Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

FEMA scores of places’ peril hold surprises

- By Seth Borenstein

Spending her life in Los Angeles, Morgan Andersen knows natural disasters all too well.

In college, an earthquake shook her home hard. Her grandfathe­r was affected by recent wildfires in neighborin­g Orange County.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has calculated the risk for every county in America for 18 types of natural disasters, such as earthquake­s, hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, volcanoes and even tsunamis. And of the more than 3,000 counties, Los Angeles County has the highest ranking in the National Risk Index.

But some other places highlighte­d run counter to what most people would think. For instance, eastern cities such as New York and Philadelph­ia rank far higher on the risk for tornadoes than tornado alley stalwarts Oklahoma and Kansas.

And the county with the biggest coastal flood risk is one in Washington state that’s not on the ocean, although its river is tidal.

Those seeming oddities occur because FEMA’s index scores how often disasters strike, how many people and how much property are in harm’s way, how vulnerable the population is socially and how well the area is able to bounce back. And that results in a high risk assessment for big cities with lots of poor people and expensive property that are ill-prepared to be hit by once- in- a- generation disasters.

While the rankings may seem “counterint­uitive,” the degree of risk isn’t just how often a type of natural disaster strikes a place, but how bad the toll would be, according to FEMA’s Mike Grimm.

FEMA’s top 10 riskiest places, in addition to Los Angeles, are three counties in the New York City area — Bronx, New York County (Manhattan) and Kings County (Brooklyn) — along with Miami, Philadelph­ia, Dallas, St. Louis and Riverside and San Bernardino counties in California.

Miami has the highest risk for hurricanes, lightning, and river flooding. Hawaii County is tops in volcano risk and Honolulu County for tsunamis, Dallas for hail, Philadelph­ia for heat waves and California’s Riverside County for wildfires.

Outside risk expert Himanshu Grover at the University of Washington called FEMA’s effort “a good tool, a good start” but one with flaws.

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