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Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP)

Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP). SELF-HELP GUIDE. AGENCY LOGO. Introduction. You need help…let’s face it. Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program or HSEEP for short.

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Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP)

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  1. Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP) SELF-HELP GUIDE AGENCY LOGO

  2. Introduction • You need help…let’s face it. • Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program or HSEEP for short. • A federal requirement for those agencies that receive funding through the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

  3. The 15 National Planning Scenarios Reflect common vulnerabilities Have been designed to test capabilities Scenarios are flexible and can be applied to a range of response levels

  4. The Scenarios 1: Nuclear Detonation – 10-Kiloton Improvised Nuclear Device 2: Biological Attack – Aerosol Anthrax 3: Biological Disease Outbreak – Pandemic Influenza 4: Biological Attack – Plague 5: Chemical Attack – Blister Agent 6:Chemical Attack– Toxic Industrial Chemicals 7: Chemical Attack – Nerve Agent 8: Chemical Attack – Chlorine Tank Explosion

  5. The Scenarios (cont.) 9: Natural Disaster – Major Earthquake 10: Natural Disaster – Major Hurricane 11: Radiological Attack – Radiological Dispersal Devices 12: Explosives Attack – Bombing Using Improvised Explosive Devices 13: Biological Attack – Food Contamination 14: Biological Attack – Foreign Animal Disease (Foot and Mouth Disease) 15: Cyber Attack

  6. Target Capabilities & the Universal Task List are Derived from these Scenarios https://hseep.dhs.gov/pages/1001_HSEEP7.aspx

  7. https://hseep.dhs.gov/pages/1001_HSEEP7.aspx

  8. Toolkit Strengths • Stores exercise data • Repeat exercises • Basic information is automated. • Writing and rewriting tasks are reduced. • Exercises stick to the INITIAL objectives (No “mission-creep.”) • It’s official!

  9. What is HSEEP Compliance? • Training and Exercise Plan Workshop (TEPW) • Exercise Planning and Conduct • After-Action Reporting   • Improvement Planning

  10. Training and Exercise Plan Workshop (T&EPW) Includes: • The entities' training and exercise priorities (based on an overarching strategy and previous improvement plans.) • The capabilities from the TCL that the entity will train for and exercise against. • A multi-year training and exercise schedule.

  11. Exercise Planning and Conduct • The type of exercise selected by the entity should be consistent with the entity's Multi-year Training and Exercise Plan. • Exercise objectives should be based on target capabilities and their associated critical tasks, which are contained within the EEGs. • The scenarios used in exercises must be tailored toward validating the capabilities, and should be based on the entity's risk/vulnerability assessment.

  12. Site Liaison https://hseep.dhs.gov/pages/1001_HSEEP7.aspx

  13. Documents created (when appropriate) • For Discussion-based Exercises (e.g., TTX): • Situation Manual (SITMAN) • For Operations-based Exercises this requires (e.g., Full-Scale): • Exercise Plan (EXPLAN) • Player Handout • Master Scenario Events List (MSEL) • Controller/Evaluator Handbook (C/E Handbook)

  14. SITMAN should include- at a minimum • Schedule of events • Purpose and scope • Design objectives • Exercise structure • Instructions for exercise conduct • Roles and responsibilities • Assumptions and artificialities • Exercise rules • Scenario • Participant questions • Reference appendices

  15. After-Action Reporting   • Following every exercise, an After-Action Conference (AAC) must be conducted, in which: • Key personnel and the exercise planning team are presented with findings and recommendations from the draft AAR/IP. • Corrective actions addressing a draft AAR/IP's recommendations are developed and assigned to responsible parties with due dates for completion. • A final AAR/IP with recommendations and corrective actions derived from discussion at the AAC must be completed within 60 days after the completion of each exercise.1 1This can be shorter based on grant/agency.

  16. Improvement Planning • An improvement plan will include broad recommendations from the AAR/IP organized by target capability as defined in the Target Capabilities List (TCL). • Corrective actions must be linked to a capability element as defined in the TCL. • Corrective actions must be measurable. • Corrective actions must designate a projected start date and completion date. • Corrective must be assigned to an organization and a point of contact within that organization.

  17. Improvement Plan (IP) https://hseep.dhs.gov/pages/1001_HSEEP7.aspx

  18. How do I get Started? • The first step in any Self-Help program is to acknowledge that you have a problem and you need to seek help. • Other trained agencies, staff, or your State Office of Homeland Security is a good place to begin. • Moving toward accessing resources for that help is a step in the right direction. • See the Self-Help packet for references and online links to helpful tools and documents.

  19. What type of HSEEP Exercise do I do? • Discussions-based Exercises • Seminar • Workshop • Tabletop (TTX) • Games • Operations-based Exercises • Drill • Functional Exercise (FE) • Full-Scale Exercises (FSE)

  20. Levels of Exercise design • Seminar: Think teaching strategies/styles. • Workshop: Plan writing workshop with the goal of arriving at a product at the end. • Tabletop Exercise (TTX): Typically in groups that will use a scenario and test hypothetical policies/procedures. • Games/Drills: Coordinated supervised activity that practices the use of equipment, protocols or plans. • Functional Exercises: Simulated events when you are testing actual operations. Not all functional exercise tests every function. • Full Scale Exercise: Multi-agency and multi-jurisdictional players respond as if it were an actual incident.

  21. “Well begun is half done!”-Mary Poppins • An Excel spreadsheet: • Name, Agency, Phone Number, and Email • Exercise Objectives: • Review the Target Capabilities List • Exercise Evaluation Guides- EEG’s • Download from: https://hseep.dhs.gov/pages/1002_EEGLi.aspx • Gather General Information: Time, Date, Maps, etc… • Set up a system for sharing files/documents in planning the exercise: • A Resource Binder • FTP address (inter-agency file sharing- talk to your IT). • Create a Reference list for players

  22. HSEEP Resources • HSEEP Classes are offered regularly. Check with the Division of Emergency Management, or your State Office of Homeland Security for information regarding their training program. • HSEEPhttps://hseep.dhs.gov/ • HSEEP Toolkit: • https://hseep.dhs.gov/DHS_SSO/?ReturnUrl=%2fhseep_em%2fToolkitHome.aspx

  23. HSEEP Toolkit https://hseep.dhs.gov/pages/1002_EEGLi.aspx

  24. Begin an Exercise using the Toolkit • For questions regarding the HSEEP Toolkit Systems (to include system access) please contact: HSEEP Toolkit Help Desk(877) 612-HELP (4357)support@hseep.net • Call and obtain your password • Login to the Toolkit • Create an exercise following the prompts

  25. Other Resources • Plague: http://www.bt.cdc.gov/agent/plague/trainingmodule/powerpoint.asp • Water system: http://www.epa.gov/safewater/watersecurity/tools/trainingcd/Pages/scenario1-s.html • Hospital surge: http://www.nyc.gov/html/doh/html/bhpp/bhpp-train-hospital.shtml

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