domingo, 31 de enero de 2010

RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 2 : USA - Snow Storm

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 2

Ref.no.: SS-20100129-24727-USA

Situation Update No. 2
On 2010-02-01 at 04:25:20 [UTC]

Event: Snow Storm
Location: USA State of Oklahoma Oklahoma-wide


Number of Deads: 3 person(s)

Situation:

Oklahoma's death toll for a winter storm that left thousands without power in the state climbed to three Sunday, emergency officials said. By mid-afternoon Sunday, 92,460 homes and businesses still were without power because of the storm, the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management said. As ice melts, more temporary outages may happen as the ice's weight on power lines shifts and causes the wires to bounce, emergency management officials said. Police responded to 568 storm-related auto accidents in Oklahoma, and one of them resulted in the death of a 33-year-old man Sunday, officials said. A 73-year-old man died Saturday after his house caught fire when he used a wood-burning stove during a power outage. And a 70-year-old woman died Friday when a propane tank she was using to power her generator exploded, emergency management officials said. Oklahoma is under a state of emergency. The state's shelters accommodated 3,000 people Saturday. Much of the state will be under a freezing fog advisory from 9 p.m. Sunday until noon Monday, the National Weather Service said. The advisory signals that light ice accumulation from freezing fog is expected, and that visibility will be limited to a half-mile or less, the weather service said. The advisory extends into the Texas panhandle. The storm struck Friday, stretching from Oklahoma to eastern Tennessee and down to southern Mississippi, dropping snow, sleet and freezing drizzle or rain. The wintry weather moved east over the weekend, hitting several states, including the Carolinas and Virginia.

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RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 1 : USA - Snow Storm

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 1

Ref.no.: SS-20100130-24744-USA

Situation Update No. 1
On 2010-02-01 at 04:24:18 [UTC]

Event: Snow Storm
Location: USA State of North Carolina North Carolina-wide


Number of Deads: 4 person(s)

Situation:

At least four people have died in connection with the winter storm that left much of North Carolina coated with frozen precipitation. Gov. Beverly Perdue told a media briefing on Sunday that a pedestrian was killed in Wayne County on Saturday night when he was struck by a snow plow. Police in Goldsboro said the accident occurred on U.S. 70. Perdue said the other victim was a Surry County resident who suffered an apparent heart attack after shoveling snow on Saturday morning at his home near Dobson. And in Charlotte, authorities say a man died after shoveling snow near his home on Sunday afternoon. Police in Gastonia say a 55-year-old man died Saturday night after falling in the snow while taking a nighttime walk in a wooded area near his home.

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RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 5 : USA - Earthquake

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 5

Ref.no.: EQ-20100119-24617-USA

Situation Update No. 5
On 2010-02-01 at 04:19:46 [UTC]

Event: Earthquake
Location: USA State of Utah Yellowstone National Park

Situation:

In the last two weeks, more than 100 mostly tiny earthquakes a day, on average, have rattled a remote area of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, putting scientists who monitor the park’s strange and volatile geology on alert. Researchers say that for now, the earthquake cluster, or swarm — the second-largest ever recorded in the park — is more a cause for curiosity than alarm. The quake zone, about 10 miles northwest of the Old Faithful geyser, has shown little indication, they said, of building toward a larger event, like a volcanic eruption of the type that last ravaged the Yellowstone region tens of thousands of years ago. The area is far from any road or community, and the park is relatively empty in winter. Swarms of small quakes, including a significant swarm last year, are relatively common.

But at a time when the disastrous earthquake in Haiti on Jan. 12 has refocused global attention on the earth’s immense store of tectonic energy, scientists say that the Yellowstone swarm, if only because of its volume, bears close observation: as of Sunday, there had been 1,608 quakes since Jan. 17. “We’re not seeing a pattern that is really discernible yet,” said Henry Heasler, a coordinating scientist for the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, a joint venture of Yellowstone, the United States Geological Survey and the University of Utah. Dr. Heasler said plans were in place to intensify observations in case the swarm continued for a long time or got larger. “We’re ready to ramp up,” he said, including using flights to monitor the area. Researchers at the University of Utah’s Seismograph Stations who have tracked Yellowstone swarms said they thought it was coincidental that another big swarm of more 1,000 quakes had struck the park just over a year ago. At the time, it was the second-biggest cluster recorded there. The largest swarm was in 1985, when 3,000 earthquakes struck over three months. Last year’s swarm, beneath northern Yellowstone Lake, had a specific track of alignment, with the earthquakes moving north and growing shallower from the initial quake area, said Robert B. Smith, a professor of geophysics at the University of Utah and a science coordinator at the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory.

