Title: NJBFBENSNJANPHA Disaster Sheltering PublicPrivate Partnerships in Action
1NJBF-BENS/NJANPHADisaster Sheltering
Public-Private Partnerships in Action
- Notes From
- Presentations
- and
- Open Discussion
- Lessons Learned Action Steps
- October 4, 2006
2NJBF-BENS/NJANPHADisaster Sheltering
Public-Private Partnerships in Action
- Outline
- NJ Office of Homeland Security and Preparedness
(NJ OHSP) - NJ Office of Emergency Management (NJOEM)
- Shelter Management Principles
- Shelter Activation
- Shelter Logistics
- Special Needs Sheltering
- Sheltering the Elderly
- Evacuation
- Sheltering In-Place for Businesses
- Legal Side of Sheltering
- Disaster Sheltering Considerations
- Closing Thoughts/ Observations
3Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- NJ OHSP Perspective
- OHSP Oriented toward All-Hazards
- Emphases on Preparedness with no operational
control - Philosophy Plan, Exercise, Train
- Functions
- Grant distribution oversight
- Exercising
- Training of law enforcement disaster response
agencies - Clearinghouse for legislation
- Protecting Critical Infrastructure
- Within NJ 85-90 privately owned
- Security while Safeguarding Civil Rights
Liberties - OHSP represents all citizens demographic areas
- Currently studying in depth problems of
evacuating metropolitan centers - Government cannot be everywhere do everything
- Must inform prepare the public
- 211 System now operational
- Source of information accessible by the public
4Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- NJOEM Strategy
- Synergy of Effort
- Buildings blocks starts at local level
- Meetings w/ Stakeholders
- Volunteerism, e.g., Citizen Corps Initiative
- Preparedness
- Education
- Family Disaster Planning
- Local Emergency Management
- Exercising includes
- Information sharing
- Private Sector Partnerships
- New Regional Operations Intelligence Center
(ROIC) nearly ready - Fusion center for information sharing
- Replaces old EOC
- Includes state Federal agencies, NGOs, Private
Sector
5Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- NJOEM Strategy (cont.)
- Evacuation Scenarios
- Invacuation relocation movement into core of
building - Shelter-in-Place stationary posture
- Evacuation orderly/controlled exit
- Population Protection Shelter Activation
- Public-Private Partnerships Synergy
- Cement partnerships including Private Sector to
address needs of New Jersey - Information sharing key to Response Recovery
- Involve local officials in evacuation planning
- Regionalization strategies for mass evacuations
- Harnessing volunteers CERT, Watch Programs
- Level of preparedness is greatly increased with
an informed public - NJOEM Website features sections on emergency
preparedness including on evacuation sheltering
activities - Reverse 911
6Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Shelter Management Principles
- Recommended actions for sheltering-in-place
- Pre-event planning stockpiling
- Instill a sense of well-being (Attitudinal)
- Turn building into safe haven (Physical)
- Prepare building
- Base storage of necessities on hours not days
- Determine who will arrive at shelter in what
condition - Have adequate supplies of essential items
- Capacity to communicate important to counter
rumors - Take advantage of training opportunities
- Prepare train workforce
- Know what local resources are available
- Private Sector involvement essential
- Liaison with local American Red Cross Salvation
Army - Encourage employees to take shelter management
other courses - In-house preparedness pool of trained people to
assist communities
7Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Shelter Activation Making the Call
- Most difficult decision NJ DHSS faces
- System has to touch the victim at the disaster
site - Who, What, When Where
- Benefits of opening shelters must outweigh
liabilities - Shelters are only buildings without
- Proper sanitation
- Health care medications
- Food water
- Identify logistics chain for medicines medical
supplies - Special health needs for populations a new
approach - Prepare for all circumstances
- Different populations based on different
scenarios - Mental health needs
- Evacuation of long-term facilities is problematic
- ARC does not run specialty needs shelters
- NJ DHSS tracks every shelter monitors health
requirements
8Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Shelter Logistics
- Reverse prevailing parochial attitudes toward
sheltering - Local shelters to consolidate into larger
regional operations - pooling - NJ lacks experience with mass evacuations
- NJ will support only 500 bed shelter facilities
- Shortfalls
- Trained shelter management personnel
- Non-government Organizations are an available
resource - Train Private Sector employees through volunteer
programs - Suitable facilities - Many unknowns at play
- Some registered sites may be unavailable during
crisises - Material support
- Limited units restrictions make temporary
housing a vexing problem - Not enough cots
- Expectations of public, do not know what to do
nor to whom to turn - Public information programs must be developed
- Private Sector key for addressing identified
issues - Possesses expertise resources
- Potential source of manpower during emergencies
9Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Special Needs Sheltering
- Problem areas
- Communications
- Transportation
- Not drop off points for loved ones residents
must be accompanied - Private Sector can bridge gaps in sheltering
programs - Defining Special Needs difficult
- Diverse group based on numerous variables
- 23 who did not evacuate New Orleans had physical
mobility issues - Know who makes up your population
- Demographics not estimates
- Not all with special needs will require a special
needs shelter - Know resources for delivery of special services
- Obligated to accommodate special needs
- Seek legal counsel prior to using facilities as
shelters
10Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Sheltering the Elderly
- Complex but manageable task
- Prepare for emergencies beyond initial response
- Plans for medications, special care recovery
actions - Post-event facility security reconstitution
- Credentials for staff
- Limited capacity of first responders to conduct
major evacuations - What the future portends
- Expanded NJ Registry of Special Needs
- Contains 100,000 names
- Blend of special needs facilities
- Greater Public-Private cooperation
- Address areas of capacity
- Leverage Private Sector resources
11Disaster Sheltering ConferenceLuncheon Speaker
- Evacuation What would it be like?
