During Isaias, residents recalled “pandemonium” as people were left unaware that the creeks had flooded until water came into their homes.
So in 2022, the Office of Emergency Management directed grant money from the city’s Operations Transformation Fund to design a system that would send neighborhood-specific emergency alerts to a subset of ReadyPhiladelphia subscribers who opt in to receiving information about Eastwick.
The new system will use forecasts from the National Weather Service, combined with flooding thresholds identified through past flood events, to determine when rainfall could put the creeks in Eastwick at risk of overflowing. Officials plan to send alerts before, during and after a rain event that poses an actual risk of flooding in the neighborhood.
“Every single message we have built in to either help them prepare, help them respond or help them recover,” said Erin Mossop, alert & warning coordinator at the Office of Emergency Management.
For example, messages could tell residents to move their vehicles to higher ground, gather important documents, elevate items within their homes or evacuate the neighborhood. The messages will also recommend recipients share information with friends and family who might not be signed up, Mossop said.
The program was designed after city officials and contractors held focus groups with Eastwick residents to determine what information would be useful in the messages.
Whitfield said the alerts will be a big improvement from having to manually monitor the creek near her home.
“When we got a heavy rain, … we would go over to the creek and see how far it was up to the bank, and then come back in the house, then go back and see if it was overflowing,” Whitfield said. “That was physically done by humans — us.”
The Eastwick alert system still lacks a much-anticipated feature: livestream cameras that should will allow emergency managers and residents to watch the creeks in real time during rain events. The Office of Emergency Management has purchased this equipment and met with partners to determine suitable locations to install it, Mossop said. The city is now working on launching a public-facing web page where residents will be able to view the camera feeds.
Whitfield said the challenge now is making sure that people know about the Eastwick-specific alerts and get signed up. She worries especially about elders who might not have cell phones and people who are not tech savvy.