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Coming soon to #Spotify

A new Podcast about gaming, TV, movies, books and modern disasters!

#VideoGames #Gaming #TV #Movies #Disasters

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#FEMA, #Tornadoes, #Disasters, #Noem, #Midwest

American lives are at stake!

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The March 10-11, 2026 Tornado Outbreak Coverage, As It Happened...
The March 10-11, 2026 Tornado Outbreak Coverage, As It Happened... YouTube video by Ryan Hall, Y'all

This is why I watch Ryan Hall and Andy Hill stream live during these events and I don't even live in those areas.

Governor Gretchen Whitmer has called for a federal investigation into why no tornado watch was issued before the storms touched down.

#Disasters

www.youtube.com/watch?v=j5En...

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We can never have nice things | #kotorirod on #citiesskylines #twitch #envtuber #vtuberclips #citybuilder #gamingclips #simulation #meteorstrike #gaming #disasters

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Webinar: Donkeys as Agents of Drought Resilience
Webinar: Donkeys as Agents of Drought Resilience YouTube video by HERD Group

"#Webinar: #Donkeys as Agents of #Drought #Resilience"
www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_CC...

#DisastersAreNotNatural #NoNaturalDisasters (avoid the phrases #NaturalDisaster #NaturalDisasters) #DRR #DisasterRiskReduction #DisasterRiskManagement #disaster #disasters #donkey #droughts #equids

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El Bordo Fire: Tragedy in Pachuco, Mexico On this day, 10 March 1920, the El Bordo mine fire occurred in Pachuca, Mexico, which killed dozens of miners. The fire broke out at 6 AM, and there was a brief evacuation period before the mine shafts were sealed shut.  Officials of the United States Smelting, Refining and Mining Company claimed that after the evacuation fewer than 10 workers remained inside, all of whom were declared to be dead by company doctors.  When the mine was finally reopened six days later, it was clear that the company had been lying. Inside were the charred bodies of 87 miners: many of whom had reached the exit of the mine, but were burned to death as they were unable to leave. Miraculously, seven miners had even managed to survive despite being trapped underground.  As in almost all historical examples of corporations killing their workers, no bosses were prosecuted or punished. More information, sources and map: https://stories.workingclasshistory.com/article/8217/el-bordo-fire

📣 New Podcast! "El Bordo Fire: Tragedy in Pachuco, Mexico" on @Spreaker #1920_pachuco #1920s_industrial #20th #accidents #and #bordo #century_coal #disaster_mexican #disasters #early #el #fire #history #labor #mexico #mexico_mexican #mexico_mine #mine #mining #tragedy

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When the chat takes the money | #kotorirod on #citiesskylines #twitch #envtuber #vtuberclips #gaming #fail #crowdcontrol #disasters #vtuberrising #citybuilder

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A reminder for our upcoming #Cambridge #Festival event:

Join Prof. Robert White, FRS, on Wednesday 18 March, 6:00pm–7:15pm at the Queen’s Lecture Theatre, Emmanuel College, for a fascinating #talk on #natural #disasters, human #responsibility, and #faith.
🔗http://faraday.institute/publiclecture