- Impetus Northeast Blackout on 8-14-03
- Triggered spontaneous evacuation of NYC
- Complicated by transportation failures
- Identified needs for agreements movement plans
- Planning based on 260,000 people
- Major HAZMAT release could drive another 100-300K
to NJ - Next Steps
- UASI 2.5 million FY06 for evacuation
sheltering - State funding support
- Establishment of animal shelters
- Special needs populations
- Regionalized shelters
- Traffic/transportation modeling
12Disaster Sheltering ConferenceConsiderations
- Evacuation What would it be like? (Cont.)
- Potential Private Sector Actions
- Continuity of Operations Plans
- Protect facilities
- Identify essential employees
- Take care of employees families
- Facilitate communication w/ families
- Release vs. shelter-in-place decisions
- Shelter stranded employees
- Implement agreements w/ local vendors
- Use scenario-based planning
- Get input from employees on evacuation plans
- Familiarize employees w/ planning schemes
13Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Sheltering In-Place for Businesses
- Top-Down Leadership vital for sheltering programs
- Post-9-11 Strategy
- Strive for self-sufficiency resiliency
- Expect to take care of your own for a length of
time - Ensure on-file employee information is updated
regularly - Important for reaching employees
- Use a communicator system to contact employees
- Provide instructions during emergencies
- Make good decisions with reliable, actionable
information - Build credibility trust in advance of an event
- Communications Strategy Sharing Transparency
- Shelter-in-place program
- Pre-position food cots
- Identify those with special needs
- Build capacity for minimum of 24 hours
- Possess a decontamination capability
- Share information w/ municipal first responders
- More effort needed to grow Public-Private
partnerships
14Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Legal Side of Sheltering
- Good Samaritan Law of interest to Private Sector
- Legal responsibility to sheltered population
- State has confiscation compensation authority
- Emergency Health Powers Act grants state special
authorities - Private Sector a default if pre-determined
shelters unavailable - Governor can commandeer Private Sector assets
contingent upon just compensation - Answers not always clear cut law contains
ambiguities - Liabilities exist if you shelter or dont shelter
- Liabilities may be corporate, personal or
criminal - Juries reflect the makeup of its jurors
- Get past liabilities obligated to protect your
charges - Issue of reasonable behavior
- Make best decision to save lives under the
circumstances - Do everything possible to protect people despite
liabilities
15New Orleans officials have, to their credit,
crafted a plan to use buses and trains to
evacuate the sick, the disabled and the careless
before the next big hurricane The city
estimates that 15,000 people will need a ride
out. However, state officials have not yet
determined where the trains and buses will take
everyone. Why We Dont Prepare, TIME,
August 28, 2006
Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
16Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- A National Culture of Unpreparedness
17Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- In June the Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
released an unprecedented analysis of state and
urban emergency plans around the country
including assessments of evacuation plans and
command structures. - DHS Report concluded most "cannot be
characterized as fully adequate, feasible, or
acceptable." - Dallas, New Orleans and Oklahoma City among worst
performers - Florida rated best
18Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- But it's not just bureaucrats who are unprepared
for calamity.
19Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Regular people are even less likely to plan
ahead. - In a TIME poll, about half of those surveyed said
they had personally experienced a natural
disaster or public emergency. -
- www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,20060828,00.h
tml
20Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- But only 16 said they were "very well
prepared" for the next one. Of the rest, about
half explained their lack of preparedness by
saying they don't live in a high-risk area.
21Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- There are four stages of denial
- One It won't happen.
- Two - If it does happen, it won't happen to me.
