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Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance

Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance. Responsible for providing foreign disaster assistance and coordinating the USG response to disasters abroad. Authority comes from the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended.

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Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance

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  1. Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance • Responsible for providing foreign disaster assistance and coordinating the USG response to disasters abroad. • Authority comes from the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, as amended. • OFDA mandate is to “Save lives, reduce suffering, and alleviate the economic impact of disasters.”

  2. Disaster Assistance and Response Team (DART) • One of several response options for OFDA • Operational element within OFDA • Tested and codified organizational structure • Staffing, managing, training and equipping from existing resources • Experience from many previous deployments • Field Operations Guide

  3. Disaster Assistance and Response Team (DART) • Operational ground presence to carry out sustained relief activities • Develops and implements OFDA’s humanitarian response strategy • Coordinates USG relief efforts with: • UN/IOs and NGOs • Donor nations • Military • Host Nation

  4. Disaster Assistance and Response Team (DART) • Coordinates commodity shipments • Expeditiously funds relief organizations • Monitors and evaluates USG funded relief activities

  5. DART Organization • Approximately 60 personnel • Unified management • Four operational components • Core DART plus three field offices • Multiple Offices – Multiple Agencies • OFDA, FFP, OTI, ANE, GH • State/PRM, CDC/PHS • Phased Deployment based on ability to access populations and implement programs

  6. DART Admin • Phased Deployment: • Maximize number of operational days • Minimum required footprint • Pre-deploy selected individuals to Amman, Turkey, and Kuwait • Call forward of remainder of team • Rear operations under of direction of Plans Officer

  7. DART Admin • Lodging and accommodations • Authorities: • Chief of Mission • US Central Command (CENTCOM) • Personal Equipment • Remote location kits and PPE pre-positioned in theater • Bring personal demand items as required

  8. DART Admin • Travel Authorization/Orders handled by OFDA • Training: Extensive Training Package to support operations in a hostile and austere environment • Additional/refresher training conducted in the field • CBRNE, Communications, others as required

  9. DART Training Courses • Orientation to OFDA • DART/RMT Training • Assessment • Intro to Field Communications • First Aid and Trauma Meds • CBRNE Tier II • Vehicle Safety and Security • Landmine Awareness • Hostage Survival • Working with the Media • Stress Management • Military 101 • International Humanitarian Law and Principles • Iraq Country Briefing • IDP Camp Management • Women and Children Protection • Food Distribution and Feeding Centers • Shelter Construction and Plastic Sheeting • Human Rights, Protection and Stability

  10. DART Deployment Sites • Kuwait City • Amman • Diyarbakir • Deployment in-country dependent on security situation

  11. DART In-country Deployment Sites • Kuwait City • Baghdad • Basrah • Erbil • Al Hillah

  12. DART Roles • Coordinate and disseminate Humanitarian Information • Facilitate HA operations • UN/IO – NGO - Military • Conduct assessments of Humanitarian Situation • Expedite Commodities and funding for implementing organizations • Call forward expertise and commodities to address needs of vulnerable population

  13. DART Roles • Facilitate and implement Transition Activities • Assist in Protection activities and prevention of civilian atrocities • Assist in provision and delivery of food commodities • Facilitate Development activities through coordination with MIW, GH, DG, and ANE staff • Assist in coordination of consequence management activities

  14. DART Sectors • Health, Water/Sanitation, Nutrition • Food Distribution • IDPs and Refugees • Shelter • Protection and Prevention of Atrocities • Commodity and Grant Expedition • Transition Activities • Consequence Management Assistance • Reconstruction Coordination

  15. Water and Sanitation • Most urgent sector • Assess damage to water supply and sanitation facilities • Determine wat/san needs in major urban centers, villages, rural zones, and camps • Develop an operational plan for minimally adequate levels of potable water, sanitary excreta disposal, and waste water removal

  16. Water and Sanitation • Assist in developing strategic plans for rehabilitating and reconstructing wat/san facilities throughout Iraq • Primary partners: CARE, UNICEF, WHO, ICRC, OXFAM and other NGOs • Rapid assessments to identify sources of potable water • Call forward additional expertise and equipment

  17. Health • Prevent excess morbidity and mortality through effective response in public health • Primary health care • Preventative health response • Assess local health infrastructure • Health facilities • Availability of medicines • Immunization status • Health care capacity

  18. Health • Assess basic statistics, level of communicable diseases, severe trauma, etc • Assist in facilitating treatment for civilian casualties • Assess the environmental status with respect to vector control and wat/san • Develop linkages with Iraqi MOH, IOs, and NGOs in the region • Facilitate establishment of nutritional programs, where required • Primary partners: UNICEF, WHO, ICRC, NGOs

