City focuses on catastrophe
In response to Hurricane Katrina, the city is reviewing its ability
to handle a major disaster, with officials acknowledging they’ve not
been tested by such a catastrophe.
City and fire officials met Thursday to discuss disaster
preparedness, and a City Council study session takes place Oct. 11
with the City on the same topic.
“We are well ahead where Louisiana was,” City Manager Mike Flad
said, referring to the city’s level of readiness.
But he added that though city, Los Angeles County and state
emergency response personnel are well organized, they have yet to
grapple with a wide-scale disaster.
More than 900 people were killed in areas in the Gulf Coast hit by
the hurricane, which ripped through the Gulf Coast on Aug. 29 with
145-mph winds. Damage from the storm has been estimated at $200
billon.
Vice Mayor Todd Campbell said it was a good idea to take a fresh
look at how the city is prepared for a disaster.
One of the key lessons from Katrina was that a city and region
needed to be pro-active and do simulations to be prepared, Campbell
said.
“While we are not in a below-sea level situation like New Orleans
we are certainly subject to repercussions of a levee being damaged up
north and should be responsive; there is a possibility -- although
unlikely -- we could have water rationing,” Campbell said.
When a major disaster strikes there will always be predictable
problems, such as with communications, said Rich Baenen, the city’s
disaster preparedness coordinator.
“We got a hint of that after the [Sept. 12] power outage, and that
was not a major disaster,” Baenen said.
These days, communications is a broad term that goes beyond just
radios, he said.
“It means the Internet and e-mail,” Baenen said. “We communicate
face to face; we communicate through public information on [cable
television] Channel 6.”
The city also has it own band radio station -- 1620 AM -- to
provide information to the public and can also use other methods,
Flad said.
“During the Northridge earthquake it was as simple as posting
fliers at grocery stores to let people know we had a curfew, where
water was available, where shelter was available,” Flad said. “Some
of it was just tips on what people should be doing.”
On a regional level, the cities of Burbank, Glendale and Pasadena
are joining forces to discuss how to better coordinate a regional
response, Flad said.
The three cities are moving beyond just having police and fire
officials talking with each other but other city departments as well,
Flad said.
“With the Rose Bowl and Rose Parade in Pasadena and Bob Hope
Airport here, a disaster at any one of those areas would require a
coordinated regional response,” Flad said.
Steve Storbakken, the Service Area Director of Safety for
Providence St. Joseph Hospital in Burbank and Providence Holy Cross
Medical Center in Mission Hills, said the hospitals are required to
annually review their preparedness plans but the meetings he has been
to in recent weeks have been dominated by talk of Hurricane Katrina.
Following what happened on the Gulf Coast, two areas that hospital
officials will look more closely at are evacuation plans and
logistics plans of having the infrastructure in place to support
staff and patients, Storbakken said.
“What Katrina taught us is the worst-case scenario is possible,”
Storbakken said. “In this day and age you don’t think about that.”
QUESTION
Do you think the city is prepared for a natural disaster? E-mail
your responses to o7burbankleader @latimes.comf7; mail them to the
Burbank Leader, 111 W. Wilson Ave., Glendale, CA 91203. Please spell
your name and include your address and phone number for verification
purposes only.
* MARK MADLER covers City Hall and the courts. He may be reached
at (818) 637-3242 or by e-mail at mark.madlerlatimes.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.