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FEMA:
New Madrid Preparedness a Priority - ST.
LOUIS Feb 24, 2006 (AP)— Preparing for a catastrophic
earthquake along the New Madrid fault is a priority, a
FEMA official said Friday before a congressional field
hearing on government readiness to handle natural disasters.
"New Madrid is at the top of the list," Michel Pawlowski,
section chief of the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
said. "It's our primary objective."
Pawlowski
told a congressional committee that FEMA has "significant
concerns" for the potential of a catastrophic earthquake
equal in magnitude to those that struck parts of the Mississippi
River Valley in 1811-1812, and again in 1895. The estimated
magnitude of those earthquakes is 7.5 or 8. The probability
of a magnitude 6 or larger earthquake is 25 percent to
50 percent over the next 50 years.
Even
a magnitude 7 earthquake would destroy more than 60 percent
of buildings in St. Louis and Memphis, Tenn., because
most buildings predate building requirements aimed at
resisting the shock, officials estimate.
"A
catastrophic earthquake in the central United States along
the New Madrid Seismic Zone could pose unprecedented problems
and challenges," Pawlowski said.
FEMA
officials are worried about how quickly they could enter
the affected area because many roads, bridges, and approaches
could not be expected to withstand a high-magnitude earthquake,
he said.
"It
will be a monumental challenge," Pawlowski said. "That's
why we want as many partners as possible to address this."
FEMA,
which was sharply criticized for its handling of the aftermath
of Hurricane Katrina, began in earnest in December to
prepare for the possibility of an earthquake along the
New Madrid fault. Pawlowski would not say whether the
Katrina criticism had prompted the agency's interest in
the 50-mile-wide New Madrid fault zone, centered near
the southeast Missouri town New Madrid, and which stretches
from Alabama to Illinois.
Instead,
he pointed to its potential, wide-ranging impact on the
nation's economy, estimated in the tens of billions of
dollars.
He
said a strong earthquake could disrupt the flow of commodities
by underground pipeline, rail, barge and highway; halt
the flow of food exports, fuel oil and coal outside the
region; cripple FedEx's hub in Memphis, Tenn.; and block
routes for emergency services.
Pawlowski
said FEMA expects to have a regional response plan in
place by June 2007.
A
House subcommittee chaired by Rep. Bill Shuster, R-Pa.,
and which oversees FEMA and emergency management, traveled
to Los Angeles on Thursday and St. Louis on Friday to
gauge how prepared local, state and federal governments
would be in responding to a natural disaster, and avoid
problems that emerged with Katrina.
Shuster
served on a special committee that last week released
the findings of its investigation into the government's
response to Katrina. Shuster said Friday he is leaning
toward introducing legislation that would separate FEMA
from the Homeland Security Department. That's in response
to criticisms that FEMA's traditional role of dealing
in natural disasters has gotten lost in Homeland Security's
emphasis on fighting terrorism.
"Response
was slow and key decisions were made late," Shuster said.
"We can't afford to get it wrong again. Business as usual
doesn't work in a catastrophic disaster."
Missouri
emergency management director Ronald Reynolds said most
federal emergency funds have been tied to terrorism and
not available for natural disasters. "That's been changing
since Katrina," he said. "It's about time."
Eugene
Schweig of the U.S. Geological Survey testified Friday
that the 1800s New Madrid earthquakes and its thousands
of aftershocks upended land, made the river unnavigable,
and created landslides in a multistate region. Such an
event today would rupture underground pipelines, burst
levees, and wreak havoc in the Midwest and East.
Sen.
Jim Talent, R-Mo., and Rep. Jo Ann Emerson, R-Mo., have
asked the federal government to conduct an emergency response
exercise along the entire New Madrid fault zone to expose
how response might be improved in the event of a devastating
earthquake.
Copyright
2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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