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Last modified
3/5/2021 12:21:12 PM
Creation date
10/14/2020 10:28:22 AM
Metadata
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Template:
Official Documents
Official Document Type
Plan
Approved Date
10/06/2020
Control Number
2020-209
Agenda Item Number
8.D.
Entity Name
Emergency Management Division
Subject
2020 Indian River County Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan (CEMP)
approved by the Florida Division of Emergency Management (see Resolution 2020-084)
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Category 4 hurricane with one of the lowest barometric <br />pressures ever recorded in this area (928.9 millibars [27.43 <br />inches]). It reached Lake Okeechobee with very little decrease <br />in intensity. In all, 1,836 people were killed and another <br />1,870 injured during this storm's passage. Nearly all the loss <br />of life was in the Okeechobee area and was caused by <br />overflowing of the lake along its southwestern shore. <br />Hurricane of September 1933. This major Category 3 <br />hurricane passed over Jupiter Island with a barometric <br />pressure of 947.5 millibars (27.98 inches). Maximum winds <br />recorded were 127 mph. There was considerable property <br />damage all along the Florida east coast, mostly in the area <br />between Jupiter and Ft. Pierce. Severe waterfront damage <br />was reported in Stuart, located in Martin County. <br />Hurricane of August 1949. This Category 3/Category <br />4 hurricane made landfall in Florida between Delray and Palm <br />Beach with winds of 130 mph and a barometric pressure of <br />954.0 millibars (28.17 inches). As it moved inland, its center <br />passed over the northern part of Lake Okeechobee. The <br />levees in that area held, and no major flooding occurred. <br />Damages in Florida were estimated at $45 million. Tides of <br />11.3 feet at Ft. Pierce, 8.5 ft at Stuart, and 6.9 ft at Lake Worth <br />were reported. Statewide, over 500 people lost their homes as <br />a result of this storm. <br />Tropical Storm (Florence) of September 1960. <br />Tropical Storm Florence deposited a total of 10 to 11 inches of <br />rain countywide over a 5 -day period from 20 to 25 September <br />1960. Fortunately, the previous month's rainfall had been <br />rather low, and overall flooding was not extensive. The most <br />significantly damaged area was in the Allapattah Marsh area <br />north of the St. Lucie Canal. Several dike systems failed and <br />allowed water to overrun several ranches. <br />Hurricane Andrew of August 1992. Hurricane Andrew <br />was a small and ferocious Cape Verde hurricane that wrought <br />unprecedented economic devastation along a path through the <br />northwestern Bahamas, the southern Florida peninsula, and <br />south-central Louisiana. Damage in the U.S. was estimated to <br />be near 25 billion, making Hurricane Andrew the most <br />expensive natural disaster in U.S. history. The tropical cyclone <br />struck southern Dade County, Florida, especially hard, with <br />Indian River County Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan Basic Page 21 <br />
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