St Charles, Mo., June 5, 2013 -- A Preliminary Damage Assessment (PDA) team looks at a neighborhood damaged by a tornado. PDA is a joint assessment used to determine the magnitude and impact of an event's damage. The State uses the results of the PDA to determine if the situation is beyond the combined capabilities of the State and local resources and to verify the need for supplemental Federal assistance. Steve Zumwalt/FEMA

Chicago citation style
Department of Homeland Security. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Public Affairs Division. 3/1/2003. St Charles, Mo., June 5, 2013 -- A Preliminary Damage Assessment (PDA) team looks at a neighborhood damaged by a tornado. PDA is a joint assessment used to determine the magnitude and impact of an event's damage. The State uses the results of the PDA to determine if the situation is beyond the combined capabilities of the State and local resources and to verify the need for supplemental Federal assistance. Steve Zumwalt/FEMA. Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America, http://catalog.archives.gov/id/24478589. (Accessed April 19, 2024.)
APA citation style
Department of Homeland Security. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Public Affairs Division. 3/1/2003, St Charles, Mo., June 5, 2013 -- A Preliminary Damage Assessment (PDA) team looks at a neighborhood damaged by a tornado. PDA is a joint assessment used to determine the magnitude and impact of an event's damage. The State uses the results of the PDA to determine if the situation is beyond the combined capabilities of the State and local resources and to verify the need for supplemental Federal assistance. Steve Zumwalt/FEMA. Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America, http://catalog.archives.gov/id/24478589
MLA citation style
Department of Homeland Security. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Public Affairs Division. 3/1/2003. Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America <http://catalog.archives.gov/id/24478589>.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.