Disaster plan teams state and retailers

This will be the place to find all your hurricane prep information. Whether it be preparing your home, family, pets or evacuation plans here is where to find the information you need.

Moderator: S2k Moderators

Message
Author
User avatar
jasons2k
Storm2k Executive
Storm2k Executive
Posts: 8076
Age: 50
Joined: Wed Jul 06, 2005 12:32 pm
Location: The Woodlands, TX

Disaster plan teams state and retailers

#1 Postby jasons2k » Sun Jul 15, 2007 9:47 am

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/met ... 67735.html

July 14, 2007, 11:42PM
Disaster plan teams state and retailers
Stores, instead of FEMA, counted on to get supplies to the scene early

By TERRI LANGFORD
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle

"If FEMA shows up, good," said Jack Colley, chief of the Governor's Division of Emergency Management. ''But we're not waiting."

Call it one more example of the lingering Hurricane Katrina effect, but Colley and his team are looking past the traditional go-through-FEMA-to-get-ice kind of emergency management model.

This new strategy, borne during 2005's Hurricane Rita and fine-tuned in the two years since by the state's emergency agency, has retailers conducting mock drills alongside government officials.

"FEMA was an old contact point for ice, water, etc," Colley explained from his agency's state operations center in the basement of Texas Department of Public Safety headquarters in Austin. "The private sector is willing and able to do this for us."

For the past two years, Colley and Texas Homeland Security Director Steve McCraw have cultivated direct relationships with retailers after watching Louisiana and Mississippi officials dial FEMA in vain for food, water and other aid.

"FEMA can't compete with the private sector," Colley said. "They do it quicker, smarter, faster every day."


Speedier response
These large retailers, including Wal-Mart, H-E-B and Home Depot, are part of the state's emergency prep team, invited to brainstorm about strategy and problem solve when there are questions about the best way to respond to a disaster. In exchange for their know-how, they're given advance notice about when the state is about to make critical decisions on evacuations, school closings or when highways will be "contraflowed" into one direction away from a storm.


Some people have voiced concerns about this new partnership and the potential benefits for the big retailers.

But the retailers deny that they are in it for financial gain, and state officials have only praise for their speedier response to disasters.

"They didn't just show up," McCraw said of Wal-Mart in the aftermath of Katrina. "They showed up with a very skilled, professional team. We embedded them immediately. Next thing you know, they were delivering commodities immediately."

Justen Noakes, emergency management coordinator for H-E-B, the San Antonio-based grocery store chain, said the private sector has a big advantage when an evacuation announcement is made.

"Speed to action is a huge asset that we bring to the partnership. We don't need a governor, a statewide or a local emergency declared to move. All we need is a telephone call from an official," Noakes said.

From FEMA's standpoint, this collaborative process dovetails nicely with the agency's own strategies.

"It seems like that would be a natural fit," said Earl Armstrong, spokesman for FEMA's regional office in Denton. "We supplement the state and local efforts and if they can get it, that's just one last thing we don't have to coordinate for. If that gets supplies to people who need it, that's great."

This new model, in which retailers' flexible delivery systems are paired with government's network of local emergency responders and powerful communication tools, has received rave reviews from those involved in recent Texas emergencies.

"I don't know Jack Colley, but I can't wait to meet him and shake his hand," said Burnet County Judge Donna Klaeger, whose county includes Marble Falls, which flooded June 26, killing one person and sending 300 others from their homes.

"We could not have made it through without the state emergency management team," Klaeger said. "They were amazing. I never was stressed about how we were going to get through, because I knew we would."

Conference calls kept local officials in touch with the state and one another. State officials were quickly on the scene and by the phone advising Marble Falls and Burnet County how to file for a federal disaster declaration, thereby freeing aid to combat the $137 million in losses the county suffered.

Then, the retail partners moved in.

"H-E-B, Wal-Mart, Home Depot, every business that I think that was not affected by the flood was out there helping victims with the flood," Klaeger said.

