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Mitigation Success Stories in the United States (Edition 4 / January 2002) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
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Mitigation Success Stories in the United States (Edition 4 / January 2002) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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For over two decades, mitigation activities have been implemented
across the country to save lives, reduce property damage and lessen
the need for recovery funding. In many cases, mitigation success
has been achieved following devastating disasters, when local
officials and the general public have realized the need to effect
change in their community. Major efforts to reduce flood damage in
the nation include programs such as the Federal Emergency
Management Agency's Hazard Mitigation Grant Program and Flood
Mitigation Assistance Program. Of particular note is FEMA's funding
of local acquisition programs, which have resulted in the
relocation of 30,000 flood prone structures since 1993. Certainly
structural projects have their place as well, such as dams, levees
and locks undertaken by such agencies as the Army Corps of
Engineers, Natural Resource Conservation Service and others. In the
21st Century, more and more communities are mitigating flood damage
through a combination of approaches. As our country grows, flood
damages are ever increasing. Annual flood losses in the United
States continue to worsen, despite 75 years of federal flood
control and 30 years of the National Flood Insurance Program. The
general trend is for flood losses to increase every decade. Even
though floods are the single most predictable natural hazard, the
cost of flood damages per capita has doubled over the past century.
Our average annual flood losses are currently estimated at $6
billion. Something must be done Early mitigation activities, which
focused on preventing loss of life, were being implemented as early
as the 1880's. For instance, Johnstown, Pennsylvania, built the
famous "Johnstown Incline Plane" in 1891 to lift people, horses and
wagons to safety after a 37 foot wall of water hit the Conemaugh
Valley in 1889. That flood killed more than 2,200 people The
Incline Plane carried people to safety during the 1936 and 1977
floods in Johnstown. It is now a focal point of an economic
resurgence for the community. Mitigation Success Stories, Edition 4
showcases examples of natural hazard mitigation activities and
publicizes the benefits of mitigation successes across the country
from 39 communities in 24 states. The examples included in this
document can serve as models for other communities and can provide
decision-makers with valuable information about how to achieve
natural hazard reduction.
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