SECTION 1: INTRODUCTION
— Dam Failure — Drought — Earthquake — Extreme Heat — Flood — Hurricane and Tropical Storm — Infectious Disease — Landslide — Severe Weather (Thunderstorm Winds, Hail, and Lightning) — Severe Winter Storm
— Tornado — Wildfire — Cyber Threat — Hazardous Materials Incident — Radiological Incident — Terrorism 1.4 REFERENCES The following FEMA guides and reference documents were used to prepare this document: — FEMA 386-1: Getting Started. September 2002. — FEMA 386-2: Understanding Your Risks: Identifying Hazards and Estimating Losses. August 2001. — FEMA 386-3: Developing the Mitigation Plan. April 2003. — FEMA 386-4: Bringing the Plan to Life. August 2003. — FEMA 386-5: Using Benefit-Cost Review in Mitigation Planning. May 2007. — FEMA 386-6: Integrating Historic Property and Cultural Resource Considerations into Hazard Mitigation Planning. May 2005. — FEMA 386-7: Integrating Manmade Hazards into Mitigation Planning. September 2003. — FEMA 386-8: Multijurisdictional Mitigation Planning. August 2006. — FEMA 386-9: Using the Hazard Mitigation Plan to Prepare Successful Mitigation Projects. August 2008. — FEMA. Local Mitigation Planning Handbook. March 2013. — FEMA. Local Mitigation Plan Review Guide. October 1, 2011. — FEMA National Fire Incident Reporting System 5.0: Complete Reference Guide. January, 2008. — FEMA Hazard Mitigation Assistance Unified Guidance. June 1, 2010. — FEMA. Integrating Hazard Mitigation into Local Planning: Case Studies and Tools for Community Officials. March 1, 2013. — FEMA. Mitigation Ideas. A Resource for Reducing Risk to Natural Hazards. January 2013. Additional sources used in the development of this plan, including data compiled for the Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment, are listed in Appendix D.
Wake County, NC Multi-Jurisdictional Hazard Mitigation Plan
WSP June 2024 Page 3
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