As soon as police, firefighters and paramedics began gathering in a Wal-Mart parking lot in Marble Falls, a store official pressed a store gift card into her hand and told her he heard she needed food for her emergency troops working throughout the night. "He said go buy groceries for the first responders."

Maverick County Judge Jose Aranda reported a similiar outpouring last April after a tornado struck Eagle Pass, destroying 125 homes.

"The same night we were out there, the local (H-E-B) director was out there with sandwiches for all the first responders," Aranda said. Bottled water and anything the county needed was quickly there for the asking.


Florida lessons
Retailers and officials in Florida point to Hurricane Andrew as the greatest wake-up call. The 1992 Category 5 storm forced 700,000 to evacuate their South Florida homes, killed 15 people immediately and 25 more later died of indirect causes.


Andrew demolished more than 25,000 homes and damaged another 100,000.

"The lesson of Hurricane Andrew was don't wait for the federal government and don't wait for permission to serve your citizens," said Craig Fugate, Florida's emergency management director.

So afterward, Florida officials turned to contracting directly with vendors instead of waiting for FEMA to do it for them.

They also brought retailers into the government fold when it came to plotting how to respond to a disaster.

Florida officials now focus on delivering aid faster to the poorest residents or those who live in isolated areas. That leaves large retailers to supply those with access and money.

"If a retailer is open and meets demand, we don't need to be in that area," Fugate said.


Motives questioned
Some people grouse that profit is the only motive behind all of this commerce-government hand-holding, but both sides say that's just not so.


"We actually take kind of a beating because our expenses go way up in responding to the market," said Jim Shortal, director of crisis management and business continuity at Home Depot headquarters in Atlanta. Additional employees are shipped in. Overtime has to be paid. Transportation costs rise when roads are out.

Colley said nothing is promised to retailers and no service contracts have been cut with them pre-storm.

During the disaster response period, roughly 72 hours before a major storm hits and 72 hours afterward, the state will rely on corporate partners such as Wal-Mart and H-E-B to work in the area with donated water and other supplies.

"Prior to 2005, there was no process in place to maximize not only the willingness of corporate America but the capability of corporate America," McCraw said.

Once a disaster moves into a recovery phase, where debris removal begins and there possibly is a need for long-term shelters, then the state will turn to contracting, particularly after a presidential emergency declaration is made, McCraw said.

"There's programs in place that you can leverage to take care of these things in the procurement," he said.

Translation: When emergency federal dollars are available, then the state will contract with retailers and submit the cost as a federal emergency expense.

For example, during the flooding in Marble Falls, retailers did donate water and food to first responders and the public during the initial emergency. The Texas Department of Health and Human Services reached into its emergency funds to pay for $90,075 worth of bottled water for the town when the flooding temporarily compromised the Marble Falls water system.

Retailers insist that their only interest is to quickly push supplies into an impacted region to keep commerce and that community alive.

But there are skeptics of this new model.

"I think everybody cheered when Federal Express and H-E-B were able to deliver supplies to New Orleans when the federal government couldn't and wouldn't," Tom "Smitty" Smith, director of the watchdog group Public Citizen, said. "But having these companies be a part of the planning for disaster relief puts them at a competitive advantage. The smaller stores do not have the same kind of access to the kind of data and the kind of preferential treatment."


Prices frozen
Retailers scoff at the idea there is any hidden motive or a desire to manipulate prices during a disaster.


"I can't think of a quicker way to lose customers than price-gouging," said Don Harrison, spokesman for Home Depot's Atlanta headquarters.

In fact, Home Depot and Wal-Mart have controls in place that freeze prices for an area once an emergency declaration is made.

Helping communities fight disasters by keeping the retail supply chain open not only gets the community back on line more quickly, retailers said, it gives evacuating residents a reason to come home sooner and get back to work.

The state wins because when a community is back at work, taxes are paid and unemployment is down.

In Louisiana, for example, three Wal-Mart stores remain closed because "there's no community to come back to," said Jason Jackson, Wal-Mart's director of emergency management.

