Management Division March 6, 2018

Michael Taylor, PE, CFM Project Manager, AECOM August 25, 2015

Volusia County Floodplain Management Plan 2012

Community Rating System. National Flood Insurance Program

SECTION V THE LOCAL MITIGATION STRATEGY BLUEPRINT

SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

A Flood Mitigation Plan for the Non-Tidal N.J. Section of the Delaware River Basin. Sussex County Kick-off Meeting November 28, 2006

Integrating Hazard Mitigation into Local Planning to Support Community Resilience on the Mississippi Gulf Coast

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Sussex County All Hazard Mitigation Plan. Plan Executive Summary

MUNICIPAL LAND USE STRATEGIES for Improving Flood Resilience

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

TERREBONNE PARISH HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE

SECTION 6: MITIGATION STRATEGIES

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT. MUNICIPAL PROFILE

10/5/2015. What Makes a Sound Floodplain Management Program? What are the Flood Problems in your Community?

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Mitigation Strategies

CHAPTER THREE Natural Hazard Mitigation Strategy

A Flood Mitigation Plan for the Non-Tidal N.J. Section of the Delaware River Basin. Mercer County Kick-off Meeting December 6, 2006

Pinellas County Local Mitigation Strategy Progress Report

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

JUNEAU COUNTY ALL HAZARDS MITIGATION PLAN UPDATE. OVERSIGHT COMMITTEE KICK-OFF September 21, 2016

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Priority Ranking. Timeframe. Faribault County Blue Earth, Bricelyn, Delavan, Easton, Elmore, Frost, Kiester, Minnesota Lake, Walters, Wells, Winnebago

in coordination with Peoria County, Planning and Zoning Department

Multi-Jurisdictional. Multnomah County. Natural Hazards Mitigation Plan. Public Comment DRAFT Nov. 7, 2016

New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. Five-Year Floodplain Management Work Plan

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

CITY OF PLANTATION ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT INTEROFFICE MEMORANDUM NO

ASFPM Partnerships for Statewide Mitigation Actions. Alicia Williams GIS and HMP Section Manager, Amec Foster Wheeler June 2016

Priority Ranking. Timeframe. Faribault County Blue Earth, Bricelyn, Delavan, Easton, Elmore, Frost, Kiester, Minnesota Lake, Walters, Wells, Winnebago

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

STATE OF MARYLAND FLOODPLAIN MANAGEMENT PLAN FIVE-YEAR WORK PLAN DRAFT SEPTEMBER, 2004

Mitigation Action Plan Alamance County

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Public Outreach Strategy

Monroe County Local Mitigation Strategy (LMS) 2015 Update Working Group Meeting #1

Joint Recommendations on Levee Policy. Association of State Floodplain Managers. National Association of Flood and Stormwater Management Agencies

Hillsborough County Local Mitigation Strategy and the Community Rating System

Section I: Introduction

Non Regulatory Risk MAP Products Flood Depth and Probability Grids

David A. Stroud, CFM AMEC Earth & Environmental Raleigh, NC

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT. MUNICIPAL PROFILE

COMMUNITY SUMMARY LINN COUNTY MULTI-JURISDICTIONAL HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN CITY OF LISBON

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Priority Ranking. Timeframe. Faribault County Blue Earth, Bricelyn, Delavan, Easton, Elmore, Frost, Kiester, Minnesota Lake, Walters, Wells, Winnebago

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Q1 Do you...(check all that apply).

Mitigation Measures: Sound Investments in Disaster Recovery

8.2 Adoption of the Cook County Stormwater Management Plan

Use of FEMA Non regulatory Flood Risk Products in Planning

Crediting Adaptation Strategies through the National Flood Insurance Program s Community Rating System Coordinator s Manual

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Skagit County Natural Hazards Mitigation Plan

Village of Blue Mounds Annex

Discovery Meeting: Middle Potomac- Catoctin Watershed. FEMA REGION III September 26, 2012 Rockville, MD and Fairfax, VA

State of Vermont FLOODPLAIN MANAGEMENT WORK PLAN

PUBLIC SURVEY FOR HAZARD MITIGATION PLANNING

9.35 VILLAGE OF TULLY

Leveraging the Community Rating System for Climate Adaptation. Southeast and Caribbean Climate Community of Practice Webinar Series 23 March 2015

Chapter 7 Appendix B: National Flood Insurance Program Summary for Kaua'i County, 2015 Update

Sources of FEMA Funding

Best Practices. for Incorporating Building Science Guidance into Community Risk MAP Implementation November 2012

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

East Hartford. Challenges

Planning Process---Requirement 201.6(b): An open public involvement process is essential to the development of an effective plan.