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Prepping for the Apocalypse? You May Want to Pack a Little Treat. Grist/Getty Images/FEMA Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free _Mother Jones Daily_. _This story was originally published b_ y Grist _and is reproduced here as part of the_Climate Desk _collaboration._ Some people spend more time than others imagining what they’ll do when the world ends. Survivalist movements have long urged adherents to focus on the details: How much food and water will you need if the power goes out? Where are the flashlights and extra batteries? What’s in your go bag? For years, this kind of forward thinking was the object of ridicule. Preppers were cast as paranoid, fixated on worst-case scenarios that would never come to pass—remember Y2K? But six years ago, the Covid pandemic made prepping go mainstream. Suddenly, everyone at the grocery store was calculating how much toilet paper, Lysol, and canned tomatoes they’d need to get through lockdown. These moments revealed the difficulty of knowing yourself in a crisis: I remember a trip to Trader Joe’s with my roommate, the day New York City’s own lockdown was announced, where I instinctively grabbed a bag of frozen meatballs despite never really liking meatballs in the first place. I bought them, and they sat untouched in my freezer for the next 12 months—when I finally made them it was out of guilt, not out of necessity. > “If you eat the same thing, over and over, you will get burnt out on it.” The world is no longer in lockdown mode, but the appeal of prepping has arguably only grown. In 2024, in a national household survey, 83 percent of respondents told FEMA they had recently taken at least three disaster preparedness actions, up from 57 percent of participants the year prior. A disaster impacting one’s self or family ranked third in participants’ top worries, behind health concerns and being able to pay their bills. It isn’t hard to understand why. News alerts now arrive daily with stories about declarations of war (sanctioned and otherwise), political and economic instabilities, and other breakdowns of public life—all against the backdrop of the worsening climate crisis. Indeed, many of us are already living through some form of disruption, in big ways or small. In a disaster, having enough food and water for yourself and your family is essential; that’s why grocery stores stayed open during lockdown, and why restaurant workers were tasked with fulfilling GrubHub orders before vaccines were available. But food is about more than survival. The ways it sustains us are personal, layered, and hard to untangle. Even FEMA agrees: “Familiar foods are important,” a 1994 preparedness manual from the agency reads. “They lift morale and give a feeling of security in times of stress.” Readers are told to prioritize foods their family “will enjoy” that are also nutritious and non-perishable.**** Building a bunker pantry—or better yet, learning to grow your own food—might come in handy even if a full-scale disaster never appears. Rising temperatures are already changing how crops are grown. Becoming even slightly more self-sufficient is useful at a time when global food supply chains are vulnerable to disruptions. Stephanie Rost, a collapsology researcher and PhD student at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, thinks that as the planet heats up, revealing cracks in our global industrialized food systems, everyone can learn from preppers. “Individuals are going to have to take more personal responsibility for their own food security and survival, much more than they do now,” said Rost. If you don’t know how to begin meal-prepping for the end times, Reddit is a popular first stop. On the thread r/preppers, there are comprehensive guides on how to build up reserves of food and supplies for both short- and long-term emergencies. Posts are helpfully labeled “Prepping for Tuesday” and “Prepping for Doomsday,” so users can find advice that matches their preferred level of intensity. Common prepper pantry recommendations include staple foods like dried beans and legumes, shelf-stable grains, and additional sources of protein like canned tuna in olive oil (it’s important to have healthy fats in your doomsday diet); you also need to have bottled water on hand (ideally three days’ worth) or a way to filter water. But if you really want to be prepared for long-term emergencies, you’re going to need more than just vitamins, fats, carbohydrates, and proteins. Even the most hardcore survivalists know that failing to include some kind of variety—or treats—in your diet is its own form of short-sightedness. The wartime prepping guidelines distributed by the Swedish government suggest keeping a stock of chocolate and fruit custard. Many posts on r/preppers acknowledge that you have to find ways of staying excited about your emergency food stores. “If you eat the same thing, over and over, you will get burnt out on it. And even if you are starving, you will not want to eat it,” wrote one user. > “If you can store the cocoa and the sugar, I’m sure you can make yourself something chocolatey and sweet.” Another preparedness tip is to consider the comfort of food rituals. Al Nordz has been into gardening and growing fruits, herbs, and vegetables for years—they had previously lived in a very rural part of Northern California—but they didn’t get seriously into prepping until they moved to Los Angeles just before the pandemic. Nordz, who uses they/them pronouns, suddenly found themself stuck at home in a new city, so they started remediating the soil in their backyard and building raised beds. But one thing they love and couldn’t grow at home is coffee. The solution: strategic stocking. Nordz likes to keep both instant coffee and coffee beans in their freezer for emergencies. The items don’t last forever, but if nothing bad happens, they also follow the maxim of “Eat what you prep.” Nordz and their partner dip into their food reserves during non-emergencies, too: no problem, no waste. Coffee is not essential, and Nordz knows that. It isn’t “something