Sep 10, 2005

Assignment Evacuation

Students...and anyone else who wants to play along. In light of the events that have unfolded in New Orleans, we will be preparing a mock evacuation plan for the cities of Victorville, Apple Valley, and Hesperia.

Here are the steps I want you to go through...

1. Find out how many people will need to be evacuated by government actions in the case of a major disaster.
2. Find out what resources the city has to transport people out of the city. Resources should include Transit buses, School buses, City Vehicles, Ambulances, City Vehicles, Church buses...You may be able to come up with other alternatives...if you do, explain how those will be utilized, and how operators will be provided.
3. Find locations that would be suitable for housing the evacuees, all housing needs to be more than 150 miles, but less than 400 miles from the boundries of the city.
4. Find drivers for all vehicles that will be utilized in the evacuation, and plan for how to assure that they will actually show up when called for the evacuation. Plan for a 20% failure to show rate…meaning that you must have at least 20% more drivers than needed.
5. Prepare a list of rallying points for local citizens to gather, and board transportation assets…create a security plan to assure order at the rallying points.
6. Make sure that your plan accounts for making sure all vehicles are fully fueled.
7. Prepare routes out of town, and to the designated relocation sites.
8. Prepare a list of spots where refueling can be accomplished if it is needed.

This is obviously not all of the steps that would be involved in preparing a plan, but it will provide us with an idea of the complexity of preparing for a major disaster.

Sep 3, 2005

Warning...History Geek at Work

The President will nominate his second Justice in the same year, something that is almost unheard of recently, but is not historically without precedent...below is a list of past such occurrances:


Brockholst Livingston-Jan. 20, 1807
Thomas Todd-May 4, 1807

John McLean- Jan. 11, 1830
Henry Baldwin- Jan. 18, 1830

Roger B. Taney-March 28, 1836 (Infamous Chief for the Dred Scott Case)
Phillip P. Barbour- May 17, 1836

Samuel Nelson- Feb. 27, 1845
Levi Woodbury- Sept. 23, 1845

Noah Swayne- Jan. 27, 1862
Samuel F. Miller- July 21, 1862
David Davis- Dec. 10, 1862
(Quite a year for Lincoln)

William Strong- March 14, 1870
Joseph P. Bradley- March 23, 1870

William B. Woods- Jan. 5, 1881
Stanley Matthews- May 17, 1881

Horace Gray- Jan. 9, 1882
Samuel Blatchford- April 3, 1882

Lucius Q.C. Lamar- Jan. 18, 1888
Melville W. Fuller- Oct. 8, 1888

Joseph R. Lamar- Jan. 3, 1911
Willis Van Devanter- Jan. 3, 1911
(Not a great deal of time spent on those confirmations, who says Taft was ineffective)

Louis D. Brandies- June 5, 1916
John H. Clarke- October 9, 1916

Pierce Butler- Jan. 2, 1923
Edward T. Sanford- Feb. 19, 1923

Felix Frankfurter- Jan. 30, 1939 (is there a better SC Justice name?)
William O. Douglas- April 17, 1939

James Byrnes- July 8, 1941
Robert Jackson- July 11, 1941

Tom C. Clark-Aug. 24, 1949
Sherman Minton- Oct. 12, 1949

William Renquist- Jan. 7, 1972 (As an Associate Justice, he became chief in '86)
Lewis F. Powell Jr.- Jan. 7, 1972

Thanks to Oyez.com for the excellent site that they are.

Feel free to use any of this information...but do know, if you do it, people will think you are a geek...and they might be right.

Breaking News...

Chief Justice Renquist passed away this evening...just a reminder for all of my former students....remember, this is why I kept saying the 2000 and 2004 elections were so important.

I will be posting more on this soon.

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