Title: Cal State San Marcos Emergency Management Program
1Cal State San Marcos Emergency Management Program
- Dean Manship, CIA, CCSA
- Emergency Management Coordinator
- dmanship_at_csusm.edu
- (760) 750-4503
2Why Are You Here?
- Required under Government Code 8607
- Executive Order 921
- CSUSM Emergency Management Policy
3What is Emergency Management?
- Emergency management is the process of
coordinating available resources to deal with
emergencies effectively, thereby saving lives,
avoiding injury, and minimizing economic loss.
4Emergency Management Program
- Emergency Management and planning is a continuous
cycle - Mitigation
- Preparedness
- Response
- Recovery
5Emergency Management Program
- Mitigation phase includes any activities that
prevent an emergency, reduce the chance of an
emergency occurring, or reduce the damaging
effects of unavoidable hazards.
6Emergency Management Program
- Preparedness phase includes developing plans to
ensure the most effective, efficient response
taking steps to minimize damages, training, and
equipping the EOC for operations during
anemergency.
7Emergency Management Program
- Response is the first phase that occurs after the
onset of an emergency or disaster. It is intended
to provide emergency assistance for
casualties, including search and rescue,
shelter, and medical care.
8Emergency Management Program
- Recovery activities undertaken during this phase
involve steps to return to normal operations
after an emergency. (Business Continuity)
9California Government Code Section 3100-3109
- All public employees (State Employees) have
disaster service worker status and could possibly
be utilized in the event of an emergency. - Oath or Affirmation of the California
Constitution.
10What are the types of Emergencies?
- Natural Disaster Floods, Earthquakes, Storms
- Technological Incident Power Outage, Systems
failure, Cyber sabotage - Fire or Haz-Mat Building fire, Explosion, Toxic
leak, Airborne contaminant - Violence or Disorder Terrorist attack, Serious
crime, Workplace violence, Bomb Threat, Shooting
11How to Prepare for an Earthquake / Emergency
- Know the safe spots in your office
- Know the danger spots
- Keep 2 exits in mind
- Know where stairwells and fire extinguishers are
located
12How to Prepare for an Earthquake / Emergency
Emergency Survival Kit for Car
- Food
- Water
- Blanket
- First Aid Kit
- Family Phone Contacts
- Medications
- Spare Eyeglasses
- Flashlight
13During Any Emergency
- Dial 911 or 4567 from any campus phone
- Pull Building Alarm
- Call Out Emergency
- Assist anyone needing help
- Never use Elevators Never Re-enter a Building
Until Deemed Safe to do so by Emergency
Personnel
14When an Earthquake Strikes
15When an Earthquake Strikes
- When Shaking Stops Evacuate the Building
- Assist Disabled Personnel
- Go to your Designated Gathering Site
- Never use Elevators Never Re-enter a
Building Until Deemed Safe to do so by
Emergency Personnel
16Building Marshal Program
Incident Commander
Program Coordinator
Building Marshal
FloorMarshal
FloorMarshal
FloorMarshal
17Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS)
18Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS)
Management Section
- Coordinates campus emergency response.
Establishes emergency response policies, and
is responsible for activation, oversight and
termination of the EOC.
19Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS)
Operations Section
- Represents the campus emergency services
units (the on-scene emergency responders).
Operations is responsible for the assessment
and implementation of field operations through
recovery operations.
20Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS)
Planning Section
- Responsible for receiving, evaluating, and
analyzing all event information and providing
updated status reports to the EOC Management
and field operations.
21Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS)
Logistics Section
- Responsible for procuring supplies, personnel,
and the material support necessary to conduct
the emergency and recovery operations (e.g.
personnel call-out, equipment acquisition,
lodging, transportation, food, etc.).
22Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS)
FinanceSection
- Responsibility for cost accountability and risk
assessment. Finance documents expenditures,
purchase authorizations, claims of damage to
property, tracks equipment usage, and vendor
contracting. All response personnel time tracking
and Worker's Compensation record keeping is
the responsibility of Finance.
23Emergency Preparedness Information Sources
- http//www.csusm.edu/ep/
- http//www.csusm.edu/police/
- www.oes.ca.gov
- http//www.redcross.org/
- http//www.dhs.gov/dhspublic/
- http//www.fema.gov/