that’s going to be the difference between getting enough calories for your body to function or not,” they said. “But it is something that makes us feel good._”_ After all, they and their partner drink it every day. Nordz’s disclaimer gets to a point that frequently comes up in Rost’s research on societal collapse: Luck favors the prepared, but planning doesn’t guarantee anything. No matter how much prepping you do, you never truly know exactly how or when disaster will occur. Even the most diligent prepper will have to adjust their routines in a completely transformed world. Will there even be time to make coffee in an emergency? When shit hits the fan—or as r/preppers users like to say, SHTF—you just have to make do. And yet, accounts from people who have already lived through crises suggest that reclaiming small moments of comfort can be a way of asserting dignity rather than denying one’s reality. During war and famine, people have found ways to mark holidays, sweeten bitter food, or recreate familiar flavors with limited ingredients. Last year, I found myself watching social media videos from Gaza in which an 11-year-old girl named Renad Attallah shared what she called “war-time recipes”: bread and chips out of dried macaroni, labneh with powdered milk. She smiled as she cooked, narrating each step. The videos were not escapist. They were instructional, defiant, and quietly human. The problem with comfort foods or treats like coffee, chocolate, and candy is that they don’t last forever. But some of these constraints can be negotiated creatively. Cocoa powder can last for years after opening if stored in airtight containers. “If you can store the cocoa and the sugar,” Rost said, “I’m sure you can make yourself something chocolatey and sweet” in a pinch. To endure prolonged uncertainty, you will also probably need to change your disposition. Rost argues it may be necessary to relearn how to experience ordinary food as precious. Fruit can be dessert if you want it to be. “I think we’d probably need to get back to thinking of those things as really special,” she said. “And maybe they would taste really nice if we hadn’t had anything else nice around.” Rather than rely on existing food systems, some preppers choose to go all in on cultivating food sources that can still function without, say, grocery stores or global trade routes. Scout Cardinal lives with their partner and toddler in rural Appalachia and has grown vegetables in their home garden for years. Last year, Cardinal, who uses they and she pronouns, grew hearty staples like squash and beans—foods that are both nutritious and have a long shelf life. Some of these veggies, like their homegrown tomatoes, get given away to neighbors or canned and stored to make them last even longer. But Cardinal also decided to plant something fun: Aleppo peppers and Korean red chili peppers, the kind that are used to make gochugaru, a sweet, smoky chili powder. “These**** are two of the spices we use most in our cooking at home,” they said. Homemade dried spices may be a small luxury, but for Cardinal, they honor an adage within the prepper community: Prep the things you already eat. (This advice would have been useful to me the day I sprang for Italian-style Trader Joe’s meatballs I then ignored for a year.) > “It’s very clear by the prevalence and regularity of these events that they’re not going to stop happening.” Keeping a garden—whether you’re prepping for doomsday or not—can also be helpful in an era of climate change. Growing crops like strawberries and melons in your backyard can attract pollinators like bees and butterflies. Planting native grasses and other plants, while also removing invasive plants around your home, can help reduce the impact of invasive species on the local environment. Plus, taking care of even one seedling, whether it’s on a windowsill or in the ground, is a reminder of the sheer amount of work it takes farmers to produce the foods we eat at scale. That reminder might help us waste less food—a worthy aim since wasted food is responsible for 8 to 10 percent of global carbon emissions. Cardinal identifies as something of a reluctant prepper. “For a very long time, I think I allowed myself to be convinced that my desire to be prepping was a little bit of an irrational anxiety response” to the changing climate, said Cardinal. “And that’s just not true._”_ Cardinal has already seen up close how natural disasters have exacerbated food insecurity in their community. During the pandemic, they joined Lonesome Pine Mutual Aid, a community organization based in Big Stone Gap, Virginia. During that time, the group focused on food distribution, hosting free community meals and giving away groceries and hygiene products. But recently, the group has begun to shift its focus to disaster relief and preparedness, after seeing how bouts of extreme weather have battered nearby communities. In February last year, just a few months after Hurricane Helene, Lonesome Pine hosted an event focused on disaster preparedness: Attendees received go bags with hand-crank radios and learned how to forage edible plants and filter water. They also took home pantry staples, like dried rice and beans. The goal of the event was not just to give things away, but to start talking as a community about how they can come together and help take care of one another through difficult times, said Cardinal. “We’ve been talking a lot as a group about the need for long-term disaster preparedness, because it’s very clear by the prevalence and regularity of these events that they’re not going to stop happening,” said Cardinal. Cardinal loves vegetable gardening—the sensory experience of it, the way it naturally helps others. “It’s somebody else’s job to have guns,” they said. “I’m really good at growing food.” They also like working with fiber and textiles, another hobby that’s both enjoyable and could come in handy if disaster strikes. “That’s my goal as far as preparedness goes,” they said. “How can I use this thing that I do for fun, that I do for myself, in a way that makes our community more resilient?”

