Title: Campus Emergency Preparedness
1Campus Emergency Preparedness
- Phil Cox
- Director of Facilities Management
- Cornell University
- plc4_at_cornell.edu
2Top Ten Public Policy Issues for Higher Education
- Homeland Security
- Scientific Research
- The Price of Tuition
- Participation of Low-Income Students
- Diminishing State Capacity
- The Culture Wars
- Economic and Workforce Development
- Accountability to the Public
- Ownership of Intellectual Property
- Aftereffects of Sarbanes-Oxley
Association of Governing Boards of Universities
and Colleges, Public Policy Paper Series 05-01
July 2005
3The Real Stuff
- Tropical storm Allison-U. of Texas, Houston
Medical, 2001 205 Million - Northridge earthquake-CSU Northridge, 1994
380Million - Hurricane Andrew-U. of Miami, 1992 17 Million
- Red River flood-U. of N. Dakota, 1997 46Million
- Residence Hall fire-Seton Hall, 2000 3 dead
4More Real Stuff
- Tornado-U. of Maryland, 2001 2 dead
- Lab fire-U.C. Santa Cruz, 2003 10 years work
- Flood-Colorado State, 1997 100 Million
- Loma Prieta earthquake-Stanford, 1989 ten years
to repair 300 Million - Heat wave/power outage-Columbia U.,
1999 irreplaceable research materials lost
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18Central Emergency Planning Team
- EHS
- Police
- Finance
- Purchasing
- Health Care
- Facilities
- Student Life
- Information Tech
- Risk Management
- Public Relations
- Human Resources
- Academic Unit
19Benchmarks for campus emergency plans
- Stanford University
- University of California, Berkeley
- UCLA
- San Diego State
- University of Maryland, Baltimore
20Lessons from Berkeley Fire
- Establish a permanent unit for emergency planning
with mission, goals, budget, and administrative
support - Focus on communications education
- Staff with effective communicators
- Interact at all levels on campus
- Decentralize involve recipients of services
- Settle for incremental progress
- Surviving a disaster is a must for continuing
your mission - Recovery is a planned process
21Emergency PlanningPolicy 2.10
- Adopts the Cornell Emergency Plan
- Requires all units to complete plans
- Regular updates are required
- Available to EOC on website
- EHS to check for adequacy
22Our mottoAn incomplete plan sure beats no plan
at all
23Emergency Conditions
- Disease
- Drought
- Earthquake
- Evacuation
- Flooding
- Forest fire
- Hail storm
- High winds
- Insects
- Land fire
- Landslide
- Snow
- Tornado
- Uncontrolled animal
- Arson
- Demonstration
- Mass blackout
- Natural gas leak
24Emergency Conditions-cont.
- Power lines down
- Water contamination
- Airplane crash
- Bus crash
- Evacuation
- Helicopter crash
- Large vehicle crash
- Personnel injury
- Rapid transit collapse
- Train derailment
- Chemical spill
- Food contamination
- Nuclear attack
- Domestic disturbance
- Explosion
- Explosives
- Hostage
- Looting
25Emergency Conditions-cont.
- Riot
- Sniper
- Suicide
- Bomb threat
- Building collapse
- Building fire
- Jammed elevator
- Structural damage
- Loss of communications
- Loss of gas supply
- Loss of electricity
- Loss of water supply
- Computer failure
- Poison
- Radiation release
- Toxic material
- Steam tunnel fire
- Subsidence
26Campus-wide Risk Assessment
- RiskProbability x Vulnerability
27High Risk at Cornell
- Hazmat
- High winds/tornado
- Winter storm
- Power failure
- Big fire
- Civil Disorder
- Flood
- Pandemic flu
28Blackout of August 2003
29What are you preparing for? Example, a Hurricane.
- Wind
- Sheer
- Tornado
- Water
- Rain
- Flooding
- Lightning
30Example, a Hurricane.
- Utilities, Or lack of them
- electricity
- Water
- Sewer
- Natural Gas
- Fuel, Or lack of it
31What can you do?
- Check your insurance
- Emergency contact phone numbers
- Suppliers
- roof
- equipment
- ICE
- glass
- Check your equipment
- trucks
- tractors
- saws
- fuel
- Prepare for rising water
- Pre-Trim trees
32What can you do?
- Prepare for single phase conditions and power
surges - Verify shut off locations
- water
- gas
- electrical
- Fill all buried tanks
- Plan for location of debris
- Pre-position your portable generators
- health
- food
- communications
- other (payroll)
33What can you do?