"The benefit (for us) is ... we will have a community to go back to in the end," Jackson said. "That's the benefit."

terri.langford@chron.com
0 likes   

User avatar
vbhoutex
Storm2k Executive
Storm2k Executive
Posts: 28974
Age: 72
Joined: Wed Oct 09, 2002 11:31 pm
Location: Spring Branch area, Houston, TX
Contact:

Re: Disaster plan teams state and retailers

#2 Postby vbhoutex » Sun Jul 15, 2007 2:18 pm

I am sure glad to hear about this. I really don't care if they are put at a competitive advantage as long as they are resoponsding to the needs of the community without asking for compensation for what they are doing. Any retailer that is willing to respond like this deserves kudos and nothing else imo. And I don't see anything wrong with them getting correct reimbursement for the supplies they provide at a minimum.
0 likes   

User avatar
jasons2k
Storm2k Executive
Storm2k Executive
Posts: 8076
Age: 50
Joined: Wed Jul 06, 2005 12:32 pm
Location: The Woodlands, TX

#3 Postby jasons2k » Sun Jul 15, 2007 5:14 pm

I agree - I think this is an excellent program!
0 likes   

User avatar
Dionne
S2K Supporter
S2K Supporter
Posts: 1616
Age: 72
Joined: Mon Jan 02, 2006 8:51 am
Location: SW Mississippi....Alaska transplant via a Southern Belle.

Re: Disaster plan teams state and retailers

#4 Postby Dionne » Mon Jul 16, 2007 6:30 am

The plan sounds good on paper. All advance planning is good. But once again we're forgetting about two aspects of our population.......the old and the poor. It is not the federal/state governments or even the private sector that should be held accountable for helping these groups. Each individual alone that is able to help another should do so.....without compensation. It is in the first hours after a natural disaster that help is critical.
0 likes   

User avatar
DanKellFla
Category 5
Category 5
Posts: 1291
Joined: Fri Mar 17, 2006 12:02 pm
Location: Lake Worth, Florida

#5 Postby DanKellFla » Mon Jul 16, 2007 7:27 am

This is an excellent program. It allows those with the means to buy what they normally need at normal prices which frees up resources for those that really need it.

I remember lines of cars after Wilma with late model BMWs getting free water. That was rediculous.
0 likes   

Jagno
Category 3
Category 3
Posts: 825
Joined: Tue Sep 07, 2004 10:40 pm
Location: SW Louisiana

Re: Disaster plan teams state and retailers

#6 Postby Jagno » Mon Jul 16, 2007 12:37 pm

Folks I saw first hand what the community can and has done in an emergency situation and it rivals anything FEMA or REd Cross ever did. We had individual store owners who gave everything they could while the corporations such as Albertson's and such took weeks to get "permission" so that they could help. Local businesses will be the first up to the plate in a time of crises. They were also the first to receive when the crises was over and we made sure of that. When the shelters were finally closed we were instructed to throw everything away. We threw it to those businesses who provided their all in the first place and were now struggling to get reopened. Take care of you and yours because the government can't with it's limited resources as well as too many chiefs and not enough indians so to speak.
0 likes   

NewOrleansMom
Tropical Low
Tropical Low
Posts: 17
Joined: Sun Aug 12, 2007 12:10 am
Location: WestBank of New Orleans

Re: Disaster plan teams state and retailers

#7 Postby NewOrleansMom » Thu Aug 16, 2007 1:30 am

We evacuated from New Orleans for Katrina.
Although we were just over 200 miles from New Orleans, our place of evacuation did not have power or water for almost 2 weeks.
While some gas stations and grocery and hardware stores opened, they operated on generators and accepted CASH ONLY for payment and banks, of course, were NOT OPEN.
Please keep that in mind folks.
Have as much cash as possible on hand.
You may need cash for longer than just a few days.
This was a valuable lesson learned.
0 likes   


Return to “Hurricane Preparation”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 87 guests