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Emergency Action Planning for State Regulated High-Hazard Potential Dams - Findings, Recommendations, and Strategies (FEMA 608 / August 2007) (Paperback)
Loot Price: R355
Discovery Miles 3 550
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Emergency Action Planning for State Regulated High-Hazard Potential Dams - Findings, Recommendations, and Strategies (FEMA 608 / August 2007) (Paperback)
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Loot Price R355
Discovery Miles 3 550
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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An Emergency Action Plan (EAP) is one of the primary safeguards
against the loss of life and property damage that can result from
the failure of a high-hazard potential dam. Today, there are
approximately 8,300 state-regulated high-hazard potential dams in
the United States. Of these 8.300 dams, approximately 40 percent do
not have an EAP. Since the establishment of the National Dam Safety
Program in 1979, both the state and federal sectors have made
significant progress in increasing the number of state-regulated
high-hazard potential dams with EAP's. The dam safety community
recognizes, however, that much more must be done to reach the goal
established in January 2006 by the National Dam Safety Review
Board: achieve 100 percent compliance for EAP's for high-hazard
potential dams. When the National Dam Safety Review Board met in
October 2005, the losses from Hurricane Katrina had just exposed
significant failures in all aspects of the Nation's emergency
mitigation, planning, and response. The failure of the emergency
management system to respond quickly and effectively to the
disaster brought to the forefront the need for all hazard areas,
including dam safety, to refocus their attention on this critical
requirement. For the dam infrastructure, the need for emergency
action planning is heightened by the aging of dams in the United
States. The 2005 Report Card for America's Infrastructure (American
Society of Civil Engineers, March 2005) states that the number of
unsafe or deficient dams in the United States has risen by more
than 33 percent since 1998, to more than 3,500. To address these
issues, the National Dam Safety Review Board established the Task
Group on Emergency Action Planning and Response. The Task Group,
which began its work in January 2006, recognized that the success
of its effort would require the involvement of all of the sectors
with an interest in its outcome. As a result, the sectors
represented on the Task Group include state and federal dam safety
professionals and engineers, the emergency management community,
the security and protection community, and emergency response
organizations. Appendix D includes the list of Task Group members.
This document provides the Task Group's findings, recommendations,
and strategies for significantly increasing the number of EAP's for
state-regulated high-hazard potential dams.
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