Title: COURSE OUTLINE
1COURSE OUTLINE
- 0800-0850 INTRO / GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- 0900-0950 VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT
- 1000-1050 EMER. MGMT. CONSIDERATIONS
- 1100-1150 TYPES OF EMERGENCIES
- 1150-1300 LUNCH
- 1300-1350 GENERAL HAZMAT RESPONSE
- 1400-1450 CHEMICAL SPECIFIC RESPONSE
- 1500-1550 PPE / AIR MONITORING
- 1600-1650 REVIEW KENDALL PLAN / EXAM
2CLASSROOM BASICS
- 50 minute sessions / 10 minute breaks
- The Rule of 8s
- Class Atmosphere
- questions anytime
- clarify Kendall aspects all the time
- comfortable, relaxed, no hierarchy
- no sleeping (please stand up, walk around)
3INTRO GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- Our Goal
- Provide a step-by-step discussion on your
emergency management program - creation
- maintenance
- execution
- evaluation
- Didactic - Interactive - Informative
4INTRO GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- Background
- Augusta Company spills sulfur trioxide
- bad press, regulatory attention, public relations
- Amoco faces scrutiny over new school
- emergency plans helped reduce concern
- Pam Tucker
- good, tough, honest, but leaving soon
- Other Examples
- Ford Boiler Explosion, NC Fire, Hurricane Andrew
5INTRO GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- So What???
- Emergencies take their toll on business in lives,
well-being, and dollars - Prevention is the best medicine, but
- Preparedness is the key to survival
- Other Terms
- emergency management, emergency response,
emergency preparedness, emergency planning,
contingency planning
6INTRO GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- The end result is the same
- - limit injuries and damage
- - limit civil/criminal liability
- - regulatory compliance / avoid fines
- return more quickly to normal operations
- protect employees, community, and env.
- enhances company image
- So, lets get into it...
7GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- What is an Emergency
- Any unplanned event that can cause deaths, or
significant injuries to - employees, customers, or the public
- Or, that can
- shut down your business
- disrupt your operations
- cause physical or environmental damage
- threaten the facilitys financial standing
- threaten the facilitys public image
8GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- Numerous Events Can Be Emergencies
- Fire, Explosion,
- HazMat Incident
- Hurricane, Tornado, Flood, Earthquake, Snow
- Civil Disturbance
- Avoid the term Disaster
- confuses impact to different companies
9GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- What is Emergency Management?
- The PROCESS of preparing for, mitigating,
responding to, and recovering from one of these
events - It is a DYNAMIC process, that MUST include
- planning
- training
- conducting drills
- testing equipment
- coordinating activities
10GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- The Five Main Steps
- 1. Establish a planning team
- 2. Analyze capabilities and hazards
- 3. Develop the plan
- 4. Implement the plan
- 5. Go to Step 2
11GENERAL PRINCIPLES Establish a Planning Team
- Forming The Team
- Involve all functional areas
- Support Services
- Management and Personnel
- Emergency Response
- Communications
- Community
12GENERAL PRINCIPLES Establish a Planning Team
- Establish Authority, Schedule, Budget
- commission the team
- wear the managers rank
- issue a mission statement
- establish schedules, deadlines, priorities
- determine the budget (needed vs. approved)
13GENERAL PRINCIPLESAnalyze Capability/Hazards
- Gather info about current capabilities
- review internal plans and policies
- meet with outside groups
- identify codes and regulations
- identify critical products, services, operations
- identify internal resources
- identify external resources
- Conduct a Vulnerability Analysis
- well address this in detail later
14GENERAL PRINCIPLESDevelop The Plan
- The Plan should include an Executive Summary,
Emer. Mgmt Elements, Emer. Response Procedures,
Support Documents - Emergency Management Elements are
- command, control, communications
- life safety, property protection
- administration and logistics
- recovery and restoration
- community outreach
15GENERAL PRINCIPLESDevelop The Plan
- The development process should include
- prioritizing
- writing
- training
- outside coord
- corporate comms
- review/revision
- approval
- distribution
16GENERAL PRINCIPLESImplementation
- Integrate plan into Company Operations
- It should become part of the company culture
- Senior Management support?
- Incorporated into personnel/financial proc.?
