Hamilton County, Iowa Emergency Management

Hamilton County, Iowa Emergency Management Our Emergency Management Agency (EMA), is responsible for providing a comprehensive Emergency Management program for all residents in Hamilton County, Iowa

To be best prepared for disaster, this is accomplished with four main programs: Preparation, Response, Recovery, and Mitigation. We use a multi-hazard approach that addresses all risks that threaten the health and safety of our citizens to include natural disasters, man-made or technological incidents, and civil actions. The Emergency Management Commission is comprised of the mayor of each jurisd

iction, the Sheriff, and one member of the Board of Supervisors, under provisions the State Code of Iowa. The Coordinator handles the daily office duties of developing and revising plans, coordinating training, completing the required state and federal projects, submitting quarterly and annual reports, preparing budgets, severe weather awareness, hazardous materials plans and in-county facility site inspections, Homeland Security plans and programs, plus other activities. Preparedness. The EMA coordinates disaster actions with the Hamilton County Multi-Hazard Emergency Operations Plan. This plan provides for response to tornados, flooding, winter storms, hazardous materials and/or radiation accidents (industrial or transportation), and acts of terrorism. Public warning systems are actively promoted. The towns in our county have outdoor warning sirens and all citizens are urged to have indoor warning receivers. Response. Severe weather spotter courses and other training is provided for our first responders including fire and rescue, law enforcement and medical personnel. Both Hamilton County and Webster City have Emergency Operations Centers from which the response to larger scale incidents can be coordinated. Our plan designates 16 functions that may be required during a disaster, and who is responsible for each area. Recovery. Recovery actions are taken after a disaster to meet the needs of the public to restore services, and assistance to return individual lives and the business community to as normal of condition as possible. EMA will help coordinate county and city resources to needed disaster areas in our county, and will assist in requesting state and federal assistance from various support agencies. Mitigation. Studies are done after disasters occur, to determine what measures could be taken to prevent as much property damage or injuries or loss of life in future events. The Emergency Management Agency then develops a plan to implement reasonable and cost effective measures that will lessen the impact on our communities, citizens, and daily living routines upon the next emergency event.

06/01/2026

Western Iowa could see a few isolated thunderstorms this afternoon, but the rest of the state will remain dry. While we don’t expect much severe weather, any storms that form could produce small hail, gusty winds, and heavy rain! Make sure to stay weather aware if you have any outdoor activities planned for this afternoon and early evening!

06/01/2026

Welcome to the first week of meteorological summer! We are kicking things off on a mostly dry note. While there is a slight chance for an isolated shower or storm Monday night, expect a primarily dry day with plenty of sunshine. The beautiful weather carries into mid-week, bringing clear skies and comfortable highs in the upper 70s to lower 80s. Clouds will begin to gather on Thursday, with rain and storm chances returning by the afternoon and evening. This unsettled pattern is expected to stick around, keeping the threat of showers and storms in the forecast through Friday and into the weekend.

06/01/2026
05/31/2026

Central Iowa will see a few scattered showers and storms kick off Sunday morning. While these storms are expected to remain below severe limits, they could drop some heavy downpours before tapering off toward the afternoon. Expect mostly cloudy skies for the bulk of the day with only brief peeks of sunshine. A slim chance for redevelopment returns this evening; if any storms manage to form, they could bring isolated hail, gusty winds and isolated heavy rainfall.

05/30/2026

It will be a warm day across Central Iowa with showers and storms possible at times. Highs are expected to climb into the upper 70’s to lower 80’s under mostly cloudy skies. Showers and storms will linger in southern and southwest Iowa through the morning hours, continuing to slowly track east-northeast and bringing short periods of steady rain across Central Iowa. However, today will not be a total washout, as we expect several dry intervals throughout the afternoon. The heaviest rainfall will be concentrated along the Iowa-Missouri border and across southwest Iowa, where 1 to 2 inches of rain could occur, with locally higher amounts. Isolated flash flooding will be possible in these areas.

05/29/2026
05/29/2026

Do you know what actions to take when thunder roars in Iowa?

🚫 Stop all outdoor activities
🏠 Shelter in a building or hard-topped vehicle
⏰ Wait 30 mins after you last hear thunder to resume activities

Ready.iowa.gov

05/29/2026

🚲Have an old kids bike in your garage?! We NEED it!!👇

Sunset Heights is gearing up for Summer School! Students enrolled in Summer School will have an opportunity to take part in a Bike Riding Unit with Mr. Hisler and Miss Barquist!!

We are in need of kids bikes in GOOD WORKING ORDER. If you have one to donate, please contact Mr. Hisler at [email protected].

05/29/2026

The recent dry pattern is set to come to an end this weekend as showers and storms become possible every day. While today remains mostly dry under increasing clouds, showers are expected to arrive tonight and linger into Saturday morning, particularly across western and Central Iowa. However, Saturday will not be a total washout, leaving plenty of dry breaks and rain-free intervals throughout the afternoon. Scattered showers and storms will return on Sunday, bringing a slim chance of an isolated strong to severe storm, but you can still expect periods of dry weather mixed in.

05/28/2026

Mild weather will prevail through the weekend, with daily high temperatures in the upper 70s to lower 80s and partly cloudy skies. Rain chances will return to southwestern Iowa on Friday, then spread across central and northern Iowa at times over the weekend. Any thunderstorms will be scattered and hit-and-miss, with the severe weather risk remaining low. While most areas will receive little or no rainfall, a few spots could see heavier amounts where isolated slow-moving thunderstorms occur.

Address

1610 Collins Street
Webster City, IA
50595

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