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The Partnership for Excellence in Pipeline Safety

The Partnership for Excellence in Pipeline Safety. VIRGINIA STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION 2006 GAS PIPELINE SAFETY CONFERENCE. Objectives. Virginia Pipeline Safety Responsibility State Fire Marshal’s Office Emergency Response Awareness Community Awareness RP 1162. Objectives.

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The Partnership for Excellence in Pipeline Safety

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  1. The Partnership for Excellence inPipeline Safety VIRGINIA STATE CORPORATION COMMISSION 2006 GAS PIPELINE SAFETY CONFERENCE

  2. Objectives • Virginia Pipeline Safety Responsibility • State Fire Marshal’s Office • Emergency Response Awareness • Community Awareness • RP 1162

  3. Objectives • Background on NASFM • NASFM/U.S. Department of Transportation Partnership for Excellence in Pipeline Safety • Pipeline Emergencies Training Package • High Consequence Areas • Q&A

  4. Virginia Pipeline Safety Responsibility • State Agencies • State Corporation Commission • http://www.scc.virginia.gov • Department of Emergency Management • http://www.vaemergency.com • VA Department of Transportation • http://www.virginiadot.org • Department of Fire Programs • http://www.vafire.com

  5. Virginia Pipeline Safety Responsibility • State Agencies • Office of Emergency Medical Services • http://www.vdh.state.va.us/oems/index.asp • State Police • http://www.vsp.state.va.us • State Fire Marshal? • http://www.dhcd.virginia.gov/State_Fire_Marshal/default.htm

  6. Virginia Pipeline Safety Responsibility • Local Government • Local Fire Departments and Fire Marshals • Emergency Medical Services • Emergency Services & Haz Mat Coordinator • Police - Sheriff • Schools • Health Care • Other Local Government Agencies

  7. Virginia Pipeline Safety Responsibility • College/Universities – Public and Private • Federal Office of Pipeline Safety • Improve public education programs of pipeline operators • Operators • RP 1162 • Voluntary Standard to help improve awareness

  8. Virginia Pipeline Safety Responsibility • Public • Media • Contractors

  9. State Fire Marshal’s Office • Mission • To Provide Safety to Life and Property From the Hazards of Fire or Explosion for the Citizens of the Commonwealth. • Headquarters and 5 Regional Offices • Responsibilities • Statewide Fire Prevention Code Enforcement • Assistant Building Official for State Owned Buildings • Contracted for Federal Life Safety Code Inspections • Fire Prevention Assistance to Localities

  10. Emergency Response & RP 1162 • Local Emergency Management • Fire Departments • Training • Equipment • Do you encourage pre-planning • Local Fire Marshals • Authority • Ditto

  11. Emergency Response & RP 1162 • Emergency Medical Services • Training • Equipment • Do you encourage pre-planning • Haz Mat Teams & Police • Haz Mat Manager • Ditto

  12. Other Local Government Agencies • Board of Supervisors • Town and City Councils • Mayors, Managers, Administrators • Building Officials

  13. Community Awareness & & RP 1162 • Public • Through Media • Through local officials • Markers • Media • News programs • PSAs • Newapapers

  14. Community Awareness & Operators • RP 1162 • Communication • How often do you or have you talked to local officials • Can you communicate with Emergency Response Teams in an emergency • Will they have necessary access

  15. Community Awareness & Operators • Where do you go • Statewide meetings with Local and State Government participants • Present programs at statewide stakeholders meeting • Participate in expos or trade shows.

  16. Community Awareness & Operators • Where do you go • Board for Contractors • SCC • DEM • Local Fire Department Pub Ed Specialists

  17. Community Awareness & Operators • Who are some of the groups • Virginia Fire Chiefs Association (State Chiefs) • http://www.vfca.us • Virginia State Firefighters • http://www.vsfa.org • Virginia Fire Prevention Association • http://www.vfpa.org • Virginia Building and Code Officials Association • http://www.vbcoa.org • Virginia Emergency Management Association • http://www.vemaweb.org

  18. How Do I Measure Success • Ask the stake holders

  19. The National Association of State Fire Marshals • Represents the most senior fire officials in the 50 states and District of Columbia • Experts in safety, risk management and community outreach • Oversees fire code enforcement, arson and fire investigation, training, public education; provides guidance to governors and legislatures on public safety matters

  20. The NASFM/PHMSA Partnership • The Department of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Safety Administration (PHMSA) is the federal agency with primary responsibility for assuring pipeline safety. • PHMSA’s mission is to ensure the safe, reliable and environmentally sound operation of the nation’s pipeline transportation system.

  21. The NASFM/PHMSA Partnership • In 2002, PHMSA’s Office of Pipeline Safety enlisted NASFM’s help in achieving the goal of zero pipeline incidents. • Facilitate dialogue between the fire service, government officials, public safety advocates, pipeline operators and the communities they serve.

  22. The NASFM/PHMSA Partnership • Deliver expert pipeline incident response training materials to first responders across the U.S. • Develop a model for industry & emergency services to help identify High Consequence Areas and increase Community Awareness efforts in accordance with RP1162 regulations.

  23. Pipeline Emergencies Training Package • NASFM has overseen the development of a comprehensive pipeline safety training program • All materials were reviewed by a group of experts from fire service, state and federal agencies and pipeline industry • American Gas Assoc., Gas Technology Inst. • American Petroleum Inst., Assoc. of Oil Pipelines • Intl Assoc. of Fire Chiefs, Intl Assoc. of Fire Fighters, Nat. Volunteer Fire Fire Council • Maryland Fire and Rescue Training Inst, Texas A&M TEEX

  24. Pipeline Emergencies Training Package • Instructor’s Manual • Student Textbook • Training Video • Website – www.pipelineemergencies.com • PowerPoint Presentations and Interactive Scenarios • Train-the-Trainer (TTT) sessions began in 2005 • 19 TTT sessions have been conducted, over 20,000 textbooks distributed • Distributed free of charge to fire departments and training agencies across the US

  25. Student Textbook

  26. www.pipelineemergencies.com

  27. Train-the-Trainer Sessions • NASFM conducts TTT sessions to teach experienced instructors how to deliver the materials. • Designed for experienced emergency response training instructors to prepare them to deliver the Pipeline Emergencies curriculum to other emergency responders. • No registration fee • Include industry in training classes when possible

  28. High Consequence Areas and RP1162 • To get local, first-hand input from fire service on HCA and RP1162 regulations • To foster cooperation between fire service and industry to: • Properly understand regulations, and identify HCAs now and as they change over time. • Develop protocols for how industry and fire service can work together • Identify technology and other needs to support the HCA and RP1162 regulations and their intent

  29. High Consequence Areas and RP1162 • Form a committee led by local fire service • Other members include industry in county, county emergency managers, law enforcement • Through committee, industry can effectively present HCA and RP 1162 needs to the fire service…and fire service can identify how best it can support industry

  30. How to Contact Us: State Fire Marshal’s Office 501 North 2nd Street Richmond, VA 23219 (804) 371-7170 www.dhcd.virginia.gov Email: ed.altizer@dhcd.virginia.gov

  31. How to Contact Us: National Association of State Fire Marshals 1319 F Street NW, Suite 301 Washington, DC 20004 (202) 737-1226 www.pipelineemergencies.com www.safepipelines.org www.firemarshals.org Email: etucker@firemarshals.org

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