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Utah ShakeOut Integrated Working Groups. Utah State Capitol Complex, Salt Lake City, UT August 24 – September 23, 2010. 30. Scenario. 31. Salt Lake County. 12 County Region. Population of 2,148,078 people (2005 Census Bureau data) 27,583 square miles Over 666,000 households. 32.
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Utah ShakeOut Integrated Working Groups Utah State Capitol Complex, Salt Lake City, UT August 24 – September 23, 2010 30
Scenario 31
Salt LakeCounty 12 County Region • Population of 2,148,078 people (2005 Census Bureau data) • 27,583 square miles • Over 666,000 households 32
Building Inventory • Estimated 541,000 buildings in the region with a total building replacement value (excluding contents) of $115 billion • Approximately 94% of the buildings are associated with residential housing 33
Critical Facility Inventory • Essential facilities: • 39 hospitals with a total bed capacity of 4,605 beds • 853 schools • 212 fire stations • 89 police stations 34
High Potential Loss (HPL) Facilities • 272 dams • 117 are classified as ‘high hazard’ • 636 hazardous material sites 35
Transportation and Utility Inventory • 7 transportation systems (highways, railways, light rail, bus, ports, ferry and airports) • over 3,595 km of highways • 1,902 bridges • 93,834 km of pipes • 6 utility systems (potable water, wastewater, natural gas, crude & refined oil, electric power and communications) • Total value of the lifeline inventory: $32 billion 36
Wednesday December 1 2010 37
Breaking News 7.0 magnitude earthquake Wednesday, December 1, 2010 38
2,289 dead 31,ooo Injured 39
$70,000,000,000 In damages and losses Building Losses • $35 billion in building-related losses • 25% of the estimated losses were related to the business interruption of the region • Largest loss was sustained by the residential occupancies which made up over 60% of the total loss Transportation Losses • Inventory: $27 billion • Economic: $948 million Utility Lifeline Losses • Inventory: $7 billion • Economic: $587 million 40
64,000 • Over 204,000 buildings are at least moderately damaged • 38% of the buildings in the region • 82% of the completely destroyed buildings are unreinforced masonry buildings Buildings collapse 41
Shaking intensity • The earthquake lasts as long as 1 minute in some areas • It affects 80% of the population of Utah • From Brigham City to Santaquin • Covering 120 miles from north to south • High chance for Aftershocks • Statistically, expect one 6.0 M and several 5.0 M within 72 hours 13 42
water gas power Electrical Power • 257,352 households without power • 8 electrical facilities damaged Water/Waste Water • 306,712 households without potable water • 3,319 breaks and leaks in potable water pipelines • 5 waste water treatment facilities damaged • 2625 breaks and leaks in waste water pipelines Life lines severed Natural Gas • 1 natural gas facility damaged • 98 breaks and leaks in natural gas pipelines Oil Systems • 45 breaks and leaks in oil pipelines • 8 oil facilities damaged Communications • 20 communications facilities damaged 43
Critical Facilities damaged • Hospitals: 16 (of 39) damaged • Of the 4,605 hospital beds available for use only 1,934 hospital beds (42%) are available for use by patients already in the hospital and those injured by the earthquake • Schools: 105 (of 853) damaged • EOCs: 25% damaged • Police Stations: 4 (of 89) damaged • Fire Stations: 18 (of 212) damaged 44
Transportation impacted • Salt Lake City International Airport • Major damage to all runways, ramps and taxiways • Damage to terminals 1 and 2 • Major highways damaged making ground transportation difficult and impacting egress and traffic around the city • Severe damage to sections of I-80, I-15 and I-215 • Bridges • 140 damaged beyond repair • 469 moderately damaged • Railways • Rail lines twisted and severed in several areas; rail yards damaged 45
161 Fires • Following the earthquake • 161 ignitions that burned about 7.62 sq. mi • Estimated 30,813 people displaced • Burn about $1.8 billion of building value 46
97,700 • 62,328 people seek temporary shelter in public shelters • Over 200,000 seek shelter on their own Households displaced 47
response efforts • The earthquake triggers an immediate Presidential disaster declaration • DHS directs implementation of the NRF Catastrophic Incident Supplement to push the deployment of Federal support to save lives, prevent human suffering and mitigate further damage • The State EOC and all local and county EOCs have been activated • The Region VIII RRCC has been activated and FEMA has deployed National and Regional IMATs and MERS to the area to coordinate with the State and stand up a JFO • Surrounding States activate their EOCs • Multiple Incident Command Posts (ICPs) have been established throughout the impacted area 48