Prepping for the Apocalypse? You May Want to Pack a Little Treat. This story was originally published by Grist and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. Some people spen...

#Environment #Food #Climate #Desk #Culture #Natural #Disasters

Origin | Interest | Match

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A graphic promoting a reading recommendation. At the top, in small green text, it reads “Our Sunday reading suggestion…”. Below, in large green text, the title reads “Suck It up Princess: The Queer Back Lash.” The text sits inside a light grey rectangular box centred on a beige background. A curved rainbow graphic runs from the lower right corner, showing the colours red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple.

A graphic promoting a reading recommendation. At the top, in small green text, it reads “Our Sunday reading suggestion…”. Below, in large green text, the title reads “Suck It up Princess: The Queer Back Lash.” The text sits inside a light grey rectangular box centred on a beige background. A curved rainbow graphic runs from the lower right corner, showing the colours red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and purple.

This Sunday's #disasters & #LGBTQIA+ reading suggestion is;

Suck It up Princess: The Queer Back Lash (2025) by Dale Dominey-Howes

Link - link.springer.com/chapter/10.1....

#InclusiveDRR

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Escalating hostilities across the Middle East. The International Rescue Committee helps people caught in the world's worst disasters to survive, recover and regain control of their future.

Refugees need your help. Escalating hostilities across the Middle East. Donate to IRC. @rescue.org

help.rescue.org/donate/escal...

#Activism #Activists #Disasters #Humanitarianaid #IRC #Refugees #War #Conflict #HumanRights #InternationalRescueCommittee #Donate #MakeADonation #MiddleEast

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How do disasters disrupt our food supply chains? wfpc.sanford.duke.edu/podcasts/the... #disasters #BetsyAlbright #Resilience #sustainability #equity #publicmanagement #environment #agroeconomics #socialinfrastructure #foodaccess #environmentstressors #policysolutions #mutualaid #marginalization

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Queensland communities cut off as tropical low tracks inland Far North Queensland communities are assessing the damage as a tropical low 29U tracks inland.  #weather #disasters #hazards #floods #rain

Far North Queensland communities are assessing the damage as a tropical low 29U tracks inland.  #weather #disasters #hazards #floods #rain

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69 Times Designers Went Too Far And Made Things Impossible To Use (New Pics) Design may be all about creativity, but, as with anything, too much of it can backfire. The subreddit r/DesignDesign sho...

#Art #& #Design #bad #design #creative #design #creative […]

[Original post on boredpanda.com]

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Vehicles 'totally submerged' in floodwaters on major highway in outback NSW The Barrier Highway which connects Broken Hill to Dubbo and Sydney has been closed by major flooding with waters still expected to rise. #floods #rain #disasters #accidents #emergency #incidents #weather #regional #communities #road #transport #industry #local #government

The Barrier Highway which connects Broken Hill to Dubbo and Sydney has been closed by major flooding with waters still expected to rise. #floods #rain #disasters #accidents #emergency #incidents #weather #regional #communities #road #transport #industry #local #government

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Dr Rebecca McNaught has delivered the prestigious Iain McCalman Lecture. Drawing on years of embedded research in the Northern Rivers of NSW, Dr McNaught challenges how Australia thinks about #disasters, #resilience and #recovery.
🔗 Now available, podcast or essay: www.sydney.edu.au/sydney-envir...