The mostly smaller quakes in the current swarm, he said, are more like a cloud, with no directional pattern, similar to what scientists saw in a big swarm at the park in 1999. “We think the crust beneath Yellowstone is highly fractured already, so we’re getting stress release in these earthquakes — a displacement of millimeters,” Dr. Smith said. Dr. Heasler said researchers use the park’s geologic wonders, like Old Faithful — which spews steam and water on schedule, plus or minus 10 minutes — as indicators of the effects of quake activity. He and his team look for changes in water temperature, or mud plumes in hot pools that otherwise run clear. This swarm, he said, seems not to have affected any of those natural monitors, though he emphasized that analysis was continuing. Attention to earthquakes in general has soared since the quake in Haiti. For instance, visits to the United States Geological Survey’s Earthquake Hazards Program Web site increased fivefold after the quake, to more than a million a day, compared with the numbers a month earlier, an agency spokeswoman said. Dr. Heasler said park visitors had been encouraged to help with the research by telling park officials if they felt the ground shake.

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RSOE EDIS: India - Vehicle Accident - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 19:51:05 - Vehicle Accident - India

EDIS CODE: VI-20100131-24755-IND
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 19:51:05 [UTC]
Area: India, State of Andhra Pradesh, Tandava Reservoir,

Number of death person(s): 11
Damage level: Moderate (Level 2)

Not confirmed information!

Description:

In yet another boat tragedy, 11 people were feared drowned as a country-made boat capsized in Tandava reservoir in Andhra Pradesh today. This was the second boat mishap after yesterday's incident, which claimed 11 lives in West Godavari district in the state. The mishap occurred when 14 villagers of Ammapeta in Golugonda mandal in Visakhapatnam district were returning in a boat after worshipping a local deity on a hillock, Visakhapatnam Rural Superintendent of Police Vineet Brijlal, who visited the spot, told PTI over phone. Two persons swam to safety while only one body was recovered from the reservoir, he said, adding 11 people were either feared drowned or missing.


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RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 75 : Haiti - Earthquake

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 75

Ref.no.: EQ-20100112-24531-HTI

Situation Update No. 75
On 2010-01-31 at 18:48:45 [UTC]

Event: Earthquake
Location: Haiti Capital City Port-au-Prince area


Number of Deads: > 170000 person(s)
Number of Injured: 750000 person(s)

Situation:

Foreign doctors treating earthquake victims at Haiti's general hospital are deeply worried many of their patients will die after they leave. They only have to look at a pile of rubble next door to witness the magnitude of the health crisis facing Haiti. More than 100 dead Haitian nursing students are buried under tons of cement bricks turned to dust and twisted bars, the remnants of a five-story nursing school that collapsed when the 7.0 magnitude quake hit Port-au-Prince on January 12. A crushed blue school bus with its "National School of Nursing" sign in yellow letters is clearly visible. They can also see rows of collapsed lockers teetering from a second floor. A lab coat still hangs in one. People working at the hospital said the unintended graveyard in the rubble smelled for a long time, a reminder of the terrible challenges that lie ahead for Haiti's hospitals, many of which were destroyed in the quake. After the disaster that killed as many as 200,000 people, teams of doctors flooded into Haiti from all over the world, including specialised surgeons with high-tech equipment to operate on amputated limbs.

