Flooding Committee Hears Update On Damage And FEMA Response

The community has not received a disaster declaration from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) yet. If there is a FEMA declaration there will be public and individual assistance. Public assistance will aid in recovering infrastructure while individual assistance will help homeowners. 

The legislature’s Joint Committee on Flooding met Sunday to discuss the recent flooding in eastern Kanawha County. 

Members of the committee learned that two homes were completely destroyed, 32 homes have major damage, 54 homes have minor damage, and 22 private bridges were destroyed in the flash floods that took place along Little, Fields, and Slaughters creeks in late August. 

Director of Kanawha County’s Homeland Security and Emergency Management, C.W. Sigman says only 9 percent of residents affected by the flood had flood insurance.  

“They are not going to get compensated 100 percent. They’ll have enough money, if we get a FEMA declaration, to kind-of get them back on their feet,” Sigman said.  

The community has not received a disaster declaration from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) yet. If there is a FEMA declaration there will be public and individual assistance. Public assistance will aid in recovering infrastructure while individual assistance will help homeowners. 

Emergency Alert Sytems

Sigman also discussed the need for better alert systems for rural communities since many flood victims did not receive any emergency warning until after the flood had begun. 

“We’re looking at putting sirens in. We just put some in in the Loudendale area,” Sigman said. 

However Sigman said that sirens are not the most effective alert system in mountainous regions like West Virginia. He said that better cell phone connectivity would be another possible way to reach rural residents. 

“I am an old volunteer firefighter. Sirens (are) not very good at alerting volunteers. It’s not gonna be very effective for alerting the public,” Sigman said. “So that wireless emergency alert is a proven performer on your cell phone.”

Improving W.Va. Infrastructure With Taiwanese Technology

A trade delegation just got back from opening a West Virginia Trade Office in Taiwan. The office will serve as a hub for promoting the state as a prime location for Taiwanese investment and assisting West Virginia businesses with exporting their products and services to Taiwan. 

A trade delegation just got back from opening a West Virginia Trade Office in Taiwan. The office will serve as a hub for promoting the state as a prime location for Taiwanese investment and assisting West Virginia businesses with exporting their products and services to Taiwan. 

One delegation member, however, said he learned much more than increasing global markets.

Del. Daniel Linville, R-Cabell, chairs the House Committee on Technology and Infrastructure. He said he is already back in touch with the Taiwan Foreign Ministry after viewing ways to improve West Virginia’s infrastructure challenges.

Linville said the mountainous island nation had an incredible number of high-end road and rail tunnels.

“They’re a very mountainous country, like our state,” Linville said. ”Certainly they build roads over and above their mountains and those sorts of things. But both for rail service, and for traditional vehicle service, they had an incredible number of tunnels and seem to have really mastered that art.”  

Linville also said broadband and cell service was everywhere in Taiwan, strong even in the most remote areas.   

Folks were able to take pictures and share them with friends and those sorts of things,” Linville said.  “You could tell that all the people were connected. It didn’t matter if someone had an AT&T phone or a Verizon phone or something like that. We all had service while we were over there just about everywhere. So how is it that they were able to accomplish that?”

Linville said he believes Taiwan’s technology on tunnel building and broadband connectivity is adaptable to the Mountain State, and he is working on that adaptation.

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