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Tropical low expected to bring flooding to sodden northern Queensland A tropical low is expected to cross the Queensland coast today, bringing heavy rainfall and flooding.  #weather #disasters #hazards #floods

A tropical low is expected to cross the Queensland coast today, bringing heavy rainfall and flooding.  #weather #disasters #hazards #floods

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📣 @ifrc.org World Disasters Report 2026 is out‼️

2020 to 2024, #disasters:
➡️ affected almost 700 million people
➡️ Caused +105 million displacements
➡️ Claimed +270,000 lives

@mhpsshub.bsky.social contribution 'Online racism and #mentalhealth after disasters' pg 49 🔗 www.ifrc.org/document/wor...

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Australian schoolgirl killed in snowmobile accident in Japan Eight-year-old Chloe Jeffries was killed after a snowmobile she and her mother were riding flipped, causing her to become trapped underneath the vehicle. #disasters #accidents #emergency #incidents

Eight-year-old Chloe Jeffries was killed after a snowmobile she and her mother were riding flipped, causing her to become trapped underneath the vehicle. #disasters #accidents #emergency #incidents

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#History #USA #Trains #Disasters #Podcasts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqA28afeRVw

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Original post on aus.social

New video out today, my first covering a topic in the ACT!

Learn about what I think was one of the most important events in Australia's 20th century history, the 1940 Canberra air disaster

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=U_q_W69AyI8

#Canberra #Disasters #Australia #aviation #history […]

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Ukrainian families still need you. The International Rescue Committee helps people caught in the world's worst disasters to survive, recover and regain control of their future.

Ukrainian families still need you. Donate to IRC. @rescue.org

help.rescue.org/donate/ukrai...

#Activism #Activists #Disasters #Humanitarianaid #IRC #Refugees #War #Conflict #HumanRights #Ukraine #InternationalRescueCommittee #Donate #MakeADonation

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Share your generosity this Ramadan. The IRC helps people caught in the world's worst disasters to survive, recover and regain control of their future.

Refugees need your help. Share your generosity with families in need this Ramadan. Donate to IRC. @rescue.org

help.rescue.org/donate/fy26-...

#Activism #Activists #Disasters #Humanitarianaid #IRC #Refugees #War #Conflict #HumanRights #InternationalRescueCommittee #Donate #MakeADonation

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Square graphic with a beige background and a rainbow arc rising from the bottom right corner. Over the centre sits a light grey text box. At the top, in small green capital letters, it reads: “Our Sunday reading suggestion…” Below, in larger bold green text: “Something Borrowed, Something New:” Underneath, in slightly smaller green text: “Navigating the Emerging Field of Queer Disaster Studies.” The overall design is clean and minimal, with the rainbow colours partially visible behind the text box, signalling an LGBTQIA+ theme.

Square graphic with a beige background and a rainbow arc rising from the bottom right corner. Over the centre sits a light grey text box. At the top, in small green capital letters, it reads: “Our Sunday reading suggestion…” Below, in larger bold green text: “Something Borrowed, Something New:” Underneath, in slightly smaller green text: “Navigating the Emerging Field of Queer Disaster Studies.” The overall design is clean and minimal, with the rainbow colours partially visible behind the text box, signalling an LGBTQIA+ theme.

This Sunday's #disasters & #LGBTQIA+ reading suggestion is;

Something Borrowed, Something New: Navigating the Emerging Field of Queer Disaster Studies (2025) by W Leonard, D Dominey-Howes, A Rushton, M Cianfarani, L Overton & H Wu

Link - link.springer.com/chapter/10.1....

#InclusiveDRR

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Ukrainian families still need you. The International Rescue Committee helps people caught in the world's worst disasters to survive, recover and regain control of their future.

Refugees need your help. Ukrainian families still need you! Donate to IRC. @rescue.org

help.rescue.org/donate/ukrai...

#Activism #Activists #Disasters #Ukraine #Humanitarianaid #IRC #Refugees #War #Conflict #HumanRights #InternationalRescueCommittee #Donate #MakeADonation

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Scan to subscribe to thisbriefing .Helping people before, during, and after  disasters.

