Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - (Page 18) Major Player Gerry Galloway Professor of Engineering, University of Maryland Gerry Galloway is one of the most accomplished flood management experts in the country. He was a presidential appointee to the Mississippi River Commission and in 1994 was assigned to lead the White House committee in assessing the causes of the Great Flood of 1993 along the Mississippi and Missouri rivers. The resulting recommendations, known as the Galloway Report, encouraged all levels of government and citizens to take responsibility for flood plain management. Galloway retired from the military as a brigadier general in 1995. He’s currently a professor of engineering at the University of Maryland. How much progress has been made in flood management policy since the Galloway Report in 1994? There’s been very, very slow progress. I guess in the political system in which we operate, it is to be expected. The problem is the decisions that have to be made are all tough, local decisions and the question is: Are they enforced by the federal government, are they enforced by the state, or do the locals do it themselves? In [California’s] Central Valley, communities were allowing development in the floodplain and with developers putting in levees that were not very good; then something happens and the people get wet, and they turn to the state and the federal government. Should terms such as “100-year-flood protection” be eliminated? That’s a lousy term. The Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority in Louisiana just sent a resolution to the National Academy [of Sciences], the Army Corps of Engineers and FEMA saying it just confuses people. Come up with something different. Nevertheless, 100 years means a one-in-four chance in the life of a 30-year mortgage that the levee is going to be topped or there’s going to be a flood. The Dutch have on the Rhine River 1,250- to 2,000-year protection, and on the coastline they have 10,000-year protection. The Japanese have 10,000year protection on the coast. What should be done about communities that are already built up in the floodplain? One of the continuing problems is we’re not willing to have tough love and say if you’re flooded and could have bought insurance but didn’t, you’re out of luck. Less than 10 percent of the people in the Midwest in 2008 had flood insurance. How can we justify going back and spending federal funds to help those people when they aren’t willing to help themselves? Is retaining water in the upper watersheds a viable option around the country? You can do that by wetland restoration, prairie pothole restoration. You can do that with dams; a dam is not a four-letter word. You can build small dams or farm ponds. There are pros and cons to those. People keep saying the reason we had all this flooding is because the wetlands have disappeared. Yes and no. When you have a giant flood — a 500year flood — and it rains and it slowly fills up every loose piece of space that exists on the soil, and after a week or so the ground is saturated and then the big rains come, there’s no place for it to go. k by Jim McKay Photo courtesy of Gerry Galloway 18
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Emergency Management - Fall 2008 Emergency Management - Fall 2008 Contents Contributors Editor’s Letter In the Field Deep Freeze EM Bulletin Major Player In the News Uncharted Waters Bio-Sensing Bluegills Joint Accounts Education Directory Degress of Change Triage in 3-D Products Eric's Corner Last Word Emergency Management - Fall 2008 Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Emergency Management - Fall 2008 (Page Cover1) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Emergency Management - Fall 2008 (Page Cover2) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Emergency Management - Fall 2008 (Page 3) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Contents (Page 6) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Contents (Page 7) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Contributors (Page 8) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Contributors (Page 9) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Editor’s Letter (Page 10) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Editor’s Letter (Page 11) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - In the Field (Page 12) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - In the Field (Page 13) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Deep Freeze (Page 14) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Deep Freeze (Page 15) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - EM Bulletin (Page 16) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - EM Bulletin (Page 17) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Major Player (Page 18) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Major Player (Page 19) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - In the News (Page 20) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - In the News (Page 21) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Uncharted Waters (Page 22) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Uncharted Waters (Page 23) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Uncharted Waters (Page 24) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Uncharted Waters (Page 25) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Uncharted Waters (Page 26) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Uncharted Waters (Page 27) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Bio-Sensing Bluegills (Page 28) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Bio-Sensing Bluegills (Page 29) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Bio-Sensing Bluegills (Page 30) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Bio-Sensing Bluegills (Page 31) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Bio-Sensing Bluegills (Page 32) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Bio-Sensing Bluegills (Page 33) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Joint Accounts (Page 34) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Joint Accounts (Page 35) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Joint Accounts (Page 36) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Joint Accounts (Page 37) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Joint Accounts (Page 38) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Joint Accounts (Page 39) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Joint Accounts (Page 40) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Education Directory (Page 41) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Education Directory (Page 42) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Education Directory (Page 43) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Degress of Change (Page 44) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Degress of Change (Page 45) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Degress of Change (Page 46) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Degress of Change (Page 47) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Triage in 3-D (Page 48) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Triage in 3-D (Page 49) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Triage in 3-D (Page 50) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Triage in 3-D (Page 51) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Triage in 3-D (Page 52) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Triage in 3-D (Page 53) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Products (Page 54) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Products (Page 55) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Eric's Corner (Page 56) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Eric's Corner (Page 57) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Last Word (Page 58) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Last Word (Page Cover3) Emergency Management - Fall 2008 - Last Word (Page Cover4)
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