  19. Food Distribution • Assist in provision and distribution of food commodities to meet the needs of the Iraqi population • Coordinate with and assist WFP • Focus on reestablishing the existing PDS • Assist in facilitating Port operations • Assess and respond to food needs for displaced populations

  20. Shelter • Assess emergency shelter needs • Assess and respond to displaced populations’ needs • Develop an operational plan to distribute and monitor plastic sheeting • Facilitate procurement and distribution of tents for environmentally insecure populations, if required • Primary partners: NGOs, UN Habitat, UN Agencies

  21. Logistics • Support humanitarian response through prepositioning of commodities and establishment of logistics system • Commodities to meet needs of 1 million • Warehouses located throughout region and worldwide • Delivery of commodities by most effective means • Air, sea, or overland

  22. Logistics • Commodity Stockpiles • 10 liter water containers • 3,000 gallon water tanks • 10,000 and 11,500 liter water bladders • Hygiene kits • Plastic Sheeting • Blankets • WHO Emergency Health Kits • LMS Water Purification Units

  23. Protection and Prevention of Atrocities • Protection Officer and Abuse Prevention Unit added to DART structure • DART not the primary implementation agent • DART will assist in development of prevention strategy • DART will assist in coordination of prevention programs • All field elements tasked with assessing potential atrocities • DART core (especially Info Officers) tasked with identification of potential problems

  24. Transition Activities • Transition Activities led by OTI staff on DART • Core DART will facilitate access and implementation • Primary activities include (but not limited to): • Assisting media and information activities • Small grants to jump start activities • High impact/high visibility projects

  25. Consequence Management • Primary DART function is protection of DART members from exposure/risk • All DART members required to have PPE within reach • DART role in larger CM effort not clarified • DART staffing and training can assist in call-forward and facilitation of CM teams from inter-agency arena

  26. Military Liaison • Military Liaison Officers integral to overall effort • DART will coordinate with, but not subordinate to the HOC • HOC function is to facilitate civ-mil information and assist in access for humanitarian community • MLOs will be located in the Core DART, Field Teams, and at CENTCOM Forward • Primary effort will be with the Civil Affairs units • DART will assist CA units with HA assessment mission

  27. Reconstruction Coordination • DART will coordinate and assist with larger reconstruction effort, when possible • DART ANE staff primarily responsible for passing information to/from MIW, GH, DG, and ANE staff • DART will coordinate activities with reconstruction effort in order to enable expansion of initial projects • Every effort will be made to avoid “stand-alone” activities

  28. Security • Security is non-negotiable • Security Officer has the authority to speak for Team Leader • Security plan will be refined in country • Evacuation plans: All elements of the DART will have and understand the evac plan • Each field element/assessment team will have a situation specific evac plan prior to mission • Primary, secondary and tertiary

  29. Relief Activities OBJECTIVE – Provide Emergency Humanitarian Assistance • Support to IDPs including registration, monitoring, food support through WFP, and support to IDPs and host communities in water/sanitation and primary health • 112 compact water treatment units and 7 plants completed to date; nearly 200 more ongoing or planned • 49 hospital/clinic rehabs completed; 131 more ongoing or planned • 7.5 kilometers of water networks completed, 216 more ongoing or planned • More than 2,000 health care professionals trained at health centers throughout Iraq Progress as of 9/16/03 More Information at www.usaid.gov/iraq

  30. DCHA/OFDA Response Management Team • Chief purposes: • Support DART field operations • Report humanitarian information to global audience • Oversee Washington-based support • Single USAID point of contact for inter- and intragency coordination of relief/operational activities • Planning and strategy development • Allows for unity of effort and streamlined management structure

  31. DCHA/OFDA Response Management Team • RMT provides necessary support to a deployed DART team • Manage USAID response activities • Coordinate interagency cooperation • Full-time, focused, and continuous attention • Flexible organization • Allows for management of entire Agency portfolio – Operational to Strategic

  32. DCHA/OFDA Response Management Team • Five Core Functions to Support Operations: • Management – including press, interagency coordination, information, and financial • Planning • Logistics • Administration – Field and Washington based support • Communications and Records

  33. DCHA/OFDA Response Management Team • Established structure • Policy and Procedures published and in place • Tested, trained and exercised • Proven success in large crises • Comprehensively addresses Agency and USG requirements • Augmented by non-DCHA staff and skill sets

  34. USAID Senior Management DCHA ANE/Technical Bureaus PPC Other USG LPA USAID Sr Rep DART

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