Scan to subscribe to thisbriefing .Helping people before, during, and after disasters.

#FEMA #Disasters

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National Watch CenterDeclaration Requests in Process – 20
State / Tribe / Territory – Incident Description Type IA PA HM Requested
AZ – Severe Storms and Flooding – Appeal DR X X Oct 24
IL – Severe Storms and Flooding – Appeal DR X Nov 21
SCA*  – Severe Storms and Flooding DR X X X Nov 26
SCA*  – Severe Storms and Flooding DR X X X Dec 15
MT – Severe Storms and Flooding DR X X Jan 10
NVK* – Severe Storms, Flooding, and Remnants of Typhoon Halong DR X X Jan 11
MT – Severe Winter Storms and Straight -line Winds DR X X Jan 15
CO – Severe Storms, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides – Appeal DR X X Jan 16
CO – Lee and Elk Fires, Flooding, and Mudslides –  Appeal DR X X Jan 16
WA – Severe Storms, Straight -line Winds, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides DR X Jan 21
SD – Straight -line Winds DR X X Jan 27
AK – Severe Storms and Straight -line Winds DR X X Jan 30
KY – Severe Winter Storm DR X X Feb 5
ID – Straight -line Winds DR X X Feb 6
FPA & ST* – Severe Storm and Straight –line Winds DR X X Feb 11
CTM* – Straight -line Winds DR X X Feb 12
FBIC* – Severe Storms and Straight -line Winds DR X X Feb 13
OR – Severe Storms, Straight -line Winds, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides DR X X Feb 18
WA – Severe Storms, Straight -line Winds, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides DR X X Feb 17
SC – Severe Winter Storm DR X X Feb 25
*San Carlos Apache Tribe  / Native Village of Kipnuk  / Fort Peck Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes / Crow Tribe of Montana / Fort Belknap Indian Community

National Watch CenterDeclaration Requests in Process – 20 State / Tribe / Territory – Incident Description Type IA PA HM Requested AZ – Severe Storms and Flooding – Appeal DR X X Oct 24 IL – Severe Storms and Flooding – Appeal DR X Nov 21 SCA* – Severe Storms and Flooding DR X X X Nov 26 SCA* – Severe Storms and Flooding DR X X X Dec 15 MT – Severe Storms and Flooding DR X X Jan 10 NVK* – Severe Storms, Flooding, and Remnants of Typhoon Halong DR X X Jan 11 MT – Severe Winter Storms and Straight -line Winds DR X X Jan 15 CO – Severe Storms, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides – Appeal DR X X Jan 16 CO – Lee and Elk Fires, Flooding, and Mudslides – Appeal DR X X Jan 16 WA – Severe Storms, Straight -line Winds, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides DR X Jan 21 SD – Straight -line Winds DR X X Jan 27 AK – Severe Storms and Straight -line Winds DR X X Jan 30 KY – Severe Winter Storm DR X X Feb 5 ID – Straight -line Winds DR X X Feb 6 FPA & ST* – Severe Storm and Straight –line Winds DR X X Feb 11 CTM* – Straight -line Winds DR X X Feb 12 FBIC* – Severe Storms and Straight -line Winds DR X X Feb 13 OR – Severe Storms, Straight -line Winds, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides DR X X Feb 18 WA – Severe Storms, Straight -line Winds, Flooding, Landslides, and Mudslides DR X X Feb 17 SC – Severe Winter Storm DR X X Feb 25 *San Carlos Apache Tribe / Native Village of Kipnuk / Fort Peck Assiniboine & Sioux Tribes / Crow Tribe of Montana / Fort Belknap Indian Community

