Recovery
Latest Stories
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The state’s new Infrastructure Planning and Development Division has adopted cloud technology to help community governments navigate matching requirements, compliance and project delivery.
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After a teenager died in a flash flood last summer, the Town Council plans to install two sirens to make sure residents know to seek shelter in the face of a flood, tornado or hurricane.
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Students ages 14 to 20 with a C average in school are eligible to apply to the annual programs.
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It’s the No. 1 reason people die in a mass-casualty incident. It’s a death that can be prevented. … People can bleed out in a matter of seconds.'
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In a 584-page dissection of the disaster at America’s tallest dam, the investigative team said Oroville Dam was designed and built with flaws from the beginning.
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The aim is to develop relationships with the goal of protecting cultural heritage during disasters.
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An additional 34 deaths were added to the tally Wednesday, including a 1-year-old boy, as influenza raged throughout the region in what experts say is the fiercest battle with the rapidly mutating virus they’ve experienced since 2009.
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Kevin Hannes, FEMA's federal coordinating officer for Hurricane Harvey in Texas, acknowledged some hiccups in the local recovery process, but said the overall response to Harvey has exceeded expectations.
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Having so many agencies — including the city and county governments, police and fire departments and utility companies — present in the EOC allows a quicker response to problems than otherwise would be possible in an emergency situation.
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'Please make plans now, tonight, for what you would do if you lose power.'
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California’s congressional Democrats have been critical of President Trump for not acting more quickly to ensure wildfire relief.
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The storm, which some forecasters are calling a "bomb cyclone" or "snow hurricane," is bringing snow along with damaging winds, bone-chilling temps and the chance of coastal flooding
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Systems that should have warned residents of impending danger failed when they were needed most.
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(TNS) — The Lake Oroville spillway crisis and evacuation last February might have only lasted a few days for Yuba-Sutter residents, but the ordeal left many with unanswered questions and a newfound fear of the unknowns of living downstream from an aging water storage facility and system.
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As the cost of firefighting has gone up, the Forest Service budget has stayed relatively flat. The result is that fire suppression now consumes 55 percent of the agency's annual budget, and some officials estimate that could grow to two-thirds in a few years.
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Volunteers continue recovery aid to people affected by hurricanes Nate, Harvey, Maria and Irma.
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A recent Associated Press review of the data found that 2 million Americans live within a mile of one of the 327 vulnerable Superfund sites.