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Governor Ivey approves deployment of personnel, resources to North Carolina in preparation for Hurricane Florence response

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MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Governor Kay Ivey on Wednesday announced Alabama is sending state personnel and resources to North Carolina to assist with hurricane response efforts.

The Alabama Emergency Management Agency (AEMA) has received requests for assistance from North Carolina and South Carolina as Hurricane Florence approaches the East Coast. Currently AEMA has one mobile communication site vehicle, one AEMA staff member and one Mobile County responder in route to a staging area in North Carolina.

“As the East Coast makes preparations ahead of Hurricane Florence, Alabama will also be prepared to aid in any way we can,” said Governor Ivey. “I spoke with the governors of North and South Carolina and offered our support. Alabama EMA will continue working with their counterparts in the Carolinas. Taking the necessary precautions ahead of time and having all hands-on deck to respond is of the utmost importance. Alabama stands ready to help.”

The Mobile Communication Site Team will support the state of North Carolina in maintaining critical communication links for public safety radio communications. Their primary role will be to support their North Carolina counterparts as they experience an overwhelming need to coordinate their state response efforts.

“We are leaning forward to support those states that may be impacted by Hurricane Florence” said Alabama Emergency Management Agency Director Brian Hastings.  “We are a close-knit team in FEMA Region IV, and when one state is threatened, we all stand ready to assist our incredible neighbors to prepare, respond and recover to save lives and mitigate human suffering.  Alabama is always ready to assist when there is a need.”

Additional support currently under consideration for states forecasted for impact by hurricane Florence includes:

  • Nurse strike team
  • Emergency Operations Center personnel
  • Damage assessment teams and debris management personnel
  • Mental health professionals
  • Volunteer services personnel
  • Maxwell Incident Support Base
  • Electrical line maintenance crews

The Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) is prepared to expedite passage of vehicles for disaster response through Alabama to affected areas on the East Coast.

Resource deployments are being coordinated through the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC). Since its enactment by Congress in 1996, largely as a response to the devastation of Hurricane Andrew in 1992, EMAC functions as a mutual aid partnership between states that allows for state-to-state support during disasters. Requests for assistance are sent to other states during catastrophic events or when another state has specialized personnel or equipment needed to respond to an emergency situation. Services rendered by the state sending aid are reimbursed by the state requesting assistance.


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