But most rotate out after a week or two of emergency service, returning their patients to a medical system which was already weak and crumbling before the quake. "I think many of (the patients) will die," said David Ansell, an internal medicine specialist from Rush University Medical Center working in Port-au-Prince's general hospital. "I have to discharge people and they have to go live in a tent in front of the palace," he said. Several hundred thousand quake survivors are sleeping outdoors under tents and sheets in improvised refugee camps that carpet all available open spaces in the devastated city. The US military halted medical evacuations to the United States this week in a dispute over where to treat the patients and who should pay, raising fears some patients who would benefit from treatment abroad would also now die. At the general hospital in the center of Port-au-Prince hundreds of patients lie in cots in tents in the patio, some connected to IV drips or dialysis machines with relatives fanning them to try to keep them cool. The most serious cases are housed inside in a dark building with cracked walls where patients lie naked or half covered in crowded rooms. Doctors wearing T-shirts from Spain, France, Brazil and the United States check on their condition.

Risk of tuberculosis, Aids

Alix Lassegue, the general hospital's director, said that along with the dead nurses, eight doctors were killed and many fled to other parts of the country after their homes collapsed. He said only half of the staff was coming to work. "I see (the foreign doctors) working on patients and they do it fast, but when they leave there will be no more good service," said Jimmy, who lost his 10-year-old child, his wife and his mother when his house was destroyed in the earthquake. He was offered a job at the hospital moving patients on cots. There is no official figure of how many Haitian medical staff died in the disaster, Health Minister Alex Larsen said in an interview. Larsen said the government was encouraging patients who had relatives in the countryside to move in with them. He hoped some 3,000 could be transferred to rural areas and said local doctors would check up on them. The real risks could come in the following months as sick people, some with infected wounds, returned to crowded camps. "There are risks in the camps of drug-resistant tuberculosis and AIDS, since existing patients may have lost their medications. People will fall through the cracks and there will be a lot more deaths," said Richard Wenzel, an infectious disease expert working in Haiti.

Russia will send two more planes with 40 metric tons of humanitarian aid to quake-devastated Haiti, the emergencies ministry said on Sunday. "Now the Russian Emergencies Ministry is preparing two planes, which will fly to Haiti in the next two days with medicines and first necessities," Pavel Plat, the ministry's chief military expert, said. At least 170,000 people were killed and some 200,000 injured on January 12 in the deadliest earthquake in the Americas since the 1970 Peru earthquake, which killed an estimated 70,000 people. Russia has already delivered over 30 metric tons of humanitarian cargoes to Haiti. A plane carrying Russian doctors who treated residents of quake-hit Haiti returned on Sunday to Russia. During the rescue operation, Russian medics treated over 1,700 injured people, including more than 600 children.

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RSOE EDIS: United Arab Emirates - Biological Hazard - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 18:01:43 - Biological Hazard - United Arab Emirates

EDIS CODE: BH-20100131-24754-ARE
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 18:01:43 [UTC]
Area: United Arab Emirates, Dubayy, , Nakheel

Not confirmed information!

Description:

A dozen birds have dropped dead on the shore of a lake in a Dubai housing development. International City resident Fajis Aboobacker Burayil was horrified to discover the bodies of gulls littering the edge of a lake near the Greek Cluster last week. Animal lover Burayil, 28, has reported the matter to developers Nakheel but said the cause of their deaths remains a mystery. It is so sad. Something bad must be in the water,” he said. “They look like they have just fallen dead. I don’t know whether its pollution or wastewater getting into the lake or something like that but it’s horrible to see.” The 28-year-old regularly takes fish for the lake’s birds and has nursed several back to health when they have been injured. He says an investigation must be launched to determine the cause of the deaths. “I love animals and I can’t stand to see them suffer,” he said. “The lake and the wildlife there is beautiful, it’s an oasis of calm in the desert. But every day in this last week, it seems to have got worse.” Local experts say there are several possible causes that could have led to the sudden death, such as pesticides or fertiliser contaminating the water or an outbreak of botulism which can occur when visitors try to feed the animals by throwing bread into the lake. Avian botulism is caused by bacteria that thrive in warm water with low oxygen content and infects birds’ nervous systems, which causes paralysis and often death by starvation as a result. Rotting food can also be a source of the bacteria. Nakheel’s security office at International City said it would investigate.

