Title: Emergency Operations Plan
1Emergency Operations Plan
- Creating a High-Quality Emergency Operations Plan
- for your church
2Agenda
- Welcome and Introduction
- Types of Disaster
- Planning Process
- Caring for Congregants
- Staying prepared
3Wake Interfaith Disaster Team
- Formed in 2002
- Primary goal
- Serving unmet needs in long-term recovery phase
- Secondary goals
- Fostering development of congregation teams
- Training volunteers for response phase
- Preparation/Mitigation
- Coordinated recovery 2011 tornados
- NC Baptist Men were key partners
4Phases of Disaster
5Preparing an Emergency Plan
- No universal plan
- Different risks/hazards at each facility
- Can you name some?
- Trees near building
- Flash flooding
- Others?
- Tools to make a plan
6Your Planning Team
- Need a team to develop the EOP
- Administrator/Facilities chair/Board Member
- Leads plan development
- Ministers/Teachers/Ushers
- Direct the response
- Why?
- Administrator has time, knows building and
hazards - Minister/teacher present when crowd is present
- Minister on pulpit with microphone, commands
respect - Minister/teacher looked to as authority
7Consequences of Diverse Team
- Everyone must buy in
- Everyone must be prepared to execute the plan
- Why?
- Knowledgeable leader/teacher might not be present
- Regular practice
- Tabletop exercise at every staff meeting?
- Live Drills? Tornado or fire drill in religious
school?
8Agenda
- Welcome and Introduction
- Types of Disaster
- Planning Process
- Caring for Congregants
- Staying prepared
9Wake County Hazards
- Hazmat release
- Hurricane
- Public Health
- Flood
- Winter Storm
- Tornado
- Wild Fire
- School Violence
- Fire
- Criminal Act
- Drought
- Earthquake
- Train Derailment
- Airplane Accident
- Civil Disorder
- Severe Weather
- Utility Failure
10Other Hazards
- Cyber Events
- Medical Emergency (Asthma, seizure, cardiac
problems) - Severe Weather (SIP, cancel services)
- Burglary, Theft, Vandalism
- Disturbance (argument, threats)
- Gas odor, smoke odor
11Response
Plan to stay
Plan to go
12Hazard Responses
- Plan to Stay
- Shelter In Place
- Tornado
- Hazmat outside
- Utility outage
- Lightning
- Plan to Go
- Evacuate
- Fire
- Flood
- Hazmat in bldg
- Bomb threat
- Tsunami
- Gas leak
- Plan to Restrict
- Lockdown
- Intruder
- Suspicious person
- Dangerous person
- Active shooter
13Agenda
- Welcome and Introduction
- Types of Disaster
- Planning Process
- Caring for Congregants
- Staying prepared
14Planning Principles
- Supported by leadership
- Consider all threats and hazards
- Consider all settings and all times
- Provides for the access and functional needs of
the whole house - Follows a collaborative process
15The Process in 6 Steps
- Form collaborative planning team
- Understand the situation
- Determine goals and objectives
- Identify courses of action
- Plan preparation, review and approval
- Plan implementation and maintenance
16The Process in 6 Steps
- Form collaborative planning team
- Understand the situation
- Determine goals and objectives
- Identify courses of action
- Plan preparation, review and approval
- Plan implementation and maintenance
17Understand the Situation
- Probability or frequency
- Magnitude (extent of damage)
- Time available to warn occupants
- Duration
- Follow-on effects
18Worksheet Example
Hazard Probability Magnitude Warning Duration Risk Priority
Earthquake 4. Highly likely 3. Likely 2. Possible 1. Unlikely 4. Catastrophic 3. Critical 2. Limited 1. Negligible 4. Minimal 3. 6-12 hours 2. 12-24 hrs. 1. gt 24 hrs. 4. 12 hours 3. 6-12 hours 2. 3-6 hours 1. lt 3 hours High Medium Low
Fire 4. Highly likely 3. Likely 2. Possible 1. Unlikely 4. Catastrophic 3. Critical 2. Limited 1. Negligible 4. Minimal 3. 6-12 hours 2. 12-24 hrs. 1. gt 24 hrs. 4. 12 hours 3. 6-12 hours 2. 3-6 hours 1. lt 3 hours High Medium Low
19Sample Risk Assessment Worksheet
Risk/Threat/ Situation Likelihood of Occurring 1 Likely 5 Not likely Seriousness if Occurring 1 Very 5 Not Very Location likely to occur
Fire
Medical Emergency
Severe Weather
Burglary/Theft
Office Disturbance
Other Emergency
20Example Goals for Fire Hazard Plan
- Three possible goals for a fire hazard include
- Goal 1 (Before) Prevent it from happening
- Goal 2 (During) Protect people and property
- Goal 3 (After) Triage provide needed medical
aid
21Examples Objectives for a Fire Hazard
- Goal 1 (Before) Prevent it from happening
- Objective 1.1 Fire prevention training for
staff and volunteers - Objective 1.2 Store combustible materials in
fireproof containers or rooms - Objective 1.3 Plan for an alternate meeting
location and continuity of services.
