Virginia Offering Storm Surge Risk Map for Coastal Areas
Virginia emergency management officials have created a new tool to help coastal residents assess the risks of rising water in a storm surge.
The Virginia Department of Emergency Management says the Geographic Information System map provides users with the maximum storm surge risk at their current location or elsewhere.
Jeff Stern is the state coordinator of emergency management. He says the map presents a worst-case scenario of storm surge, but he stressed it’s not a real-time tool.
Storm surge is the abnormal and dangerous rise of water over and above the tide. It is pushed to shore by high winds, typically a hurricane or tropical storm.
The localities shown on the map include Virginia’s coastal areas. They include Newport News, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Virginia Beach and the Eastern Shore, among others.
Related Articles:
6.5 Million Homes from Maine to Texas at Risk for Storm Surge: CoreLogic
Forecasters to Issue Special Maps, Warnings on Storm Surge
Nuisance Flooding Rising Problem for U.S. Cities: NOAA
- Abbott Presses Congress for Legal Shield Over Preemie Baby Formula Lawsuits
- Apollo Sees Echoes of Collapse of SVB in US Insurance’s Shift to Caymans
- Florida Jury Returns $779M Verdict for Family of Security Guard Killed at Gambling Cafe
- State Farm Files for Auto Rate Decrease, Homeowners Rate Increase in Louisiana