Fay a good test of Charlotte's new EOC
Last Modified: Tuesday, August 19, 2008 at 10:45 a.m.
CHARLOTTE COUNTY - Strong rain and winds blanketed much of Charlotte County Tuesday morning but the conditions were mild enough that emergency officials were preparing to end operations.
Hurricane shelters were scheduled to close by noon, special needs
people were being bused home and Charlotte County Emergency Management
Director Wayne Sallade said he was preparing to deactivate the
county's emergency operations center.
"Everyone should feel a great sense of relief today," Sallade said.
Reports of minor street flooding were begingint to come in Tuesday
morning and Sallade recommended residents stay indoors if possible.
"It's going to be a very blustery, rainy day," he said. "I'm glad we
didn't have 6 year olds at bus stops."
While some may be wondering why there was so much excitement over a
tropical storm that fizzled and limped ashore south of Naples today,
Sallade said the region dodged a bullet.
Had Tropical Storm Fay not stalled over land masses in Cuba, Puerto
Rico and the Florida Keys, it likely would have gained hurricane
strength before slamming into Southwest Florida, he said.
"The number one reason Fay never got her act together was land
interaction," Sallade said. "Another two hours in the Gulf and you
would have had a hurricane."
And with Fay making landfall just 60 miles south of Punta Gorda, it
was prudent to have the entire southern Gulf Coast of Florida on
alert, Sallade said.
"Sixty miles is a near miss in this big world of ours," he said.
In the end, Fay was a good test run for emergency officials and a wake
up call for a region that has not seen a major hurricane in nearly
three years, Sallade said.
"This is a reminder that we're in the tropics and these things happen
as a matter of course," Sallade said. "Be prepared."
In Charlotte County, Fay helped test a new Emergency Management Center
that replaces a building that was damaged by Hurricane Charley in
2004, forcing emergency officials to flee during the height of the
storm.
Sallade said the county's new facilities worked well. Among the useful
new tools, the storm team used a web camera to hold meetings with
officials scattered throughout the county who were making
preparations.
"We waited 14 months, seemingly an eternity, to activate the
building," Sallade said. "Not that we want disastrous events but you
want to find out if it's all going to work when the time comes. First
indications are that everything has performed very well."
While the test run was useful, Sallade said Fay's fizzle out was a
welcome relief for a region still recovering from Charley.
"Last week was four years and we've come so far," Sallade said.
"There's no more of the open wounds and we'd like to keep it that
way."
Fay was expected to drop between two and three inches of rain in
Charlotte County Tuesday, down from a high of eight inches forecast
Monday, but still enough for residents to take precautions, Sallade
said.
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