The name of Hazard: Birds Die-off (Susp. Butulism)
Species: Animal
Status: Suspected

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RSOE EDIS: Germany - Landslide - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 17:59:17 - Landslide - Germany

EDIS CODE: LS-20100131-24753-DEU
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 17:59:17 [UTC]
Area: Germany, Province of Bavaria, , Kempten

Damage level: Moderate (Level 2)

Not confirmed information!

Description:

German Police say helicopters and dogs are searching a mountain region in southern Bavaria after it was hit by an avalanche. Police told the news agency DAPD that there were reports of several missing people after the avalanche in the Alps Sunday morning. Two rescue helicopters and one police helicopter as well as mountain rescue crews from nearby Kempten are combing the area.


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RSOE EDIS: New Zealand - Extreme Weather - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 12:50:27 - Extreme Weather - New Zealand

EDIS CODE: ST-20100131-24752-NZL
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 12:50:27 [UTC]
Area: New Zealand, , Northern Island-wide,

Damage level: Heavy (Level 3)

Not confirmed information!

Description:

Flooding and slips have closed roads, prompted evacuations and isolated rural communities as heavy rain continues to hammer the eastern North Island. Gisborne was particularly hard-hit on Sunday, with heavy rain leading to the evacuation of more than 20 people and forcing the closure of two major roads in the region. Widespread slips and flooding prompted the closure of State Highway 5 between Napier and Taupo about 2pm. The road was reopened for several hours on Sunday evening but would remain closed overnight as contractors worked to clear slips. The New Zealand Transport Agency would reassess the closure on morning. Flooding also forced the closure of SH2 between Dymock Rd and Whatatutu Rd, near Te Karaka, 32km northwest of Gisborne. Fifteen people trapped by two areas of flooding were airlifted to Gisborne by helicopter, while about 40 cars heading to Gisborne from the Bay of Plenty were forced to turn back, Gisborne Civil Defence emergency management officer Richard Steele said. Water in the area was still rising and it was not known when the road would reopen. Road closures also cut off rural communities, with more than 30 people at Waipaoa Station, north of Te Karaka, left isolated on Sunday night after rising floodwaters and debris buckled a bridge on the Waipaoa River. "They're a remote farming community used to looking after themselves, so they'll be coping," Steele said. "River levels have dropped after reaching a height of 8.5m, but we expect a lot more rain." The bridge would be assessed on Tuesday at the earliest, he said. "I don't think we'll get in there earlier because there's too much damage on the road to where they are."

Meanwhile, six people north of Tolaga Bay, Gisborne, were twice evacuated from their homes on Sunday. The Mangatuna village residents were moved out on Sunday morning as the Uawa River rose from it usual 4m to 11m. They were allowed to return several hours later but were evacuated again on Sunday afternoon as a precaution due to the uncertainty of the weather, Steele said. More than 280mmm of rain had fallen in some areas around Gisborne in the past 36 hours, Steele said. The MetService said Gisborne and Hawke's Bay could receive a further 50 to 80mm rain overnight, with up to 20mm falling an hour, before it was expected to ease on Monday morning. The risk of heavy flooding would continue overnight but would ease on Monday. The Bay of Plenty and Coromandel were also expected to receive heavy downpours on Sunday night, with up to 100mm rain in some areas, easing from the afternoon to early evening. Police were advising motorists to be cautious.


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RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 1 : China - Earthquake

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 1

Ref.no.: EQ-20100131-24750-CHN

Situation Update No. 1
On 2010-01-31 at 12:48:37 [UTC]

Event: Earthquake
Location: China Province of Sichuan Anju area


Number of Deads: 1 person(s)
Number of Injured: 11 person(s)

Situation:

A moderate, magnitude 5.2 earthquake in Sichuan, south-west China, has brought down at least 100 homes, killing one person and injuring 11, officials say. US earthquake monitors report that the tremor struck at 0537 local time (2137 GMT Saturday) 35km (20m) south-east of Suining, at a depth of 18.6km (11.6m). Houses collapsed in the Moxi area of Suining, a city of 3.5 million people. Chinese state media said the authorities in Sichuan were "still not sure" if the latest quake was an aftershock from the earlier disaster. China's top auditing authority, the National Audit Office, reported this week that reconstruction after the 2008 quake was nearly complete. By the end of last October, 11 of 72 major reconstruction projects had been completed and 54 launched, it said. A total of 480 of the 753 schools to be reconstructed had been completed and 238 were under construction.

