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VOLUSIA COUNTY SITUATION REPORT # 50
(status changes made since last report shown in bold
black type)
EVENT: WILDFIRES 1998
DATE / TIME: July 3,
1998 @ 21:00 hrs
EOC ACTIVATION LEVEL :
4
LOCAL STATE OF EMERGENCY
DECLARATION : ORIGINALLY ISSUED JUNE 22, 1998 AT 1 P.M. RETROACTIVE TO JUNE 20,
1998
DATE OF EXPIRATION : Extended
an additional seven days. Revised date of expiration is now July 11, 1998.
CONTACT NUMBERS FOR COUNTY EOC AND
PIO: (904) 254-1500
COUNTY ESF-5 FAX : (904)
258-4096
SUMMARY OF FIRE ACTIVITY
LOCATION(S) OF FIRES TO DATE :
FIRES LOCATED THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY
DUE TO NUMBER OF FIRES AND FREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE,
THIS REPORT FOCUSES UPON NEW FIRE EVENTS ONLY AND WILL REFER TO THEM IN GENERAL TERMS OF
LOCATION.
The major areas of utmost concern at this time are as
follows:
Flagler County Fires. Firefighters in Volusia County are
undertaking strategic actions in the event that a wind shift occurs and brings the Flagler
fires back across the Volusia County line. Flagler County EOC has requested mutual aid
assistance in fighting these fires. Continued monitoring for additional impact for Volusia
County resources, fire fighters and/or shelters.
Other major fires that are cause for concern:
Maytown/I-95 - under control. Crews are working.
Boy Scout Camp/Lake Ashby - Crews are working this area.
Hunter Ridge - Crews are still working and
monitoring.
Ranchette Road - Hot spots are still evident. Crews
are present and working.
Other fires are under surveillance and are continuing
to be assessed for further action:
County line/Stacy Grove Road. No lines around the fire. Two
crews are present.
Indian Lake Road area fire(s). Small fires, not contained.
Pose no threat to structures.
Ranchette Road fire. Contained to south of S.R. 44. Pose no
threat to structures.
Lake Woodruff area fire. Begun by lightning 30 Jun 98. Pose
no threat to structures. Crews are present.
Plantation Pines/Rodeo Road fire. Substantial fire breaks
are in place around residential subdivisions. Any threatened houses are being protected by
crews present.
Shunz Road fire. Poses no threat to structures. Crews are
present.
S.R. 44/Pioneer Trail. Crews are present.
ACREAGE OF FIRES CURRENTLY ACTIVE:
ESTIMATED TOTAL ACREAGE, APPROXIMATELY: 121,000 acres
SUPPRESSION EFFORTS
UNDERWAY : The policy is to protect life first. Protection of structures will
be prioritized based on field conditions. A unified command consisting of Volusia
County and municipalities has been coordinated with Division of Forestry. It has been
determined that some fires may be suspicious in nature. Air reconnaissance flights are
being flown by the U.S. Forest Service out of New Smyrna Beach and DeLand airports.
Firefighters plan a controlled burn around the Indian Lake Road area fire(s). Several
controlled burn operations were conducted.
MUTUAL AID:
- State Fire Marshals Office: 8 people on duty.
- National Guard: 130 individuals from the First of the
265th ADA Battalion have arrived for firefighting duty and have been reassigned to other
counties. An additional 50 personnel from the Orlando unit will be arriving 4 July
1998. A large tent is available just west of I-95 on State Road 40 to provide rest and
food for guardsmen, firefighters and any other support personnel.
- Federal Incident Command (Blue Team): 38 person overhead
team arrived on Saturday (6/27). They brought 5 "hot shot" teams which consist
of 20 personnel per team, and included a Type I helicopter equipped with a 2000 gal water
tank, 2 Type II helicopters and 1 tactical aircraft for aerial spotting. The U.S. Forest
Service/DOF have sent 268 firefighters. They have provided 16 tractor plow units and 30
engines.
- Public Information Office: PIOs from across
the state are sending individuals to provide assistance.
- Salvation Army: Responsible for all field food as of
Monday, 6/29/98. A warehouse for storage & distribution has been established at the
Daytona Mall (Nova Road).
- US Marine Corps: 33 personnel from Camp Lejuene replaced
a bridge on Rima Ridge Road. The intent of the bridge was to facilitate heavy equipment
traffic between US 92 and State Road 40 in the event I-95 and other north-south arteries
are congested with traffic. Temporary bridge was installed on July 2, 1998; however, the
bridge had to be removed due to impending fires.
