- The difference between a hurricane and a typhoon is
simply where it happens. Both are tropical
cyclones, called hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean, and eastern
Pacific Ocean, and referred to as typhoons west of the international date
line in the Pacific Ocean.
- Names are given to tropical
storms (which may or may not develop into a hurricane) in
alphabetical order, alternating male and female names, and skipping names
that start with the letters Q, U, X, Y and Z.
- It's a common
myth that opening a window during a hurricane will help
equalize the pressure in your home, but the reality is that doing so will
only invite in more wind and debris.
- The deadliest tropical cyclone in history was
Bangladesh's Great Bhola Cyclone in November 1970, which killed as many as
500,000 people.
- Superstorm Sandy, while destructive, was
downgraded from hurricane status. Officially, it was Post Tropical Cyclone
Sandy, but the superstorm name given by media outlets stuck.
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
5 Quick Facts About Hurricanes
Monday, June 9, 2014
Colorado State Increases Estimate of Named Atlantic Storms for 2014 Season
Colorado State University increased the
number of storms it expects to develop during the Atlantic hurricane season to
10 from nine.
The forecast calls for four of those to
become hurricanes, one of them a major system, said Phil Klotzbach, lead author
of the outlook. In April, his team predicted three hurricanes, with one growing
into a major storm.
“We raised the number slightly because El
Nino isn’t coming on as strong as we thought,” Klotzbach said by telephone
today. “We’re still pretty confident it will be a quiet season.”
Atlantic hurricanes can disrupt U.S. and
Mexican natural gas and oil production and affect refineries and agriculture.
An estimated $10.6 trillion of insured coastal property in 18 states from Maine
to Texas is vulnerable to storm strikes, according to the Insurance Information
Institute in New York.
The 30-year average is for the Atlantic to
produce 12 storms during the season that runs from June 1 to Nov. 30.
Currently, an area of disturbed weather in the Bay of Campeche, in the southern
Gulf of Mexico, has a 10% chance in the next five days of becoming the season’s
first storm, said the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami.
Friday, June 6, 2014
Will You be Ready if Disaster Strikes? -Employee Assistance Plan
With June 1
officially being the start of the 2014 Hurricane season, a business needs
to be able to react immediately and confidently after a disaster, so it can
quickly minimize losses and get back up and running. Follow along this week as
we provide 5 valuable Emergency plans the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) recommends developing to ensure workplaces are ready when a flood,
tornado, earthquake, fire, hurricane, or other disaster occurs.
#5 Employee Assistance Plan
Disasters can
impact employees and their families. They may experience costly expenses or be
forced to stay somewhere other than their homes. Support employees as much as
possible as they recover from an emergency. It’s helpful to develop a plan for
how your business will aid affected employees, whether by providing financial
assistance, connecting employees to the appropriate public agencies and
services, or offering mental healthcare to help with the emotional impact of a
disaster.
Thursday, June 5, 2014
Will You be Ready if Disaster Strikes? - IT Disaster Recovery Plan
With June 1
officially being the start of the 2014 Hurricane season, a business needs
to be able to react immediately and confidently after a disaster, so it can
quickly minimize losses and get back up and running. Follow along this week as
we provide 5 valuable Emergency plans the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) recommends developing to ensure workplaces are ready when a flood,
tornado, earthquake, fire, hurricane, or other disaster occurs.
#4 - IT Disaster Recovery Plan
Many business activities depend on the use
of information technology. An IT disaster recovery plan includes processes to
quickly restore hardware, applications, and data so the business can re-open
quickly. It would also provide a plan for data backup to ensure critical files
and information are kept safe.
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