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RSOE EDIS: Russia - Epidemic Hazard - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 12:39:47 - Epidemic Hazard - Russia

EDIS CODE: EH-20100131-24751-RUS
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 12:39:47 [UTC]
Area: Russia, Far-East, , Magadan

Not confirmed information!

Description:

Over 200 children, most of them younger than three years, have been hospitalized with acute intestinal infection in the Magadan Region in the Russian Far East, reported on Sunday. Doctors believe the children were poisoned after eating imported fruits - bananas, apples and citruses - largely supplied from China. Local health authorities are taking measures to contain the spread of the virus. Doctors say the virus has affected whole families in the area, with children hit hardest. The infection is likely to subside in spring when navigation will allow domestic food supplies into the subarctic region.

The name of Hazard: Acute intestinal infection
Species: Human

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RSOE EDIS: China - Earthquake - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 12:37:35 - Earthquake - China

EDIS CODE: EQ-20100131-24750-CHN
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 12:37:35 [UTC]
Area: China, Province of Sichuan, Anju area,

Number of death person(s): 1
Number of Injured person(s): 11
Damage level: Heavy (Level 3)

Not confirmed information!

Description:

At least one person was killed and eleven others were injured in an earthquake that hit southwest China's Sichuan province, reported on Sunday. The earthquake measuring 5.0 points on the Richter scale struck the province early on Sunday. More than 100 houses were destroyed by the tremor. The earthquake's epicenter was near the city of Suining, which has a population of 3.8 million and is located 140 km (87 miles) east of Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan.


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sábado, 30 de enero de 2010

RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 3 : Germany - Snow Storm

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 3

Ref.no.: SS-20100128-24722-DEU

Situation Update No. 3
On 2010-01-31 at 06:10:22 [UTC]

Event: Snow Storm
Location: Germany Statewide

Situation:

Heavy and rapid snowfall left roads in parts of Germany impassable, with three lives lost as a result of the blizzards. In the state of North Rhine-Westphalia alone, police said that there had been at least 300 accidents that could be put down to snow and ice. One man in the region was killed, apparently after getting out of his car following an accident and being hit by another vehicle. Two people in Bavaria died in separate traffic accidents attributed to the weather, both colliding with oncoming vehicles. The northeastern state of Mecklenburg Pomerania, where ground snow has remained since mid-December, was hit hardest. Major highways were closed after trucks jack-knifed and railway lines were shut until they could be cleared. Cars were left buried in roads and even snow clearance vehicles became stranded. In the city of Rostock, bus services were suspended and the second division city football team Hansa Rostock was forced to cancel its game with FC Union Berlin. "The ground is unplayable: we've had 30 centimeters of new snow and the blizzard hasn't finished," said soccer club spokesman Karsten Lehmann. There were traffic delays on many highways across the country while at airports some flights were late or even cancelled. Police warned motorists to keep off roads unless travel was absolutely necessary and that stranded drivers might wait hours for help. "People should just stay at home," a spokesman said.

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RSOE EDIS: Spain - Earthquake - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 06:09:41 - Earthquake - Spain

EDIS CODE: EQ-20100131-24749-ESP
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 06:09:41 [UTC]
Area: Spain, , Palma de Mallorca,

Damage level: Low (Level 1)

Not confirmed information!

Description:

An earthquake rocked the bay of Palma de Mallorca at 07.09hrs yesterday morning. Emergency services confirmed the quake reached 3.2 on the Richter scale – not severe enough to be life-threatening, but sufficient to lead to widespread panic and cause minor property damage. Luckily, no damage was sustained, but around 70 people rang 112 when they felt the tremor. The national government's ministry of public works has declared a state of emergency as a precaution, although the only known side-effects so far have been a crack in the wall of one person's house. Residents in Marratxí, Llucmajor, and Calvià, where the popular resort of Palma Nova is based, were those who most felt the impact of the quake. Emergency services warn aftershocks could follow, although earthquakes in Spain tend not to be severe.