OTHER:
- CEOC currently has personnel from State Division of
Emergency Management; State Division of Forestry; National Guard; Florida Dept. Of Law
Enforcement; Florida Highway Patrol; and Florida Department of Transportation.
- Representatives from SBA and FEMA are in the County today
to conduct damage assessment.
INJURIES / CASUALTIES
INJURIES (MINOR) TO DATE :
9 (firefighters) + 1 fire contractor (no injuries reported at 16:00, 7/3 briefing)
FATALITIES TO DATE : 0
MISSING PERSONS TO DATE :
0
STATUS OF MISSING PERSONS :
N/A
PROPERTY / INFRASTRUCTURE IMPACTED
HOMES THREATENED :
±29,000 homes threatened in various areas around Volusia County including 20,000 homes in
the Daytona Beach and Ormond Beach area. Until reports start coming from the field, exact
damages will remain unknown.
HOMES DESTROYED/DAMAGED :
2 homes destroyed and 10 mobile homes damaged in Ormond Beach.
BUSINESSES THREATENED : 5
BUSINESSES DAMAGED/DESTROYED :
4 businesses in the Ormond Beach area were destroyed.
OTHER STRUCTURES THREATENED :
Unknown
OTHER STRUCTURES DAMAGED :
Unknown
OTHER STRUCTURES DESTROYED :
15 (miscellaneous hunting camp structures)
VEHICLES DAMAGED : 3
(two automobiles and a boat)
VEHICLES DESTROYED :
Unknown
INFRASTRUCTURE IMPACTED:
Communications: Fire breaks have been installed around a
Bellsouth telecommunications tower in the Ormond Beach area. Overall, telephone
communications on the east side of the county are very congested--WHEN DIALING PLEASE WAIT
A FEW SECONDS FOR A
CONNECTION. Additional telephone lines at the CEOC are now
installed, however, phone traffic remains very heavy. Radio communications continues to be
very heavy, as well.
Power: A regional FPL switching dispatch facility is in
harms way. In addition an FPL substation which serves as a primary facility for Daytona
Beach is of concern. FPL has reported that power has been restored to most customers in
the north Volusia area. FPL reports approximately 500 customers are still without power
in the following areas: SR 44 east of I-4, Ormond Airport and US 1/I-95.
Water/Sewer: The Daytona Beach Water Plant located on
LPGA Blvd. is operating on generator power. The plant is back on electric power.
Transportation: City of Ormond Beach Airport remains
closed.
EVACUATIONS / SHELTERS
AREA(S) EVACUATED: No re-entry into any mandatory areas
at this time. (** Except as noted with ID and expected to leave the area after
evaluation of residence/business)
Voluntary Evacuation Areas:
Cow Creek Road from SR 442 South to Volco Road (West of the
City of Edgewater)
Rodeo Road, West of Ormond Beach
Daytona Pines, West end of Fleming Avenue (West of Ormond
Beach)
Ormond Lakes Subdivision (Ormond Beach)
Quail Ranch Road (Lake Ashby Area)
Hunting Camp/Rasley Road/Archie Road (Lake Ashby Area)
Durrance Lane, Durrance areas west of Ormond Beach
Florida Shores Subdivision, Edgewater, South of SR 442,
from Hibiscus west to City Limits
Plantation Pines off S.R. 40 (West of Ormond Beach)
Derbyshire Road/Jimmy Ann Drive area (Daytona)
Bear Creek Subdivision (Ormond Beach)
Pierson - East Washington Avenue from to Pine St. to
the Flagler County line
Coquina Point Subdivision (Ormond Beach)
Aberdeen Subdivision (Ormond Beach) ( ID required)
Spring Meadows Subdivision (Ormond Beach)
The Falls Subdivision (Ormond Beach)
LPGA residential community (Daytona)
Mason Avenue, north side only Bill France Boulevard
to Williamson Boulevard (Dayton)
West of Derbyshire, North of LPGA (Daytona)
Indigo Lakes Subdivision (Daytona)
North Tomoka Farms Road off US 92 (Daytona)
Jimmy Ann Drive area, from Mason Ave. To LPGA Blvd.
