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York U disaster management and engineering experts available to discuss Hurricane Harvey

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York U disaster management and engineering experts available to discuss Hurricane Harvey

University experts can discuss the storm’s impact including flooding-related issues, evacuation, disaster and risk management related to Houston

TORONTO, August 29, 2017─ The damage by Hurricane Harvey continues to grow as Houston, the fourth largest city in the United States, continues to receive more rain this week. Harvey has unloaded trillions of gallons of water since it made landfall on the Texas gulf coast late Friday night. The National Weather Service has called this weather event “unprecedented” on Twitter, advising “all impacts are unknown & beyond anything experienced. Follow orders from officials to ensure safety.”

York University has experts available to comment on disaster and emergency management, water flood management, evacuation of residents and recovery from this dangerous natural disaster.

Jack L. Rozdilsky, associate professor of Disaster and Emergency Management in the School of Administrative Studies in the Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies is available for media interviews on disaster preparedness, mitigation, response and recovery, and natural disasters, including his first-hand research experience on Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Ike. His research combines disaster-related scholarship with emergency management and homeland security practice. He has actively explored a variety of disaster-related circumstances, some of which include the Montserrat volcanic crisis, Hurricane Katrina, tornado disasters, the Ferguson civil disturbances, 9/11 memorialization, and the 70th anniversary of the first use of the atomic bomb.

He can speak to:

  • Role of emergency management, what is happening right now, coordination between federal and local authorities, FEMA etc.
  • Comparison of the impact of Hurricane Harvey to Hurricane Katrina, specifically its scope and size
  • The choice by the Houston mayor not to evacuate the city
  • Why this hurricane is a test for the new FEMA director
  • Disaster recovery and aftermath (physical and social aspects)
Ali Asgary, associate professor Disaster & Emergency Management & Associate Director of Advanced Disaster, Emergency and Rapid Response Simulation

Ali Asgary

Ali Asgary, associate professor Disaster & Emergency Management & Associate Director of Advanced Disaster, Emergency and Rapid Response Simulation (ADERSIM) in the School of Administrative Studies, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, is available for media interviews to discuss the hurricane’s potential impact, emergency preparedness and management. His research includes creating disaster simulations.

He can speak to:

  • The impact of evacuation
  • Criteria for evacuation in a disaster

Nirupama Agrawal, associate professor in the School of Administrative Studies, Faculty of Liberal Arts & Professional Studies, serves as an elected editorial board member for the Springer publication “Natural Hazards”, has co-edited a book on “Indian Ocean tsunami”, and is the lead author of “Tsunami Travel Time Atlas for the Atlantic Ocean”, which provides charts of tsunami travel times to 118 locations around the Atlantic Ocean.

She can speak to:

  • Increase of flood risk due to urbanisation
  • Disaster risk management; business continuity
  • Physical dynamics of natural hazards
  • Disaster management using GIS and remote sensing techniques

Usman Khan, assistant professor in Civil Engineering at the Lassonde School of Engineering, York University. His research interests lie in water resources engineering, focusing on urban hydrology, including flood risk assessment and uncertainty analysis, sustainable water resource management and infrastructure, and the impacts of climate change on these systems. In addition to this, Khan has worked with municipal governments, providing his expertise to a number of stormwater, watershed management and urban hydrology projects.

He can speak to:

  • Whether low impact development technologies could help reduce the risk of floods in Houston
  • How to improve existing stormwater infrastructure to reduce the risk of floods in the future
  • How data analytics and modelling tools can be used to better highlight the risk of floods in Houston and other urban areas

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Media Contacts:
Anjum Nayyar, York University Media Relations, 416 736 2100 ext. 44543, anayyar@yorku.ca