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RSOE EDIS: USA - Power Outage - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 05:56:43 - Power Outage - USA

EDIS CODE: PW-20100131-24748-USA
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 05:56:43 [UTC]
Area: USA, State of North Carolina, Craven, Jones, Lenoir, and Pender Counties,

Damage level: Moderate (Level 2)

Not confirmed information!

Description:

Winter weather has knocked out power to a number of people in the Channel 9 viewing area. Progress Energy is reporting thousands of people are without power in Craven, Jones, Lenoir, and Pender Counties. More outages are affecting other areas in North Carolina as well. Progress Energy crews are working to restore power outages this morning. For a detailed look at power outages by County, type in the keywords: power outages, at the top of our home page.


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RSOE EDIS: USA - Snow Storm - 2010.01.31

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

2010-01-31 05:53:24 - Snow Storm - USA

EDIS CODE: SS-20100131-24747-USA
Date & Time: 2010-01-31 05:53:24 [UTC]
Area: USA, State of Virginia, Virginia-wide,

Damage level: Moderate (Level 2)

Not confirmed information!

Description:

Snow paralyzed transportation in Virginia yesterday. And it's likely to stay frozen for a while. "It might be Tuesday before we get into neighborhood roads" to plow deep snow that fell on the Old Dominion yesterday, said Britt Drewes, a Virginia Department of Transportation spokeswoman. "We're going to work as fast as we can." Area snowfall yesterday reached 14 inches in Henrico County's Lakeside, 13 inches in Short Pump, 12.8 inches in Studley in Hanover County, 11.4 inches in Richmond, 11 inches in Chesterfield County and 9.5 inches at Richmond International Airport, the National Weather Service said. Across the state, unusually high snowfalls included 9 inches in Virginia Beach. From one end to the other, snow buried the state. Snowfall rates of an inch an hour were common during the storm that tapered by evening, the weather service said.

"For Virginia, for the entire state to get snow is relatively unusual," said meteorologist Larry Brown with the Wakefield Weather Forecast Office. If the weather is cold enough to produce snow in Hampton Roads, most storms are not also large enough to engulf Northern Virginia as well, he said. The weather in central Virginia today and tomorrow will be frigid; later in the week, temperatures will stay below freezing at night and struggle only into the 40s by day as cold high pressure builds into the area. "Certainly through Wednesday, the amount of melting you're going to see is minimal," Brown said. Without warmer weather to melt the snow, street and road snow-removal crews will have to work longer. "It's going to make our job harder," Drewes said. And, she said, "we're going to be more concerned about black ice forming" as roads refreeze after sundown. The storm caused hundreds of auto accidents, interrupted electric service, slowed traffic to a crawl, canceled almost all flights at Richmond International Airport, stopped every bus running through Richmond's Greyhound terminal -- stranding about 160 passengers -- and halted most of Amtrak's passenger-rail service in Virginia.


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RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 74 : Haiti - Earthquake

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 74

Ref.no.: EQ-20100112-24531-HTI

Situation Update No. 74
On 2010-01-31 at 05:50:50 [UTC]

Event: Earthquake
Location: Haiti Capital City Port-au-Prince area


Number of Deads: > 170000 person(s)
Number of Injured: 750000 person(s)

Situation:

Critically injured Haitian earthquake victims are no longer being flown by the U.S. military for treatment in the United States, raising fears some will die in a dispute over where to treat them and who should pay the costs. U.S. officials said on Saturday no solution had yet been found in order to renew the U.S.-run medical evacuations, which were halted earlier this week. Florida Governor Charlie Crist is asking the federal government to share the burden of treating people seriously injured in the Jan. 12 quake and who need specialized medical care in U.S. hospitals. "Florida's health care system is quickly reaching saturation, especially in the area of high level trauma care. We will not be able to sustain these efforts alone," Crist said in a letter to the federal government earlier this week.

