Title: LIVING WITH THE EARTH
1LIVING WITH THE EARTH
CHAPTER 14 EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS
2Objectives for this Chapter
- A student reading this chapter will be able to
- Discuss the history and origins of Incident
Command System (ICS), the National Incident
Management System (NIMS), and The National
Response Plan (NRP). - List and describe the major components of ICS,
NIMS, and NRP
3Objectives for this Chapter
- A student reading this chapter will be able to
- Describe and discuss the role of Environmental
Health professionals in emergency/disaster
response.
4Introduction
- It is not terrorist bombs or the release of
anthrax spores that spawned the birth of modern
day emergency preparedness. -
USS Cole
5Introduction
- It began with a wildfire in Southern California
in 1970 that swept through several counties
during a 13 day period burning more than half a
million acres, destroying over 700 structures,
and costing 16 lives.
6FIRESCOPE
- the 92nd Congress approved funding for the U.S.
Forest Service Research group to design a system
or process to significantly improve the capacity
of the agencies in Southern California to provide
protection against wildfires.
This became known as FIRESCOPE (Firefighting
Resources of California Organized for Potential
Emergencies).
7FIRESCOPE
- There were five major program components that
required planning and attention. - The coordination of the resources among many
agencies during a large incident, - Creating a standard and easily understood
terminology by all participants to avoid the use
of professional jargon that would differ among
police, fire, and emergency medical responders, -
8FIRESCOPE
- Develop systems and technical capacity that would
permit communication among many participating
agencies, - Provide training to all members of the
participating agencies in communication,
terminology, and command structure, and - Develop better methods for predicting the
behavior of fires.
9Incident Command
- These objectives were ultimately condensed into
two components of the FIRESOPE system designated
as - Incident Command System (ICS) that provided a
specific command structure and coordinated
incident management tool. - Multi-Agency Coordination System (MACS) that
improved coordination among multiple agencies for
large incidents that demanded massive resources.
10ICS
- ICS structure and successfully employed ICS on a
number of wild land and urban fires in 1978. - The use of ICS expanded to non-fire incidents.
- The management of these incidents was
all-hazard as they employed the well documented
and proven command structure of ICS to a wide
variety of incidents.
11NIIMS
- Initial steps to extend this ICS management
structure began in 1983 with the creation of the
National Inter-Agency Incident Management System
(NIIMS).
12Post 9/11
- In swift reaction to 9/11, the Homeland Security
Act of 2002 (H.R. 5005-8) was approved with the
purpose of establishing a Department of Homeland
Security (DHS) as an executive department of the
United States.
13DHS Mission
- The mission of DHS is to prevent terrorist
attacks within the United States, reduce the
vulnerability of the U.S. to terrorism, and to
minimize damage and assist in recovery from those
terrorist attacks that do occur in the United
States. - DHS was officially established on January 23,
2003 causing a massive reorganization of the
government
14DHS
- More than 20 Federal agencies were directed to
become part of the DHS and to be compartmented
into one of four directorates including 1) the
Border and Transportation Directorate 2) The
Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate
3) the Science and Technology Directorate and 4)
the Information Analysis and Infrastructure
Protection Directorate.
15HSPD-5
- President Bush issued Homeland Security
Presidential Directive 5 (HSPD-5) on February 28,
2003. HSPD-5 directed Secretary of Homeland
Security to develop and then administer a
National Incident Management System (NIMS) in
order to provide a consistent management tool for
government, private, and nongovernmental
organizations to function together during a major
incident.
16ICS and NIMS
- Among the most likely reasons for response
failure in an emergency includes confusion about
who is in charge, unclear lines of authority, and
lack of clear communication. The management model
used successfully for more than 30 years to
overcome these problems is ICS.
17ICS
- ICS position titles are distinct and recognizable
anywhere in the country and at any agency or
organization using the ICS system. There is only
one Incident Commander at each incident and only
that person is given the title, Commander.
Members of the command staff are called Officers,
and members of the general staff are called Chief
18ICS
19ICS
20ICS
- ICS provides a very clear reporting structure so
that each response person knows to whom to report
and what they are expected to do. All response
personnel answer to one immediate supervisor and
can be assured that communication will be
understandable and in plain English.
21ICS
- ICS structure may be greatly expanded if the
incident grows or is already complex and large.
22ICS
- Public health doesnt normally function within an
ICS command structure as do police, fire, and
EMS, since most public health departments and
agencies are quite small, personnel have defined
roles, communication is usually simple, and there
are very few immediately life threatening
incidents.
23ICS
- Whether large or small incidents, the response of
Public Health needs to be within the NIMS/ICS
framework. In order to better understand how ICS
might work within a Public Health structure, a
detailed description of the Public Health
Incident Command System is available online at.
- http//www.ualbanycphp.org/pinata/phics/guide/defa
ult.cfm
24NIMS
- The purpose of NIMS is to provide a unified
national response to incident management for all
potential incidents regardless of size and
complexity. A major objective of NIMS is also to
improve coordination and cooperation among public
and private agencies and organizations throughout
a whole range of domestic incident management
activities.