- How is the plan distributed/communicated?
- Are all levels of the organization involved?
- Do personnel know what they should do?
17GENERAL PRINCIPLESImplementation
- Conduct Training
- orientation and education sessions
- tabletop exercises
- walk-through drill
- functional drills
- evacuation drill
- full scale exercise
18GENERAL PRINCIPLES
- Does Anyone Remember the Last Step?
- Go to Step 2
19VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- This systematic process of evaluating the
probability and potential impact of each
emergency. - Use a numerical system to
- Assign probabilities
- estimate impact
- assess resources
- The Higher The Score the Better
20VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- List Potential Emergencies
- Include internal and external emergencies
- Factors to consider
- historical
- geographic
- technological
- human error
- physical
- regulatory
21VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- Historical Factors, what HAS occured
- at this facility
- at similar facilities
- at other facilities in the area
- in the community at-large
- Geographical Factors (ie. due to location)
- flood plains, seismic faults
- adjacent company hazards
- airports, railroads, highways, nuclear power
22VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- Technological Factors
- Process Safety
- Computer Failure
- Power Failure
- Emergencies from human error due to
- poor training
- misconduct
- fatigue
- drugs/alcohol
23VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- Physical Factors
- layout of equipment
- proximity of shelter areas
- physical construction
- Regulatory Factors
- Limited by regulations?
- Required to respond by regulations?
24VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- Estimate Probability
- Rate the likelihood of emergency
- Use scale of 1 to 5 (1 lowest probability)
- Subjective consideration
- Be consistent
25VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- Estimate the Potential Human Impacts
- the possibility of death or serious injury
- Estimate the Potential Property Impacts
- cost to repair/replace
- cost of temporary facilities
- Estimate the Potential Business Impacts
- business interruption
- breach of supply contracts
- inaccessiblity by employees, customers, shippers
26VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- Assess Internal and External Resources
- The lower the score the better
- in-house assets/talents sufficient
- responsiveness of external support
- Add the columns
- The lower the score the better
- Subjective, but comparisons provide planning and
resource priorities.
27VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS
- Sounds easy, Right???
- Lets do one on a simple emergency.
28Emergency Management Elements
- Command, Control, and Communications
- Life Safety
- Property Protection
- Recovery and Restoration
- Administration and Logistics
- Community Outreach
29Emergency Management Elements
- Command, Control, and Communications
- SomeONE has to be in charge
- Emergency Action Group
- Incident Commander
- First Aiders, Fire Brigade, HazMat Team
- Emergency Management Group
- Plant Manager, General Manager,
- Safety/Health Manager, Environmental Manager
- Public Relations, HR, Logistics
30Emergency Management Elements
- Incident Command System
- Developed specifically for the fire service
- Can be applied to all emergencies
- Provides for coordinated response and a
- CLEAR Chain of Command for safe operations
- Incident Commander
- frontline management of the problem
- tactical planning and execution
- determines if outside assistance is needed
31Emergency Management Elements
- The Incident Commander must have authority to
- assume command
- assess the situation
- implement the emergency plan
- determine response strategies
- activate resources
- order evacuation
- declare the incident is over
32Emergency Management Elements
- Emergency Operations Center
- communications equipment
- copies of emergency plan / EOC procedures
- blueprints, maps, status boards
- a list of EAG members and their duties
- technical information and data
- data/info management capabilities
- telephone directories
- back-up power, comms and lighting
33Emergency Management Elements
- Emergency Operations Center
- THE centralized management center
- Where the EMG (decision makers) operates from
during an emergency - The ONLY location/source to override the IC
- Must be located in an area of the facility not
likely to be involved in any of the Emergency
Plan scenarios. - An alternate should also be designated
34Emergency Management Elements
- Other Command and Control issues
- Need a predetermined line of succession
- Define duties of personnel with assigned role
- Prepare checklists/procedures for each role
- Maintain logs
- Use security to isolate the involved area
- coordination of outside response
35Emergency Management Elements
- Communications
- Cant stress this enough!
