Recovery
Latest Stories
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Providers in St. Louis were awarded the money through the Missouri Department of Health’s Crisis Counseling Program, which has for decades been funded by FEMA to help build hope and resiliency in disaster survivors.
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When Typhoon Halong devastated Western Alaska last month, the hardest-hit communities were accessible only by air or water. That complicated response efforts and makes rebuilding a challenge.
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From an emergency preparedness and management perspective, elimination of landlines is a very bad idea.
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Flood defense has been designed for past conditions, and continuing the trend will be catastrophic.
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The emergency response to November's deadly shooting at Los Angeles International Airport was hampered by poor communications and a lack of coordination between agencies.
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The city is taking steps to mitigate the effects of flooding as mountain snow melts and then summer thunderstorms gather.
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The immediate response from a school perspective was quickly planned in order to get schools rebuilt before the new academic year.
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Every day hackers ranging from high school kids to Iranian Revolutionary Guards search for ways to control or disrupt the flow of power in the United States.
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Scientists from the two labs have been advising officials in Japan about how to clean the area because it has many similarities to the Hanford Nuclear Reservation about 20 or 25 years ago.
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After Hurricane Katrina the guard realized it had to improve its response to natural disasters, especially in California.
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The more than 3,500 police officers who will patrol this year's Boston Marathon will be more than double the number deployed last year.
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If a 9.0 earthquake were to strike along California's sparsely populated North Coast, it would have a devastating ripple effect.
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A 30 percent reduction in a program aimed at strengthening health-care preparedness could have dire consequences on the ability of communities to respond when disaster strikes.
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After years of running emergency operations out of a training classroom in the 911 building, city officials now have a stand-alone facility.
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The advent of mobile apps and websites that allow more people than ever to listen to police radio chatter is prompting local law enforcement agencies to encrypt radio traffic.
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A professor and former police officer and others have created an app that alerts cops when they're too tired to continue working safely.