- Three - If it does happen to me, it won't be that
bad. - And four - If it happens to me and it's bad,
there's nothing I can do to stop it anyway.
22Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- What we know A serious hurricane is due to
strike New York City, just as one did in 1821 and
1938. -
- Experts predict that such a storm would swamp
lower Manhattan, Brooklyn and Jersey City, N.J.,
force the evacuation of more than 3 million
people and cost more than twice as much as
Katrina. - An insurance-industry risk assessment ranked New
York City as No. 2 on a list of the worst places
for a hurricane to strike Miami came in first.
23Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- The conventional wisdom after Katrina was that
most of the people who failed to evacuate were
too poor to do so. - Overall, 33 said they would not leave or were
not sure whether they would leave if an
evacuation order was given. - But it was homeowners, at 39, who were
particularly stubborn.
24Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
-
- Lack of funds or transportation does play a
role for stay-behinds, but according to the poll,
a greater consideration is a vague belief that
their home is built well enough to survive a
storm - a justification offered by a whopping 68.
25Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
-
- People cherry-pick the lessons of Katrina to
avoid taking action. - 54 of those who say they wouldn't evacuate are
worried that the roads would be too crowded. - 67 believe shelters would be dangerous.
26Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- One of the most damaging legacies of Katrina are
TV images of looting and graphic rumors of
violence that crystallized our belief that we
turn into savages in a disaster. - www.artdiamondblog.com/images/NewOrleansLooting
-thumb.jpg
27Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- A notion that is demonstrably untrue.
28Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Ironically, 66 of those surveyed were also
confident that if they stayed at home, they would
eventually be rescued - a faith hardly justified
by the Katrina experience.
29Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Ours is a strange culture of irrational distrust
- buoyed by irrational optimism.
30Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- When Americans cannot be trusted to save
themselves, the government does it for them - at
least that's the story of mandatory car
insurance, seat-belt laws and smoking bans.
31Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Historically, humans get serious about avoiding
disasters only after one has just smacked them
across the face. -
- What this means is that the emergency management
community will be forced into a situation where
it plans in a vacuum to assist the population it
spite of itself. - If this assertion becomes an operating assumption
and a majority of people do not prepare
adequately, then sound sheltering strategies must
begin in the pre-event stage.
32Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
-
- The issue is much more difficult and basic
-
- It goes to the heart of personal
responsibility and the role of the emergency
response community.
33Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
-
- There is only so much the emergency response
community can do. There is no question that in
general it must take more effort to inform,
involve and advise the public on plans and
programs but there is only so much they can do
without individuals taking some responsibility.
34Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
35Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Shelterees vs. Shelter Residents
- The longer the period the more difficult shelter
operations become - Short- vs. longer-term residents
- Once occupied, how do you get people out of
shelters? - Information management and rumor control
- Support structure
- Psychological issues
- Return to Normal
36Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- After insisting for months that it can
provide only short-term assistance to victims of
Hurricane Katrina, the Federal Emergency
Management Agency is beginning to allow outside
groups to plan for a longer future for its
trailer parks. FEMA and the nonprofit
organization Save the Children jointly announced
in July a plan to open a community center on the
450-trailer Diamond Group Site in Plaquemines
Parish, La. -- the kind of space that FEMA has
resisted providing at other sites. Save the
Children and local charities will work with
residents to secure child care and other social
services, and to create play areas. (National
Journal)
37Disaster Sheltering ConferenceOpen Discussion -
Considerations
- Closing Thoughts/ Observations
- NJs geography presents real planning challenges
- Goal of Disaster Sheltering is to maintain
Business People Continuity - Sheltering is no longer the sole domain of the
state - Nature of the event determines the factors faced
- Know the demographic composition of your
workforce - Liabilities are a fact of life
- Dont let fear of liabilities prevent you from
doing the right thing - Public-Private Partnership is a force multiplier
- Conference Paean Plan, Train Exercise
38Disaster Sheltering Conference Wrap-Up
- Facilitator Observations
- 9-11 changed our perspectives toward emergencies
- Continuity of Community
- Share plans transparency are key to employee
cooperation - Successful shelter management is dependant on
logistics - Shelters operations are detailed involve
varying levels of training - Shelter operations contain complex challenges
- Health Medical
- Special Needs
- Liabilities
- Staffing
39Disaster Sheltering Conference Wrap-Up
- Facilitator Observations (Cont.)
- Plan for special needs populations
- A very diverse group
- Know demographics requirements of shelter
population - Understand fully discharge obligations
- Liability is a balance between doing the right
thing vs. obligations under the law - Katrina validated Response Communitys
unpreparedness - Change of culture needed
- Educate shelter staff about their
responsibilities - Training exercising is essential for success