- Think about comms during a routine day, then
think about them during an emergency - Consider comms between
- the EAG and the IC
- the IC and the EOC/EMG
- the EOC and everyone else
- customers, neighbors, media, fire department
36Emergency Management Elements
- Contingency Planning Communications
- Business/Recovery impact
- Prioritize communications
- Consider backup communications
- messengers
- radios short wave, microwave, CB, etc
- satellite
- Family Communications
37Emergency Management Elements
- Communications - Notification
- How should employees report an emergency
- Post emergency telephone numbers
- MAINTAIN a list of repsonders numbers
- consider a weather radio watch
- Communications - Alarm
- Be audible or within view of ALL personnel
- auxiliary power supply
- distinct and recognizable signal
38Emergency Management Elements
- Life Safety
- Evacuation planning
- Pre-determine conditions warranting evac
- Identify personnel authorized to order evac
- Use a system to account for personnel
- Establish alternate muster areas
- disabled / non-English speaking persons
- Define approved shelter areas
- physically sound? Supplies?
39Emergency Management Elements
- Property Safety - Consider
- fire fighting
- spill control/clean-up
- closing barricades, doors, windows
- shutting down equipment
- covering/moving equipment
- protection systems
- retrofitting mitigative modifications
- Facility shutdown (similar to evac policy)
40Emergency Management Elements
- Records Preservation
- A major source of loss, often overlooked
- off site copies
- electronic back-ups
- improved storage
- include in evacuation policy (initial response)
- procedure to recreate lost records
41Emergency Management Elements
- Community Outreach
- involving the community
- mutual aid agreements
- community service
- public information
- media relations
- risk hazard outrage
42Emergency Management Elements
- Recovery and Restoration
- involve your insurance carrier
- determine critical ops and make plans to bring
those on-line first - repair/replace equipment
- relocating operations
- contracting operations
- Community Outreach
- Evaluate continuity of management and key
personnel
43TYPES OF EMERGENCIESFire
- Prevention, Prevention, Prevention
- Fire Extinguishers / Training
- Assign fire wardens to each area
- Predetermine the level of response
- Meet with Local FD to
- review their capabilities
- review their fire plan for your facility
- request their help with evac drills
44TYPES OF EMERGENCIESHazMat Incidents
- Review both on-site and off-site sources
- Highly regulatory environment
- OSHA - HazWoper, HazComm, Resp Standard,
Ventilation - EPA - RCRA, CERCLA, SARA, HMTA, TSCA
- Consider
- labelling, MSDSs (HazComm)
- Predetermine the level of response
- Meet with the Local FD
45TYPES OF EMERGENCIESFloods
- Determine if you are in a flood plain
- Know NOW where the higher ground is
- Establish a weather radio watch
- Consider
- permanent flood proofing measures
- contingent flood proofing
- emergency flood proofing
46TYPES OF EMERGENCIESHurricanes
- The Season is June-November
- This far inland storm surge and direct wind
damage is unlikely, but - Hurricanes can spawn Tornadoes
- Emergency planning involves flood and tornado
preparations
47TYPES OF EMERGENCIESTornadoes
- Winds can reach 300 mph
- Damage up to 1 mile wide 50 miles long
- Establish a weather radio watch
- Designate shelter areas in the plant
- area of 6sqft per person
- structurally sound (engineer)
- away from exterior wall, windows, doors
- conduct drills
48TYPES OF EMERGENCIESSevere Winter Storms
- A little snow can cause a lot of problems
- Plan for shutdowns and early releases
- Plan for employees stranded at the facility
- Back-Up power
49TYPES OF EMERGENCIESEarthquakes
- Geologically minor risk for Augusta
- Ensure new construction considers seismic rating
- prevent resultant damage
- secure shelves and equipment to floor/wall
- secure utility and process piping
- move large heavy objects to lower shelves
- install safety glass where appropriate
- if indoors, stayif outdoors, get away
50TYPES OF EMERGENCIESTechnological Emergency
- Loss of utility service, power, information
system, or critical business equipment - Avoid or mitigate the loss
- redundancy
- plan for rapid restoration
- establish preventive maintenance system
- review building systems with key safety and