(Daytona)
Cone Road & Appaloosa Lane Area (west of Ormond
Beach)
Tymber Creek Subdivision, west of powerline
North of Ormond Beach Airport including Pine Trails, by
Hope/Timothy Street
Ormond Greens Subdivision
Broadwater Subdivision
Ormond Lakes Subdivision
Bear Creek
Ranchette Road, South of SR 44 near New Smyrna Beach
Mandatory Evacuations:
Ormond Beach
Airport Road North to Durrance Lane, excluding Bear Creek
Subdivision
Breakaway Trails Subdivision
River Bend, (South of SR 40/Booth Road)
Hunters Ridge Subdivision
All residential areas West of Tymber Creek Road within the
city limits
All residential areas on US 1 north of Airport Road
Unincorporated Areas
Rima Ridge, west of Ormond Beach
Town and Country Trailer Park southwest corner of Bellevue
and Tomoka Farms Road
NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS EVACUATED:
Approximately 29,000
NUMBER OF EVACUEES : Unknown
SHELTERS OPEN :
Sweetwater Elementary, Port Orange
Spruce Creek Elementary, Port Orange
Spruce Creek High, Port Orange
Seabreeze High School
Mount Bethel Baptist, Daytona Beach
Atlantic High School, New Smyrna Beach (Special Needs)
County Fairgrounds, DeLand (Pet Shelter)
New Smyrna Beach Recreation Center
DeLand YMCA
First Baptist Church of Pierson
Mainland High School, Daytona Beach
Daytona International Speedway
Babe James Youth Center (NSB)
First United Methodist Church (Orange City)
SHELTER POPULATION : 496 as of 21:00 - July 3
SPECIAL NEEDS POPULATION :
129
SHELTERS ON STANDBY
First United Methodist Church, Ormond Beach
First Baptist Church of Oak Hill
Sugar Mill Elementary, Port Orange
New Smyrna Beach High School
City Gym (NSB)
BILLETING FOR SUPPORT CREWS :
FEDERAL BLUE TEAM
1. DELAND MIDDLE SCHOOL - 104 CREW MEMBERS
2. DELAND HIGH SCHOOL - 200 CREW MEMBERS
3. DELTONA HIGH SCHOOL -STANDBY
4. VOLUSIA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS-FEDERAL OVERHEAD SOUTHERN
BLUE TEAM
MUTUAL AID
1. ERAU - 78 CREW MEMBERS
2. STETSON - @ CAPACITY 300+ CREW MEMBERS
MISCELLANEOUS
STATUS OF FIREWORKS
BAN AND OTHER BURN CONTROLS: Volusia County passed an ordinance on Thursday,
June 25, 1998, banning the sale and use of fireworks in unincorporated and incorporated
areas. All vendors including those who sell fireworks in tent sales have voluntarily
agreed not to sell any fireworks to individuals in Volusia County. Firework shows have
been voluntarily canceled in the cities of DeLand, DeBary, Deltona, Port Orange,
Edgewater, Ormond Beach. Holly Hill has issued an emergency order banning fireworks.
Pierson has also passed an ordinance to ban fireworks. The Governor has issued a statewide
ban on fireworks.
FINANCIAL: Daily
costs are estimated at $155,000 per day excluding state-wide mutual aid and additional
expenditures from municipalities. Expect operations to continue for a minimum of 2
weeks. The Federal Government has declared Volusia County a disaster area and has pledged
to cover 75% of local municipal firefighting cost. All First Union Banks are
taking monetary donations for the Volusia County Fire Relief Fund. Cash donations will be
put directly into a special account specifically for firefighting efforts.
FEDERAL OVERHEAD
SOUTHERN BLUE TEAM: Efforts are underway to facilitate the transition from
"mutual aid" to the Federal Overhead Team. Resources (food, lodging, etc.) are
being secured, in cooperation with federal representatives during this period. Incident
Command Post has been established at the Volusia County Fairgrounds on SR 44, east of I-4
and the City of DeLand.
FEEDING: The Salvation
Army has continuing responsibility for feeding firefighters and evacuees.
SPECIAL EVENTS: The
Speedway has decided to postpone the PEPSI 400 scheduled for July 4th until October 17th. A
meeting is scheduled for Monday 6 July 1998 to discuss using the speedway as an
equipment/supplies/staging area for incoming federal and state resources.
WEATHER REPORT: Volusia
County weather: Lingering showers moving south near 10 mph. Winds decreasing to 5 mph or
less. Saturday - Partly cloudy and hot with areas of smoke. A chance of afternoon
thunderstorms. High in the lower 90s near the coast and mid to upper 90s elsewhere. Wind
northwest 5 to 10 mph becoming northeast 10 mph in the afternoon. Chance of rain 30
percent.
SUPPORT: There will
be a communications capability set up for the Volusia County Fairgrounds on 4 July 1998.
DONATIONS: There is not a
shortage of any supplies reported at this point in time. All First Union Banks are taking
monetary donations for the Volusia County Fire Relief Fund. Cash donations will be put
directly into a special account specifically for firefighting efforts.
ESTIMATED LOSS - Estimated
value of loss structures (residential and commercial) to date is $2 million dollars.