SECTION 6 - RANGE OF ALTERNATIVE MITIGATION ACTIONS CONSIDERED

EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT

Section 19: Basin-Wide Mitigation Action Plans

Chapter 10 Mitigation

COMMUNITY CERTIFICATIONS

SECTION 6: MITIGATION STRATEGIES

Flood Smart Communities

The Changing NFIP, the CRS & Local Governments. Scott Pippin, J.D., M.E.P.D.

Flood Vulnerability Assessment for Critical Facilities. Molly Woloszyn Lisa Graff, GISP, CFM

CRS UNIFORM MINIMUM CREDIT CALIFORNIA

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT MUNICIPAL PROFILE

INTRODUCTION 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 HAZARD MITIGATION PLANNING 1.2 PLANNING REQUIREMENTS Local Mitigation Plans

Board of Thurston County Commissioners. Flood Planning Committee NAME ROLE/TITLE AFFILIATION Community Representatives Scott Boettcher Stakeholder

Attachment B. King County Flood Control Zone District Work Program

Town of Montrose Annex

Pre-Development Floodplain Application

National Flood Insurance Program s Community Rating System:

HOW PLANNING FOR SEA LEVEL RISE CREATES FLOOD INSURANCE REDUCTIONS: THE GEORGIA CONTEXT. Hunter Jones 1 I. INTRODUCTION

Action Items for Flood Risk Management on Wildcat Creek Interagency success with floodplain management plans and flood forecast inundation maps

APPENDIX D PLANNING PROCESS DOCUMENTATION

Somerset County Mitigation Plan Update

HAZARD MITIGATION PLAN POINT OF CONTACT. MUNICIPAL PROFILE

Flood Risk Products. New Techniques for Identifying and Communicating Flood Risk

Transcription:

Public Meeting 28 November 2016 Presented by: Deepa Srinivasan, Vision Planning and Consulting, LLC Dr. Michael Scott, ESRGC, Salisbury University

To update the all-hazards mitigation plan and flood mitigation plan to improve Calvert County s resistance to natural hazards, including flooding, by identifying actions to reduce the impact of various hazards to people and property.

Calvert County Staff Emergency Management, Community Planning and Building, GIS, etc. Hazard/Flood Mitigation Plan Steering Committee Municipalities Consultants Deepa Srinivasan, President, Vision Planning & Consulting Dr. Mike Scott, ESRGC- Salisbury University Public Maryland Emergency Management Agency (MEMA) Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA R3)

1. Reconvene 2009 Steering Committee and develop planning process (meetings) 2. Assess hazards, risks, vulnerability 3. Assess municipal capabilities Existing Plans, Programs, Policies Capability questionnaire Plan Integration Document Reviews Local Codes and Zoning Ordinances Current and Proposed Projects 4. Develop goals and objectives and mitigation actions Preventative Measures Projects Natural Resource Protection Outreach and Communication Other Mitigation Actions

5. Write mitigation plan and prioritize projects (using Evaluation Criteria) Social Technical/Administrative Economic 6. Develop implementation plan Priorities for Mitigation Actions Short-, Medium-, or Long-Range Potential Funding Sources Responsible Entities Target Completion Dates Five-Year Plan Maintenance Cycle

4 Steering Committee Meetings Meeting 1: October 2016 Planning process, schedule, deliverables Goals and objectives Meeting 2: November 2016 Mitigation Actions Meeting 3: November 2016 Hazard identification and risk assessment Meeting 4: January 2017 Mitigation actions prioritization Implementation strategy

Public Meeting 1 (Nov 2016) Planning process, hazard identification, risk assessment Goals and objectives Public Meeting 2 (Jan 2016) Mitigation actions and projects Prioritization criteria for mitigation projects

Prevention Goal 1: Direct population concentrations away from known or predicted high flood hazard areas through appropriate regulations. Address hazard mitigation goals through existing plans and ordinances. Continue to examine the zoning ordinance, and include language to ensure that any new development does not increase the vulnerability to flooding and make changes if required. Continue to ensure that the current building codes, floodplain ordinances, wetland protection, and erosion and sediment control standards are properly enforced.