maintenance personnel
51TYPES OF EMERGENCIESOthers
- Riot, War, Sabotage, Terrorism
- Workplace Violence
- Bomb Threats
- Emergency Medical Situations
- Lightening
- Wildfire
- Dam Failure
- Radiological
52TYPES OF EMERGENCIESThreat Rankings
53TYPES OF EMERGENCIESLEPC Threat Rankings
- HighwayHazMat
- Power Failure
- Winter Storm
- Flood
- Tornado
- Draught
- Transportation Radioloogical
- Facility HazMat
- Urban Fire
- Rail HazMat
54TYPES OF EMERGENCIESTen Most Costly
- 1992Hurricane Andrew (10.8 Billion)
- 1989 Hurricane Hugo (4.2 Billion)
- 1992 Hurricane Iniki (1.6 Billion)
- 1991Oakland Wildfires (1.2 Billion)
- 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake (960 Million)
- 1983 Winter Storms (880 Million)
- 1992 Los Angeles Riots (775 Million)
- 1979 Hurricane Frederic (753 Million
- 1983 Hurricane Alicia (676 Million)
- 1990 Denver Storms (625 Million)
55GENERAL HAZMAT RESPONSE
- SIZE UP
- The process of gathering and analyzing
information - STRATEGY
- The general plan or course of action for
preventing or reducing effects of an incident - TACTICS
- The methods and tasks used to accomplish the
selected strategy
56GENERAL HM RESPONSESize Up
- Obtain and Evaluate as much information as time
permits - the identity of the material
- the hazards associated with each material
- effects on public, property and environment
- air, land, surface water, groundwater
- determine options for control or mitigation
- determine and initiate safety measures.
57GENERAL HM RESPONSESize Up
- Brief description of incident
- location, date, time, identity, habitation
- Terrain and Site Conditions
- accessibility, dispersion paths, sensitive areas
- Present status and current participation
- Status of communications
- Current / impending weather conditions
58GENERAL HM RESPONSESize Up
- Offsite Reconnaissance
- general layout of the site
- note of containers, building, impoundment
- look for placards, labels, markings
- look for vapors, clouds, run-off, dead animals
- not an unusual odors
- off site samples
- interview people in the area
59GENERAL HM RESPONSESize Up
- On Site Survey
- confirm earlier observations
- s, types, quantities, locations, dispersion
paths - labels, markings, tags
- determine condition of material and container
- assess behavior
- foaming, vaporizing, corroding
- consider air monitoring
- approach from upwind
- assume plume dispersion and set boundaries
60GENERAL HM RESPONSESize Up
- Determine Hazardous Nature of Material
- Toxicity, Corrosivity, Radioactivity
- Biological Hazards, Asphyxiating Hazards
- Flammable Hazards, Explosion hazards
- reactive or unstable materials, oxidizers
- Type, Condition, Behavior of Containers
- under stress from heat or fire
- under stress from mechanical damage
- under stress from chemical reactions
61GENERAL HM RESPONSEStrategy
- Based on priorities established by size up
- rescue, life saving, responder safety
- prevention/mitigation of explosion/fire
- protection of property
- protection of environment
- potential for container failure (additional loss)
- availability of resources and time
- weather conditions
62GENERAL HM RESPONSETactics
- Life Savings Operations
- Rescue
- endangered persons
- Evacuation
- affected persons
- needs to be an early decision, expect delays
- Taking Shelter
63GENERAL HM RESPONSETactics
- Actions/Tasks employed to prevent or reduce the
hazards of the chemcials - extinguishing fires, wetting areas
- controlled burning/detonation
- cooling containers, removing materials
- plugging, patching original containers
- dikes, berms, dams to confine materials to
smallest possible area - chemical/physical methods
64GENERAL HM RESPONSETactics
- Prevent container Failure
- Cool containers
- use stress barriers
- remove uninvolved materials
- Contain Confine the Hazard
- stop the leak
- construct a barrier
- remove ignition sources
- controlled burning
65GENERAL HM RESPONSETactics
- Extinguish Fires
- Use Proper Extinguishing Agent
- Remove Fuel/Oxygen Supply
- Let substance burn
- Exposure Protection
- PPE, CPC, Heat Stress, Decon
- Tactical Withdrawal
- Explosion Barriers
66GENERAL HM RESPONSESummary
- Size up the conditions present
- Define the problems
- Establish priorities
- Evaluate possible courses of action
- Determine if SOPs are applicable
- Determine the best course of action
- Put the strategy in operation
- Review results and Revise