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Regional analysis of social characteristics for evacuation resource planning: ARkStorm scenario

January 1, 2016

Local planning is insufficient for regional catastrophes; regional exercises are needed to test emergency plans and decision-making structures. The ARkStorm scenario would trigger a mass evacuation that would be complicated by the social characteristics of populations [e.g., vehicle ownership, age, poverty, English language limitation (ELL), and shelter needs]. Land cover data and dasymetric mapping improves the allocation of residential populations and their social characteristics to the ARkStorm flood zone in 21 counties in California. Numbers and concentrations of county, urban, and rural residents exposed to flooding as well as populations in and out of the scenario flood zone are profiled. The results inform mass evacuation planning by providing a means to (1) examine the sufficiency of mutual aid agreements, (2) underscore planning for carless populations, and (3) tailor multilingual communication strategies. The various geographical distinctions emphasize different challenges throughout the region. It will be important to investigate behavioral responses to warnings, identify evacuation constraints (e.g., shelter capacity versus need), and obtain comparable data on transient populations.

Publication Year 2016
Title Regional analysis of social characteristics for evacuation resource planning: ARkStorm scenario
DOI 10.1061/(ASCE)NH.1527-6996.0000161
Authors Anne Wein, Jamie L. Ratliff, Allan Baez, Rachel Sleeter
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Natural Hazards Review
Index ID 70140638
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Western Geographic Science Center