25NIMS
- NIMS is composed of six related components that
function together as a system to prepare for,
prevent, respond to, and recover from domestic
incidents
- Command and Management
- Preparedness
- Resource Management
- Communications and Information Management
- Supporting Technologies
- Ongoing Management and Maintenance
26Command and Management elements of NIMS
- The Command and Management elements of NIMS
during an incident is based on the use of ICS
for establishing the operation and structure of
incident management organizations - Multi-agency Coordination System which defines
the operation and structure of supporting
entities - and Public Information Systems that establishes
the processes, communication systems , and
procedures for delivering timely and accurate
information to the public.
27Preparedness NIMS
- NIMS compliancy also requires participating
entities to be prepared and to provide continuing
pre-incident training, planning, exercises,
personnel qualification checks, certification
standards, and equipment acquisition and
certification standards.
28Resource Management NIMS
- NIMS requires effective resource management so
that there are standard methods for managing
equipment, supplies and personnel throughout the
incident.
29CommunicationsNIMS
- Similarly there needs to be a standardized system
for communications information management
including systems and technology procedures that
work across all agencies, and a mechanism of
assuring that information flows smoothly through
a commonly accepted architecture. -
30Unified Command
- When there is more than one responding agency or
there are incidents that cross jurisdictional
boundaries, a Unified Command may be employed
whereby command decisions and planning are
completed by senior representatives of the
participating organizations who comprise the
Unified Command
31Area Command
- Area Command is used for coordinating multiple
incidents with different incident command posts
(ICP). - An Area Command structure does not require an
Operations section since those functions are
normally performed at each site.
32National Response Plan (NRP)
- The Homeland Security Presidential Directive
(HSPD-5) led to the creation of the National
Response Plan (NRP) in establishing a single,
comprehensive approach to domestic incident
management to prevent, prepare for, respond to,
and recover from terrorist attacks, major
disasters, and other emergencies.
33NRP
- The NRP is constructed around the previously
described NIMS and is intended to be an
all-hazards plan that provides the structure for
incident management at all levels of federal,
state, and local government and for any major
type of incident including a major public health
emergency. -
- The NRP is designed to be scalable and flexible
to meet the needs of incident management ranging
from multi-jurisdictional to Incidents of
National Significance (INS) such as massive
hurricane.
34NRP
- The NRP and NIMS are companion documents that
function together to integrate the capabilities
and resources at all government levels,
non-government entities, tribal, and
private-sector organizations into a coordinated
national response for domestic incident
management.
35NRP
- When an incident occurs, it is managed at the
lowest jurisdictional level possible. If it is a
train derailment with the release of a toxic gas
as an example, it may be handled locally with the
assistance of State agencies and response teams.
The NRP does alter the typical ICS response of
first responders to carry out their functions or
responsibilities. Should the derailment incident
expand to multiple jurisdictions or states with
greater potential consequences, then more than
one federal, state or local agency will have
jurisdiction.
36NRP
- The Incident Commanders from each agency will
form a Unified Command to coordinate resources,
develop a common Incident Action Plan with a
unified set of objectives. An Incident Command
Post (ICP) will likely be designated and the
Unified Command develops the NIMS/ICS command
structure from the top-down according to the size
and complexity of the incident.
37Environmental Health Response
- The American Public Health Association (APHA)
collaborated with EH practitioners to create
three major EH competency areas now in use by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). These
three major EH competencies include - Assessment gathering information, data analysis,
evaluation - Management record-keeping, problem solving,
project management - Communication risk communication, conflict
resolution, education
38Environmental Health Response
- Environmental health personnel should participate
in the development of the emergency response
plans since the plans provide direction for EH
professionals during an incident response. - The EH professional will have responsibilities
for identifying, monitoring, and reducing
environmental hazards that may impact on the
health of the community during a disaster.
39Environmental Health Response
- Conducting these activities requires EH personnel
to work in partnership with other responding
organizations in the emergency management
structure including police, fire, public works,
Red Cross, medical response teams, and so forth.
40Environmental Health Response
- The EH personnel will be expected to perform
their assigned duties often based on a
pre-defined set of activities defined in a Job
Action Sheet (JAS) created as part of the
emergency response plan for their agency. A JAS
describes the functional role of a
position/person in an emergency response.
41Environmental Health Response
- A set of immediate actions suggested by the
Minnesota Department of Health to rapidly restore
environmental health services during and after a
disaster would include - Obtaining information on the movements of
populations at or near the incident site
identifying the location of facilities used to
house displaced persons, hospitals, and medical
facilities and determining where relief workers
will be housed to determine if those living
quarters meet sanitary and housing codes. -
42Environmental Health Response
- 2. Determine what capacities remain for
delivering basic environmental health services
including inspection and regulation enforcement
of food, water and housing. - 3. Quickly assess what damage has occurred to
those food, water, housing, solid waste, and
other environmental entities that fall under the
Public Health regulations and ordinances. The EH
professional should also attempt to discover what
the immediate needs are for safe water, housing,
food and sanitation.