22Examples Objectives for a Fire Hazard
- Goal 2 (During) Protect people and property
- Objective 2.1 Evacuate all people from the
building and grounds. - Objective 2.2 Immediately call 9-1-1, fire
department and EMS - Objective 2.3 Account for everyone known to be
on site.
23Examples Objectives for a Fire Hazard
- Goal 3 (After) Triage provide needed medical
aid - Objective 3.1 Immediately render first aid to
those in need. - Objective 3.2 Contact insurance company
- Objective 3.3 Implement continuity of operation
and continuation of services plan
24Examples Objectives for a Fire Hazard
- Goal 2 (During) Protect people and property
- Objective 2.1 Evacuate all people from the
building and grounds. - Objective 2.2 Immediately call 9-1-1, fire
department and EMS - Objective 2.3 Account for everyone known to be
on site.
25Examples Goals Objective for Evacuation
Function 2.1
- Before Ensure everyone knows their evacuation
route. - Function/Action 1.1 Assess, identify and
communicate the location of assembly points - During Evacuate the building immediately
- Function/Action 2.1 Everyone get out go to
assembly points - After Confirm that all are safely out
- Function/Action 3.1 Take head count who was
next to, in front of and behind you?
26For Each Hazard
- ? 2 or 3 Goals
- ? 2 or 3 Objectives per Goal
- ? 2 or 3 Functions or Courses of Action per
Objective
27Identifying Courses of Action
- What is the action?
- Who is responsible for the action?
- When does it take place?
- Where does it take place?
- How long should the action take and how much time
is actually available?
28Identifying Courses of Action (2)
- What happened before the action?
- What happens after the action?
- What resources and skills are needed?
- How will this action affect specific populations
children, elderly, disabled?
29Steps 5 and 6
- 5 Plan Preparation, Review Approval
(training testing) - 6 Plan Implementation Maintenance
30A plan is nothing, planning is everything.
- Dwight D. Eisenhower
- General of the Army
- and 34th President
31Agenda
- Welcome and Introduction
- Types of Disaster
- Planning Process
- Caring for Congregants
- Staying prepared
32Caring for Congregants
- Planning a safe response is not sufficient
- Why?
- Cant give direction with people screaming
- Panicked people wont follow direction, may
evacuate when they should shelter in place - Children in school may scream in a silent
lockdown - Need to reassure congregants
33Reassuring Congregants
- How?
- Familiar plan thats been practiced
- Confident and reassuring leaders
34An experience
- On the morning of November 17, 2013, a powerful
tornado tore through Washington, Illinois.
35An experience (2)
- On the morning of November 17, 2013, a powerful
tornado tore through Washington, Illinois. - On Sunday morning Associate Pastor Ben Davidson
of Bethany Community Church was preparing to
begin his adult Sunday school class, when he
received an emergency phone call. A tornado had
touched down and their church was in its path. - Immediately he and the staff worked to move the
congregation--particularly the children--to their
designated shelter in the church location and
they began to pray together as the storm passed
through their community. - The entire congregation comforted one another
through what Pastor Davidson recalls as "the
longest 45 minutes of my life." Once all
congregants were accounted for and families could
leave the sheltered location Pastor Davidson
immediately went home to confirm the safety of
his children who were at home sick that morning. - Immediately following the disaster, Bethany
Community Church joined its fellow members of the
Washington Ministerial Association, AmeriCorps
and the Illinois Voluntary Organizations Active
in Disaster to help coordinate the communitys
recovery efforts.
36Agenda
- Welcome and Introduction
- Types of Disaster
- Planning Process
- Caring for Congregants
- Staying prepared
37Staying Prepared
- A plan that no one remembers is worthless
- Hesitating leads others to give erroneous
guidance - Hesitant directions cause uncertainty
- What to do?
- Regular tabletop exercises
- Administrator leads at monthly board meetings
- Ushers, teachers meetings
- Annual drills Fire, Tornado, Lockdown
38Preparation
- Fire extinguishers checked annually?
- People trained on fire extinguishers and AEDs?
- Emergency lighting checked?
- Flashlights available and checked
- Classroom doors lockable and coverable?
- Tornado alert available when in worship?
- Office events
- Business Continuity
39Resources
- Todays charts are available online at
http//www.wakeidteam.org/documents - Materials from the January 28 workshop including
presentations, FEMA manuals, sample plans, and
other resources are also available at
http//www.wakeidteam.org/documents