THE FOLLOWING SLIDES PRESENT AN OVERVIEW OF THE PROJECT INCLUDING MAJOR PARTICIPANTS, GOALS AND MILESTONES. MORE COMPLETE INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE IN THE APPROVED DRU PLAN.
DISASTER RESISTANT UNIVERSITY PLANNING GRANT Administered by Mississippi Emergency Management Agency Disaster Resistant University Advisory Committee – U.M. Oversight and Support Center for Community Earthquake Preparedness – Project Management $75,000 Grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency
COMPLETION OF AN ACCEPTED NATURAL HAZARDS MITIGATION PLAN IMPLEMENTATION OF HAZARD MITIGATION PROJECTS A SAFER UNIVERSITY FOR FACULTY, STAFF AND STUDENTS
ADVISORY COMMITTEE MEMBERS Mr. Buster Clark (chair) Ms. Barbara Lago Mr. Ed Movitz Ms. Linda Christian Mr. Jim Windham Ms. Kathy Tidwell Mr. Patrick Brown Ms. Lorinda Krhut
CHARACTERIZING THE HAZARDS SERVES TO IDENTIFY DAMAGE TYPICALLY ASSOCIATED WITH THE HAZARD, ITS EXTENT, DURATION, AND ESTIMATED COSTS. THESE FACTORS ARE THEN USED TO CONSTRUCT APPROPRIATE MITIGATION MEASURES.
Hazard Profiles Historical occurrence of event Severity of event Location (regional or local) Typical damage
Hazard Identification / Evaluation Avalanche Coastal Erosion Coastal Storm Dam Failure Expansive Soils Volcano Tsunami Subsidence
TORNADO Hazard of most concern Potential to cause the most damage Particularly destructive in densely populated areas 1971 “Mobile City” tornado (F2 class – 113 to 157mph) on western edge of Oxford - $500,000 damage
April 21, 1984, Class 3 on Fujita Scale (158-206 mph) $25,000,000 worth of damage Tracked through an urbanized area A model for the University campus
March 9, 2006 Sardis, Mississippi Tornado (F1 Class)
Earthquake Potentially the second most costly hazard for the University No warning Regional in nature – implications for rescue operations (how long the wait?) Older campus buildings pre-date building code
Straight-line Winds Severe Winter Weather Straight-line wind is third potentially most expensive hazard – from thunderstorms and remnants of hurricanes (Katrina, Rita, Lillian) Ice storms in 1996, 1994,1983,1951,1948 Mostly life line (infrastructure) damage
F3 Tornado Scenario
MEMA Standard HM Plan for MS
DRU PROJECT BACKGROUND INFORMATION ASSETS AND COST ESTIMATION HAZARD PROFILES ARE USED TO ESTIMATE POTENTIAL LOSSES FROM EACH HAZARD. THE POTENTIAL LOSSES ARE COMPARED WITH TOTAL ASSETS (EXPOSURE) TO EVALUATE THE RELATIVE IMPORTANCE OF THE HAZARD TO THE UNIVERSITY. THESE DATA ARE ALSO USEFUL TO DESIGN MITIGATION MEASURES.
OXFORD CAMPUS ASSETS Personnel ~14,900 students ( ~80 students in 1848) ~ 2,300 full-time employees (~ 3,700 students in 15 resident halls, 2 apt. complexes) Total Direct Economic Exposure (incl. Football Stadium) $1.6 Billion Buildings/Facilities $1.9 Billion (Including Contents) Critical Facilities (Electricity, Telecommunications, Water, HVAC Power, Health Care, Food Service, Shelter, Transportation) High Priority Buildings (Library, Administration, Research Labs, Classrooms, Large Dormitories)
Economic Loss Estimation (including building contents)
DRU PROJECT BACKGROUND INFORMATION MITIGATION MITIGATION MEASURES ARE SPECIFIC ACTIONS DESIGNED TO REDUCE THE FISCAL AND HUMAN COST OF AN EVENT – PRIOR TO THE OCCURANCE OF THE EVENT. SPECIFIC MITIGATION MEASURES ARE LISTED IN THE FOLLOWING SLIDE.
MITIGATION – THE KEY TO SAVING LIVES, MONEY AND PROPERTY IMPLEMENTATION OF THE MITIGATION MEASURES FULFILLS THE ULTIMATE GOAL OF THE DRU PLANNING EFFORTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSISSIPPI
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