He asked the federal government to send some patients to other states and ensure that hospitals are paid for the treatment. Hundreds of people have already been evacuated to the United States for treatment, most of them to Florida hospitals, but military officials said they canceled the flights on Wednesday because they no longer knew where to take them. The White House said on Saturday that "this situation arose as we started to run out of room," and that there had been no policy decision to suspend the evacuation flights. U.S. government agencies "are working on solutions," including expanding capacity in Haiti to deal with the critically ill, presidential spokesman Tommy Vietor said in a statement. While Florida insisted it was not closing the door on earthquake victims, it wants the Obama administration to put a plan in place. "We have not turned down any flights. We have not asked for the flights to stop," said John Cherry, spokesman for the Florida Division of Emergency Management. "We just need better coordination and planning from our federal partners so that we can ensure that we're ready to help out and other states are as well."

Authorities in Haiti said on Saturday they had arrested 10 U.S. citizens caught trying to take 33 children out of the country without documents proving adoptions had taken place or that the children were orphaned by the quake. The five men and five women, from an Idaho-based charity called New Life Children's Refuge, were in custody in Port-au-Prince after their arrest on Friday night at the Malpasse border crossing with the Dominican Republic. Laura Sillsby, a leader of the group, told Reuters from a jail cell it "had permission from the Dominican Republic government to bring the children to an orphanage that we have there." Fears have mounted since the quake that traffickers could try to exploit the chaos to pursue illegal adoptions. The earthquake killed as many as 200,000 people and hundreds of thousands more were injured. Haiti's hospitals were overwhelmed with patients needing treatment for skull and spinal injuries, burns and amputated limbs. Although the military-run evacuations to U.S. hospitals have helped only a small number of earthquake victims, their cancellation would likely bring sharp criticism of the U.S. relief effort. "The flights in some ways, while themselves may not be that important to the larger public health problem, it may be a first signal that the world is going to turn its back on Haiti," David Ansell, a doctor from Chicago's Rush University Medical Center who is part of an emergency relief team, said in the Haitian capital on Saturday.

The U.S. Navy hospital ship Comfort is posted just off the Haitian coast and is treating thousands of earthquake victims, but it is not able to handle some specialized cases. There are seriously injured people who need urgent treatment all across Port-au-Prince. Danielle Bien-Aime's left leg was crushed when her home collapsed around her and it has since been amputated. She lies in a medical tent and is on dialysis after her kidneys failed. "There are many things that could be done in a modern environment. If she was back in Florida her wound would be properly treated. She would have a special filter to stop the blood clot traveling to her lung. She would have proper antibiotics," said R.T. Noel Gibney, an Irish physician from the Doctors Without Borders group who is treating Bien-Aime. Aid workers have also been struggling to get food to hundreds of thousands of survivors. Some handouts in Port-au-Prince have been chaotic, with crowds of young men fighting for food while women, the elderly and sick miss out. The U.N. World Food Program said on Saturday it would begin using a coupon system and the coupons would only be given to women. The first distributions will take place at 16 sites in the city on Sunday and continue for two weeks. Each family will receive a 55-pound (25-kg) bag of rice. The WFP said it hoped to reach over 2 million people during the two-week period.

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RSOE EDIS - Situation Update No. 2 : Germany - Snow Storm

RSOE EDIS

RSOE Emergency and Disaster Information Service


Budapest, Hungary

RSOE EDIS ALERTMAIL

Situation Update No. 2

Ref.no.: SS-20100128-24722-DEU

Situation Update No. 2
On 2010-01-31 at 05:49:11 [UTC]

Event: Snow Storm
Location: Germany Statewide

Situation:

Heavy snow driven by strong winds brought road and rail services to a halt in northeastern Germany Saturday, authorities said. A police spokesman at Stralsund on the Baltic coast said nearly 40 centimetres (15 inches) of snow had fallen on the offshore island of Ruegen, while drifts up to three metres (10 feet) deep blocked roads in Mecklenberg-Pomerania. Public transport was off the roads in the cities of Rostock and Greifswald, while state railway company Deutsche Bahn reported numerous delays and cancellations in the northeast.

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