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<br />199B - Colorado Flood Hazard Mitigation Plan (409) <br /> <br />Chapter 1 - Introduction <br /> <br />,!U0.t'.J. <br /> <br />;u,_,,2.,i..;'~"_'_L: '.<-'" <br /> <br />'",",,', <br /> <br />1.0 Introduction <br /> <br />1.1 Purpose <br /> <br />in addition to fulfilling the legal obligation under the <br />Stafford Act, this mitigation plan serves: <br /> <br />. To recognize and describe flood hazards and <br />their impact upon the state, <br /> <br />. To identify federai, state and local agencies, <br />capabilities and shortfalls, and assign responsi- <br />bilities to: (1) develop programs, activities, <br />strategies, and recommendations for mitigation; <br />and (2) monitor and implement pre-disaster and <br />post-disaster mitigation measures, <br /> <br />. To document existing federal, state, and local <br />government programs that relate to flood hazard <br />mitigation, <br /> <br />. To identify and discuss critical issues which, if <br />resolved, would enhance mitigation efforts, <br /> <br />. To identify and establish mitigation goals, objec- <br />tives, and priorities for governmental actions to <br />reduce flood damages, <br /> <br />. To offer mitigation strategies and measures for <br />the state and local govemment jurisdictions to <br />use in their planning efforts, <br /> <br />. To guide the state of Colorado and its local <br />jurisdictions in taking action as may be reason- <br />ably expected to reduce flood damages, <br /> <br />. To document the flood and recovery process <br />resulting from presidential disaster declarations, <br /> <br />1.2 Scope <br /> <br />The scope of the plan is statewide, It is not necessar- <br />ily limited to the declared disaster area because all <br />streams in Colorado have the potential to flood and <br />cause damages, regardless of the cause, Both short- <br />term and long-term opportunities for flood hazard , <br />mitigation are considered, Furthermore, ideas for I <br />mitigation measures that go beyond existing federal, <br />state or local funding frameworks have been evalu- <br />ated, <br /> <br />The plan does not attempt to consider mitigation <br />opportunities for some of Colorado's other natural <br />hazards such as drought, winter storms, avalanches. <br />tornadoes, earthquakes, and wildfires, A Wildfire <br />Mitigation Plan, Landslide Mitigation Plan, and <br />Drought Plan have been developed and supplement <br />this Flood Hazard Mitigation Plan, Future floods in <br />Colorado are inevitable, and this plan should be re- <br />viewed and updated annually or as necessary follow- <br /> <br />'-01,;., <br /> <br />,_'0,:" <br /> <br />ing each major disaster <br /> <br />The Mitigation Plan is not a manual on what state <br />agencies should do when the next flood or dam break <br />occurs, Such response procedures are covered in the <br />"Colorado State Emergency Operations Plan" pre- <br />pared and updated by the Colorado Office of Emer- <br />gency Management (see Appendix C - References), <br /> <br />1.3 Authority <br />1.3.1 Federal <br /> <br />The requirement for state governments to prepare a <br />Hazard Mitigation Plan following a Presidential Disas- <br />ter Declaration is stated in Section 409 of Public Law <br />93-288, Robert T, Stafford Disaster Relief and Emer- <br />gency Assistance Act (Stafford Act) as amended by <br />Public Law 100-707, 42 U,S,C, 5121 at sea, and the <br />Hazard Mitigation and Relocation Assistance Act of <br />1993 and establishes the pre-requisites for state re- <br />ceipt of federal disaster assistance, The Act requires <br />the identification, evaluation, and mitigation of signifi- <br />cant hazardous conditions attributed to the most re- <br />cent disaster Additional authority is derived from the <br />following: <br /> <br />. Presidential Executive Order 11988, Floodplain <br />Management <br /> <br />. Presidential Executive Order 11990, Protection <br />of Wetlands <br /> <br />. FEMA Regulation, 44 CFR, Part 13, administra- <br />tive requirements <br /> <br />. FEMA Regulations, 44 CFR, Part 17, Subpart F, <br />drug-free work place <br /> <br />. FEMA Regulations, 44 CFR, Part 206, Subparts <br />M&N <br /> <br />. Final Report of the Interagency Floodplain Man- <br />agement Review Committee - June 1994 <br /> <br />. FEMA DR-1186-CO Hazard Mitigation Team Re- <br />port - October 1997 <br /> <br />1.3.2 State <br /> <br />Presidentially declared disasters include a stipulation <br />that the state must initiate the mitigation process, This <br />condition is required by Section 409 of the stafford Act <br />(as amended) and is also stated in the FEMA-State <br />Agreement for DR-1186-CO Flood Disaster in Col- <br />orado, declared August 1, 1997, The govemor, <br />through his executive power, directs specific agencies <br />to participate in post-disaster mitigation activities, Ad- <br />I ditional authority is derived from the following sources: <br />I <br /> <br />File: FHMP-ChapW-1.pub <br /> <br />Chapter 1 - 1 <br /> <br />1/29/989:59 AM <br />