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  • 2 days ago
Rae Ann Haight, the USPS Director of National Preparedness, explains to AccuWeather how their plans keep the mail running despite wildfires or hurricanes or any emergency.
Transcript
00:00When severe weather or natural disasters strike, the U.S. mail still has to go through.
00:05That takes planning, training, and rapid response.
00:07Joining us is Rae Ann Haidt, Director of National Preparedness for the U.S. Postal Service.
00:12What's the mission of the USPS Office of National Preparedness,
00:16and how does it support mail delivery during a weather emergency?
00:21Well, we are a small but mighty group of emergency preparedness professionals,
00:26and we cover the entire organization, so from Guam, Alaska, Hawaii, all of the U.S., the Caribbean,
00:35and what we do is we put in place plans, procedures, protocols.
00:41We have all sorts of preparedness guides and tools and resources so that we can rebound
00:47and be ready for any type of emergency event.
00:51All right, so how does USPS, how do they prepare for severe weather events,
00:55and what's the difference between things like wildfires and hurricanes or blizzards,
00:59like those three things, how do you differentiate those?
01:03Well, with wildfires, of course, that's an immediate action that you need to take.
01:08With hurricanes, you do have an opportunity to watch the forecast for a few days to be able to prepare
01:15so that we can figure out exactly where this may come to play,
01:20and that is where we rely so heavily on the forecast.
01:24So part of what we do is monitoring the forecast.
01:27We do that daily, sometimes hourly.
01:30The local news channels, the National Weather Service,
01:34AccuWeather for you all, and then the National Hurricane Center.
01:37So we take all of those advisories.
01:40We take the maps.
01:41We actually overlay our postal facilities on those maps
01:45so that we know exactly about where this storm could hit.
01:49And when we do that, we can help pre-position some of the assets and resources that we would need.
01:56But the other efforts that we take to be able to prepare is that we have robust prepare disguise.
02:01We have emergency threat checklists.
02:04And we actually, this team, trains, creates and trains and facilitates training
02:09for over 238 emergency management teams across the country.
02:14So we test all of that leadership for severe weather procedures,
02:19as well as our continuity of operations plans are tested.
02:24And we do all of this to ensure that we are able to meet our mission,
02:28critical, essential function of delivering mail to the American public.
02:33Wow, some really important work there.
02:35We've definitely had our fair share of high-impact weather events
02:38over the last couple of weeks and months.
02:40Can you share a recent example where a preparedness plan kept mail moving during a disaster?
02:46Well, as you know, we are in every community.
02:50We are delivering to every address.
02:53So our continuity business plans are always in play.
02:58A recent example would be with the North Carolina,
03:02with Hurricane Helene, which was so devastating.
03:04Our postal facilities were also impacted.
03:07And what we did to keep those plans moving for our customers
03:11is we actually deployed mobile post office units that would sit in the parking lot
03:16for customers to be able to arrive and send, receive their mail,
03:21all while that facility was being repaired.
03:25So we have so many examples of our service that we provide.
03:29It's the fabric of what we do.
03:31And, in fact, the Postal Service is celebrating its 250-year anniversary starting this week.
03:37So every letter, every mile, sits 1775.
03:42Wow.
03:43Breanne Haidt, Director of National Preparedness for the U.S. Postal Service.
03:47Thank you so much for joining us and for the important work you do.
03:50Thank you for having me.

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