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Docusign Envelope ID: AADFOE75-B4D9-497C-9EO1-CC295BDCOA36 <br />May 1, 2025 / Page 2 of 9 <br />11723.11 —Vulnerability Assessment <br />City of Sunny Isles Beach <br />SCOPE OF SERVICES <br />CIVIL ENGINEERING SERVICES <br />Task 1 Acquire Background Data <br />CONSULTANT will research and compile the data needed to perform the Vulnerability <br />Assessment (VA), based on the requirements as defined in Section 380.093, F.S.. Three main <br />categories of data are required to perform a VA: 1) critical and regionally significant asset <br />inventory, 2) topographic data, and 3) flood scenario -related data. <br />1) CONSULTANT will work directly with the CITY to identify critical public infrastructure within <br />City limits. This critical infrastructure may include key transportation routes, hospitals, <br />police and fire stations, schools, stormwater, wastewater, water supply, utilities, natural <br />resources, and cultural resources susceptible to coastal flooding. This collaboration may <br />include phone conferences, in-person meetings, and site visits with CITY staff to assess <br />key infrastructure to be considered. County and CITY GIS datasets will be assessed for <br />the depth and breadth of information available to aid in the identification of publicly owned <br />assets and critical infrastructure. <br />Potential Data Sources include but are not limited to: <br />a. Property/parcel geo-referenced data (public, historic, natural resources, land use) — <br />sourced from Florida Geospatial Open Data, local water management districts — <br />Florida Land Use, Cover, and Forms Classification System (FLUCCS), Florida Master <br />Site File — Division of Historical Resources, locally sourced county, and municipality <br />data. <br />b. Critical Facilities — sourced from Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM) <br />Critical Facilities Inventory, United States Geological Survey (USGS) Geographic <br />Names Information System, FEMA / Dept. of Homeland Security, locally sourced <br />county, and municipality data. <br />c. Flood Elevation Certificates — sourced from FDEM Elevation Certificates, locally <br />sourced county, and municipality data. <br />d. Roadway/Transportation Network data — sourced from USGS The National Map <br />transportation layer, U.S. Department of Homeland Security Homeland Infrastructure <br />Foundation -Level Data, OpenStreetMap, Florida Department of Transportation <br />(FDOT) Open Data Hub, NavTeq / HERE roads database. <br />e. Building Footprints — sourced from Microsoft/Esri, Google, locally sourced county and <br />municipality property appraiser data. <br />2) Existing topographic data will be used and may include sources such as the FDEM <br />Elevation Certificates, locally sourced county and municipality data of Finished First Floor <br />Elevations (FFEs) and roadway crests for selected critical assets, and topographic LiDAR, <br />DEM data sourced from NOW , Florida Geospatial Open Data, local water management <br />district GIS hubs, USGS National Elevation Dataset, and locally sourced county and <br />municipality data. No new data will be collected for this project. <br />3) Flood scenario -related data: <br />a. Sea level rise (SLR) projections — sourced from NOAA's 2022 intermediate -low and <br />intermediate SLR projections for 2050 and 2080. <br />b. Tidal datums and tidal flooding — sourced from NOAA Tides and Currents website, <br />NOAA Digital Coast SLR viewer, Florida Flood Hub. <br />c. Storm surge — sourced from FEMA flood depth grids and water surface elevation grids <br />(which are non -regulatory products provided to local municipalities), National <br />Hurricane Center's Sea, Lake, and Overland Surges from Hurricanes (SLOSH) model, <br />United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Coastal Hazards System South <br />Atlantic Coastal Study (SACS). Storm surge data used must be equal to or exceed the <br />Engineering Inspired Design. <br />1 <br />