We recently got an inquiry referencing a blog post I did some time back about whether Californians might stream into Arizona looking for shelter and assistance if a major earthquake strikes that area.
We turned to our colleagues at the Arizona Division of Emergency Management and Mariano Gonzalez, Jr., State Plan Coordinator, provided this information about
the State Emergency Response and Recovery Plan (SERRP) relative to earthquake
evacuation from California to Arizona:
1. The SERRP is an
all-hazards plan. It contains 15
Emergency Support Functions, and Logistical Support and Specific Incident
Annexes.
2. Arizona is a
member of the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, an agreement of mutual
aide and support amongst the States.
3. State agencies
have specific rules, laws, and authorities that may allow them to engage
immediately in their subject matter area in support of other states'
requests. In this case, a state agency
may ask for coordination support from the State Emergency Operations Center to
supplement their response work, whether in-state or at the request of another
state.
4. FEMA Region IX
has constructed a Concept of Operations Document with Arizona to allow for
immediate synchronization of efforts in a catastrophic situation affecting
Arizona and/or other states in Region IX's area.
These elements allow for rapid support in the initial
response, short-term and long-term recovery.
The recent I-10 bridge failure in California demonstrated
#2 and #3 above, as ADOT and CALTRANS worked to coordinate traffic control,
information flow to the public, and situation reports regarding safety of the
rest of the road infrastructure along I-10.
Hats off to ADOT for keeping the Arizona State EOC fully informed of
their support to CALTRANS, including the use of WEBEOC to inform all concerned
in a real-time basis.
This background supports the answer to Evacuation of
California as a result of a catastrophic earthquake. Arizona would support California's request
for evacuation support and reception. It
would be upon California to define and determine (and inform) Arizona how it
would map and time the evacuation. Both
Arizona and California's transportation and emergency management agencies would
be closely involved in developing this timeline and the support needed. This
timeline would be incident specific, and could change on the fly.
It is important to note that California has not engaged
with Arizona, to my knowledge, in the past regarding evacuation planning as a
result of a catastrophic earthquake. We
would welcome the opportunity.
As a final note, cursory research of after action reports
and available academic research indicated to our office that residents in
California affected by earthquakes in the last thirty years were unwilling to
evacuate. Instead, they chose to camp in
available spaces (parks, shelters, etc.) nearby to wait to go back in and
rebuild/repair.
Mariano shared that ADEM would
like to work with California to develop a Concept of
Operations document to better coordinate and cooperate in the event of a big quake.