Prevention - cont. Continue to implement a multi-objective management approach that promotes public involvement & coordination of floodplain management with other community concerns such as economic development, housing, water quality, and recreation. Ensure continued coordination and notification procedures between departments within the County and municipalities that are responsible for implementing flood mitigation activities. Develop recommendations for wetlands, buffer zones, etc. in municipal ordinances.

Property Protection Goal 2: Ensure new construction and reconstruction is resistant to flood damage. Encourage owners of high-risk, pre-firm residential structures to use retrofitting techniques to avoid repeated flooding. Support projects and programs to retrofit, relocate/acquire structures that are susceptible to repetitive flooding. Continue to emphasize the importance of flood insurance to residents through CRS and other efforts. Natural Resource Protection Goal 3: Protect natural resources and open-space within the floodplain and watersheds. Ensure all acquired properties are cleared of all structures, returned to their natural state, and remain in public ownership in perpetuity.

Emergency Services Goal 4: Ensure continued coordination during emergencies. Continue to evaluate coordination, notification, and response procedures. Goal 5: Ensure critical facilities are less vulnerable to flooding. Identify appropriate mitigation techniques for critical facilities in the floodplain currently and in the long term. Structural Projects Goal 6: Reduce potential disruption of the County s critical infrastructure during hazard events. Ensure regular maintenance of the County s critical infrastructure within the 100-year floodplain. Identify vulnerable existing critical facilities and infrastructure and encourage pre-disaster retrofit.

Goal 1: Minimize future losses from all disasters by reducing the risk to people and property. Protect populations and properties in Calvert County susceptible to economic or physical loss from disasters consistent with the standards established in this Plan and the current Calvert County Comprehensive Plan. Provide protection of critical facilities/infrastructure vital to disaster response, such as fire and police, and those vital to the continuous operations of the county, such as hospitals and health care facilities, water and sewer facilities, electrical and other utility, and transportation systems.

Goal 2: Support a balance between government regulation & enforcement, and personal awareness/responsibility for hazard mitigation, by emphasizing education and training for property owners, families and individuals. Continue to develop and support disaster preparedness education and awareness programs, targeting specific benefits to residents, visitors, businesses, and elected officials. Continue to develop economic incentive programs for both public and private sectors promoting benefits of structural retrofitting.

Goal 3: Minimize losses and institute adequate regulations through proper land use regulations. Develop and support public and private projects and programs to retrofit, relocate, or acquire properties susceptible to repetitive flooding. Require systematic maintenance programs for stormwater management systems. Discourage new development in high hazard areas through appropriate regulations and land use planning.

Goal 4: Reduce economic vulnerability and increase recovery capabilities of business and industry. Continue public education through collaborative programs with government, businesses and community organizations through seminars and online resources. Goal 5: Emphasize pre- and post-disaster planning to decrease vulnerability of existing and new construction to loss. Promote to elected officials, builders, and existing and potential homeowners, the economic and safety benefits of designing mitigation features into new construction and retrofit of existing structures. Identify vulnerable existing critical facilities and infrastructure and encourage pre-disaster retrofit.

Goal 6: Define the benefits of hazard mitigation principles through public education. Educate the public on higher standards of protection to structures and facilities from hazards. Identify and coordinate public information programs and events such as contests and festivals with public and private partners. Identify and seek multiple funding sources that will support hazard mitigation awareness and training programs. Goal 7: Ensure hazard mitigation goals are consistent with existing County plans and ordinances. Incorporate hazard mitigation principles into new and existing plans and ordinances.

Small Area Plans Cove Point Community Flood Mitigation Plan Broomes Island Flood Mitigation Plan Breezy Point/Neeld Estate Flood Mitigation Plan County Plans and Ordinances Calvert County Floodplain Regulations Calvert County Soil and Erosion Control Regulations Calvert County Road Ordinance Calvert County Stormwater Management Ordinance

Flood Mitigation Plan Hazard Identification and Vulnerability Assessment October and November 2016 Mitigation Strategy November and December 2016 Implementation Plan January 2017 Deliverables to County January 2017 Hazard Mitigation Plan Hazard Identification and Vulnerability Assessment October and November 2016 Mitigation Strategy November 2016 through February 2017 Deliverables to County May - June 2017 Plan Approvals MEMA and FEMA R3 August 2017