Western county emergency offices are running pre-season evacuation drills with traffic sensors and mobile alert testing. The exercises identify where outbound routes slow first under different wind and smoke scenarios.
Officials said previous plans assumed even departure behavior, which did not match real household response patterns. Updated models now include delayed departures, school pickup surges, and limited-access road dependencies.
Public health teams are integrating shelter capacity data earlier in planning cycles so transfer routes can prioritize medically vulnerable residents. This has reduced last-minute reallocations during tabletop exercises.
Managers describe the effort as preparedness infrastructure, not one-time training. Agencies will rerun simulations monthly as conditions change through summer.