#FEMA #Disasters

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IM Cadre Availability                         7 (+1)  Cadres ≤ 25% Availability IM Workforce
Civil Rights: 23% (22/96); Disability Integration: 19% (3/16); External Affairs: 23% 
(63/271); Environmental Planning and Historic Preservation: 17% (109/644); Field Leadership: 17% (20/117); Hazard Mitigation: 18% (139/769); Planning: 18% (61/345)28 Assigned
0 Unavailable
0 Deployed
28 Available36 Assigned6 Unavailable2 Deployed
28 AvailableMERS
≥ 66%US&R
≥ 66%  JFO Office: Bothell, WA
FEMA -XXXX- DR: 
Declared 4/28 FEMA Common Operating Picture
FEMA HQ
NWC NRCC
Monitoring Steady State
FEMA REGIONS
Watch RRCC
Monitoring R1 Rostered
Monitoring R2 Rostered
Alt. Location R3 Rostered
Monitoring R4 Rostered
Monitoring R5 Rostered
Monitoring R6 Rostered
Monitoring R7 Rostered
Monitoring R8 Rostered
Monitoring R9 Rostered
Monitoring R10 Rostered
Notes:
NRCC/RWCs/RRCCs:
•R3 RWC: Alternate location 
effective Feb 22, 2026, for 
approximately 4 weeks
IMATs:
•NSTRState EOCs :
•DC: Potomac Interceptor Sewer Line
•HI: Wildfires
•FL: Previous Incidents
•MA/MS/RI/TN: Winter 
Storm
•PR: Influenza Epidemic
•OK/TX:  Fire Weather12
Joint Field
Offices
SupportingMajor
Disasters25 19
Emergency
Declarations+ 5
RSF-Supported 
Disasters8
Direct Housing
Missions
Fully Mission Capable (FMC)
Partially Mission Capable (PMC)
Not Mission Capable (NMC)
DeployedN-IMATs
2-5 Teams Available
Red
White
Blue
Gold
HS
R-IMATs 
≥ 7 Teams Available
R1 2
R2
R3 DC (Feb 24)
R4 (1)
R4 (2) MS (Jan 26)
R5 1
R6 (1)
R6 (2)
R7 MO

IM Cadre Availability 7 (+1) Cadres ≤ 25% Availability IM Workforce Civil Rights: 23% (22/96); Disability Integration: 19% (3/16); External Affairs: 23% (63/271); Environmental Planning and Historic Preservation: 17% (109/644); Field Leadership: 17% (20/117); Hazard Mitigation: 18% (139/769); Planning: 18% (61/345)28 Assigned 0 Unavailable 0 Deployed 28 Available36 Assigned6 Unavailable2 Deployed 28 AvailableMERS ≥ 66%US&R ≥ 66% JFO Office: Bothell, WA FEMA -XXXX- DR: Declared 4/28 FEMA Common Operating Picture FEMA HQ NWC NRCC Monitoring Steady State FEMA REGIONS Watch RRCC Monitoring R1 Rostered Monitoring R2 Rostered Alt. Location R3 Rostered Monitoring R4 Rostered Monitoring R5 Rostered Monitoring R6 Rostered Monitoring R7 Rostered Monitoring R8 Rostered Monitoring R9 Rostered Monitoring R10 Rostered Notes: NRCC/RWCs/RRCCs: •R3 RWC: Alternate location effective Feb 22, 2026, for approximately 4 weeks IMATs: •NSTRState EOCs : •DC: Potomac Interceptor Sewer Line •HI: Wildfires •FL: Previous Incidents •MA/MS/RI/TN: Winter Storm •PR: Influenza Epidemic •OK/TX: Fire Weather12 Joint Field Offices SupportingMajor Disasters25 19 Emergency Declarations+ 5 RSF-Supported Disasters8 Direct Housing Missions Fully Mission Capable (FMC) Partially Mission Capable (PMC) Not Mission Capable (NMC) DeployedN-IMATs 2-5 Teams Available Red White Blue Gold HS R-IMATs ≥ 7 Teams Available R1 2 R2 R3 DC (Feb 24) R4 (1) R4 (2) MS (Jan 26) R5 1 R6 (1) R6 (2) R7 MO

#FEMA #Disasters

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National Watch Center
Snowfall Forecast

National Watch Center Snowfall Forecast

#FEMA #Disasters

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National Weather Forecast
National Watch CenterSat
MonSun

National Weather Forecast National Watch CenterSat MonSun

#FEMA #Disasters

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