The Florida Catastrophe Plan (FLCP) program is under the sponsors of the National Disaster Planning Process (CPP), mandated by the 2002 Homeland Security Act, amended by the Homeland Security Act of 2007. In 2007, the strict response to Hurricane Katrina expanded the role and responsibility of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in preparation for disasters (Ruback et al., 2010). FEMA was given special requirements for better response to catastrophic disasters and the FLCP planning process mirrored the first major test of CCP.
• FEMA is a large-scale catastrophic disaster plan that improves responsiveness and complements national response plan / framework (NRP / NRF), national accident management system (NIMS), and federal, state, and local planning activities We developed a program. Notification events and non notification events of the program are organized by DHS and FEMA, and its federal, state, and regional agencies to ensure proper, prompt, effective, and efficient response and recovery to protect health and safety It reflects the important steps taken by the partner. And to restore the infrastructure as much as possible after population happiness, and devastating affair. FEMA's catastrophic disaster response planning program currently covers four specific geographic areas. South Eastern Louisiana, 8 New Madrid Seismic Zones (NMSZ), Florida State and California State
Florida Keys and Level 5 storms that are likely to cause devastating damage this weekend in southern Florida, followed by a second storm. Florida Keys experienced the flood of Hurricane Wilma in 2005, a level 3 storm at landing. The last level 5 storm that landed at Florida Keys was a labor day hurricane in 1935. Now Elma looked to Puerto Rico. In Puerto Rico it is regrettable that the number of properties that are responsible for flood insurance in the past 5 years has been reduced to less than 1/10 of the previous level of stability and 96% of high-risk properties are not covered. A sharp decline in policy penetration rate may be related to economic downturn in this region. At peak time, only 69% of high risk assets are covered
Last year, we saw this pattern repeating over and over again. Historical drought in Missouri and Arkansas floods, Texas and Florida Puerto Rico hurricane disasters, California and Oregon fire, Dakota, Montana and California. The impact of each case will continue to have a significant impact. In all cases, despite the stronger pressure and the best efforts to quickly build physical and mental resilience, these ongoing challenges begin to cause losses. We have a lot. As you know, it takes time to build a resilient one - a few years to decades. However, the stream of torrents fell on the hillside of a burnt hill for a while.