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| (Photo
courtesy of FEMA) |
The Federal Emergency
Management Agency is preparing to release a multi-hazard risk
assessment and loss estimating tool that comes with extensive
base reference data, yet can also incorporate local data supplied
by users.
The product is the fruit of a FEMA
effort to provide individuals, businesses and communities
with information and tools to proactively mitigate hazards
and prevent losses from disasters.
FEMA developed its initial product,
HAZUS, or Hazards U.S., in 1997 to help planners estimate
potential damage from earthquakes. It uses methodology developed
in partnership with the National Institute of Building Sciences.
The new product, HAZUS-MH, which
FEMA plans to start distributing free in March, uses a geographic
information system approach to organize data and help planners
evaluate development decisions in light of potential losses
at a given location, not only from earthquakes, but also from
river or coastal flooding and hurricane winds. Links also
will be provided to other hazard models for estimating exposure
of people and property to dam failures and chemical hazard
plumes.
The software product comes with
default data for U.S. geographic locations based on census
information, flood plane maps and other resources. It can
be linked to planners' existing GIS systems and enhanced with
locally gathered data.
"The whole premise is that you
have all this default data, but you can take it to the next
level and bring in your own data to make it better and more
accurate," says Adrienne Sheldon, project engineer with Greenhorne
and O'Mara, an engineering firm in Greenbelt, Md., hired to
help with outreach efforts.
A series of training sessions is
scheduled to take place at a FEMA facility in Emmitsburg,
Md., in March, April, June, August and September.
See www.fema.gov/hazus
for details.
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