1 / 28

Writing an Emergency Operations Plan

Writing an Emergency Operations Plan. Why do we need to plan? Spring 2008. Planning…. …lends to making high quality decisions in a low stress environment. What are we planning for?. Emergencies out of the ordinary requires a response Disasters large scale emergency

Download Presentation

Writing an Emergency Operations Plan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Writing an EmergencyOperations Plan Why do we need to plan? Spring 2008

  2. Planning… …lends to making high quality decisions in a low stress environment.

  3. What are we planning for? • Emergencies • out of the ordinary • requires a response • Disasters • large scale emergency • great damage, loss or destruction

  4. What are the risks? • Minnesota ranks 17th for disasters • Severe weather & floods • Risk Elements • Chemical storage facilities • Terrorist targets • Mall of America • Fortune 500 companies

  5. Why should CBO’s plan? • Trusted resource • Provide critical services • Clients rely on services • Needs increase in disaster

  6. Critical Services • Services that support life • supervision • medical care • activities of daily living • shelter/housing

  7. Critical Services cont’d. • Services that emergency management may need • interpretation and translation • medical supplies and equipment • accessible transportation • specialized communication

  8. Critical Services cont’d. • Services that may increase • crisis counseling • food shelves • crisis phone lines • temporary housing/shelters

  9. How do we plan? • Develop an emergency preparedness plan • Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP) • Plan for all hazards • More than fire safety

  10. Plan for all hazards • Natural • weather, disease • Man-made • power outages, fire • Intentional (terrorism) • anthrax, bombs

  11. Plan Objectives • Ensure safety of staff & clients • Minimize damage • Protect vital records/assets • Be self-sufficient for 72 hours • Continue essential operations

  12. Challenges • Limited background in emergency preparedness or management • Limited resources • May seem overwhelming

  13. Phases of Emergency Management • Mitigation – reduce possibility or impact of an emergency • Preparedness – planning for emergencies • Response – activities undertaken at the time of an emergency • Recovery – return to normal

  14. Getting Started • Form a team • employees • volunteers • board members • Review template • what pertains to your organization • Set goals – one step at a time

  15. Template • Serves as a guide • start the plan • expand existing plans • Tailor to your agency • one size does not fit all • make specific to your needs

  16. Risk Assessment • Possible emergencies • has this happened before? • what is most likely to happen? • location • time of year • physical plant • Opportunities to minimize (mitigation)

  17. Personnel • Information • staff/volunteers/board • how to contact • skills & availability • Crisis manager • incident command • plan for 3 deep • what decisions can be made?

  18. Communication • Multiple systems • remote email • remote voice mail • phone systems • Calling trees

  19. Services and Functions • Essential services • Additional services • Additional clients • Backup services

  20. Record Storage/Back Up • Critical operating information • hard copy records • electronic records • Off-site storage

  21. Key Contacts • Client information • Other key phone numbers • services and utilities • emergency contacts • media • suppliers and contractors

  22. Physical Plant • Location of emergency resources • Emergency procedures • Training

  23. Evacuation • Designated location • Person in charge • Special needs • Transportation

  24. Extended Relocation • Pre-arranged agreement (MOU) • Directions to location • Notification to staff and clients

  25. Shelter-in-Place • Location • Resources • Procedures and training • Listen to authorities for direction

  26. Disaster Supplies Kit/Go-Kits • Various situations • evacuation • extended relocation • shelter-in-place • Essentials • food, water, tools, records

  27. Other Considerations • Individual & family preparedness • a prepared worker is an available worker • Pandemic influenza • a human emergency • Drills and exercises • test your plan

  28. Janet Mengelkoch City of Minneapolis Department of Health & Family Support 250 South 4th Street Minneapolis, MN 55415 612-673-3729 janet.mengelkoch@ci.minneapolis.mn.us

More Related