- Web sites
- WWW.nws.gov
- www.fema.gov
- www.nysemo.state.ny.us
- WWW.hurricane.terrapin.com
- WWW.nhc.noaa.gov
- WWW.wunderground.com
- Water conservation measures
- Plan for a place for outside power crews
- Develop your record keeping system
- work orders
- supplies
- receipts
- timecards
- location of work
- equipment time
34Supplies
- Batteries
- Chain saws
- Chains
- 2 cycle oil
- Gloves
- Eye Ear protection
- Radios
- Rope
- Chain
- Flashlights
- extension cords
- fuel
- Generators
- Rain gear
- Coolers
- First Aid Kits
35Supplies
- Plywood
- Screws
- Rakes
- Wet Vacs
- Squeegees
- Compression fittings
- Pipe
- Glass
- Plastic
- Caulk
- Glazing
- Shingles
- Roofing Tar
- Single Ply Repair
36Supplies
- Water (1 gal/person/day)
- Ice
- Food (3 day supply)
- CASH
37Plan elements common to most types of emergencies
- Assignments responsibilities
- Communication
- Evacuation
- Supplies equipment
- Emergency response actions
- Hazard reduction
38Cornells Emergency Management Team
- President
- Provost
- EVP Fin. Admin.
- VP Fin. Affairs
- VP H.R.
- VP Govt Com Rel
- VP I.T.
- VP S.A.S.
- VP Com.Media Rel
- AVP Facil. Services
- University Counsel
39Executive Policy Group
President Provost Executive Vice President VP
Student Academic Services VP Communications
Media Relations University Counsel
Emergency Operations Center
Director
40Major Responsibilities of the Executive (EMT)
- Clearly state university policy.
- Evaluate effectiveness and correct deficiencies.
- Support a multi-agency approach.
41Executive - Delegation of Authority Should Cover
- Legal policy restraints and/or freedoms.
- Limitations on authority.
- Political and social concerns.
- Environmental issues.
- Cost considerations.
42Emergency Operating Center (EOC)
- Cornells EOC is a pre-designated facility
established by the Central Emergency Plan to
coordinate the overall response and support to an
emergency.
43Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Constituents
- EHS
- Facilities
- Health Services
- Human Resources
- Information Tech
- Public Information
- Police
- Purchasing
- Risk Management
- SAS
- Utilities
- Research
44Lines of Authority at an EOC
- Emergency Management Team
- EOC Director
- Department Managers
- On-Scene Incident Commanders
- Assigned Resources
45The Executive (EMT) is generally NOT at the
incident.
- The executive operates from
- Day Hall.
- Through the Emergency Operations Center.
46Stages of Emergencies
- Preparation
- Response
- Recovery
47The Emergency Management Team's response actions
are guided by Cornells desire to protect the
following in priority order
- People
- Research animals and plants and intellectual
property - Equipment and facilities
48OSHA-Minimum Elements for Emergency Plans
- Preferred means of reporting emergencies
- Escape procedures/routes
- Shut-down of critical plant operations
- Accounting for everyone after evacuation
- Duties of response employees
- Roster of references for more information
49http//web.cornell.edu/Emergency/
50Elements of Cornells plan
- Central plan
- Personal plan guide
- Emergency planning template
- Unit plan guide
- Links to emergency resource information
51 Emergency Management Team
University Emergency Operations Center
52Emergency Operations Center
Director of Cornell Police
53Our mottoAn incomplete plan sure beats no plan
at all
54NEVER FORGET---------
55Emergency Preparedness Web Site Upgrade
- Team
- Mary Lynn Cummings - CALS
- Debra Howell - FS Computer and Network Support
- Dan Maas - EHS
- Mike Patten - FS Programming Services
- Autumn Pfister - AFF Computing Resources
- Nianne Vanfleet - Gannet Health Services
- Joe Lalley - FS
56Emergency Preparedness Web Site Upgrade Objectives
- Roster of College/Unit Emergency Coordinators
- Easier Maintenance of Emergency Plans
- Broaden Access to Plans
57Roster of College/UnitEmergency Coordinators
- Maintained by College/Unit
- Coordinator contact information maintained by
College/Unit or the staff person - Maintains privacy of certain information
- Identifies an emergency coordinator by relating
them to organization, department and/or facility
codes
58Easier Maintenance of Emergency Plans
- Identify 1 or 2 persons per College/Unit
- Maintain coordinator contact information
- Identify building and emergency coordinators by
relating them to one of their organization,
department and/or facility codes - Manage updates and access to plans
- Use databases to manage certain portions of
plans, e.g. Staff Rosters
59Broaden Access to Plans
- Associate plans with organization, department
and/or facility codes - Associate people to plans
- Organization, department and/or facility codes
- Presence on a staff roster for a plan
- University role or function
- Automate notification of updates
- Segmentation of plans
- Confidential sections
- Managed access
- Kerberos (NetID) authentication
- Permit direct download of plans
60Proposed Changes
- Personal Planning Resources and General Emergency
Information - Move to
- http//www.cornell.edu/emergency
- http//emergency.cornell.edu
61Resources
- Grant from Executive Vice President for Finance
and Administration - Support from Vulnerability Assessment Team
- Tactical support from Facilities Services
- Member of the Emergency Planning Team
- You
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63Questions and Ideas
- Joe Lalley
- JML2_at_cornell.edu
64Our mottoAn incomplete plan sure beats no plan
at all