Resident Engineer Blake Tillery provides an update to debris removal operations in Decatur County to a Tallahassee television station Jan. 3, 2019. Second pass of debris removal recently started for several of the 13 counties in southwest Georgia mission area. Through Jan. 2, 2019, nearly 750,000 cubic yards of vegetative debris has been removed from Decatur County, with more than million cubic yards of debris removed from the 13 county debris removal mission area. The Army Corps of Engineers along with local government officials, started debris removal activity in Georgia, under the


Resident Engineer Blake Tillery provides an update to debris removal operations in Decatur County to a Tallahassee television station Jan. 3, 2019. Second pass of debris removal recently started for several of the 13 counties in southwest Georgia mission area. Through Jan. 2, 2019, nearly 750,000 cubic yards of vegetative debris has been removed from Decatur County, with more than million cubic yards of debris removed from the 13 county debris removal mission area. The Army Corps of Engineers along with local government officials, started debris removal activity in Georgia, under the direction of the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency and Federal Emergency Management Agencies as part of the FEMA debris mission assignment.


Size: 1987px × 1006px
Photo credit: © Conner Flecks / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: archive, armed, army, armyhurricanemichael, armyhurricaneresponse, bainbridge, blake, blvd, corps, county, debris, decatur, defence, efo, emergency, engineers, field, forces, ga, georgia, hurricane, hurricanemichael18, industrial, management, michael, military, office, reportage, servicemen, site, southwest, sw, swga, tillery, usa, usace