1 / 27

Inclusive Emergency Management

Inclusive Emergency Management. ADA and Emergency Management in North Carolina. Hurricane Katrina (2005). American with Disabilities Act 1990. Title II: Public Entities (State & Local Governments) State and local governments must provide program access to people with disabilities.

silvain
Download Presentation

Inclusive Emergency Management

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. Inclusive Emergency Management ADA and Emergency Management in North Carolina

  2. Hurricane Katrina (2005)

  3. American with Disabilities Act 1990 Title II: Public Entities (State & Local Governments) State and local governments must provide program access to people with disabilities

  4. American with Disabilities Act 1990 Title III: Public Accommodations (Private Businesses) Places of public accommodation must remove architectural barriers

  5. American with Disabilities Act 1990 Title IV: Telecommunications Communications with people with disabilities are equally as effective as communications with others

  6. “But we don’t have the time or money…”

  7. Los Angeles Lawsuit (2009) Communities Actively Living Independent and Free (CALIF), et al. City of Los Angeles

  8. Los Angeles Court Ruling (2011)

  9. New York City Lawsuit (2011) Center for Independence of the Disabled, New York, et al. v. Michael R. Bloomberg and The City of New York

  10. New York City Ruling (2013)

  11. What does that mean to you?

  12. North Carolina will include people with access and functional needs in all aspects of the emergency management system: • Planning • Prevention/Preparedness • Response • Recovery • Mitigation

  13. Let’s do this!

  14. Service Animals vs. Companion Animals Service animals • Dogs • Miniature horses All other animals are companion animals

  15. Service Animals Can only ask two questions: • Is this service animal required because of a disability? • What work or tasks has the animal been trained to perform?

  16. Access and Functional Needs People with Access and Functional Needs People with Disabilities

  17. Access and Functional Needs Communications Maintaining Health Independence Services and Support Transportation

  18. Preparedness • Alert and warning • Personal preparedness • Non-profit agency preparedness • DME agreements • Interpreter agreements • PAS agreements

  19. Planning • Inclusive language in all plans • Planning considerations for people with access and functional needs (sheltering, transportation/evacuation, communication) • Representatives from disability communities on planning committees

  20. Training and Exercise • Trainings with and for people with access and functional needs • Members of training and exercise planning committee(s) • Use of people with AFN in exercises (rather than actors portraying them)

  21. Response • Ask for the resources needed – the earlier, the better • DME, CMS • FAST teams • Early evacuations as needed, including accessible transportation • Accessible services for sheltering

  22. Recovery • Government assistance is fully accessible (e.g. FEMA trailers) • Recovery centers are ADA compliant • Inclusion of AFN on Long Term Recovery Task Forces

  23. Mitigation • Inclusion in mitigation planning • Use of universal design in mitigation measures, if applicable

  24. Sheltering • ADA accessible facility (or capability to make it accessible for duration of shelter being open) • Allowance of service animals • Accessible/assistive supplies • Communication access

  25. Sheltering • Properly trained shelter workers/volunteers • Continued evaluation of needs for resources by people with access and functional needs (Use of FAST teams) • Demobilization planning for shelter guests (are their homes still accessible?)

  26. Communications • Redundant methods of communications before, during and after disasters • ASL interpreters included in press conferences • Multi-language alerts and warnings, as well as video relay alerts • Simple language for ease of comprehension • High contrast visuals (e.g. yellow or white text on black or blue backgrounds)

  27. Contact Sheri Badger Disability Integration Specialist Human Services Branch North Carolina Emergency Management Sheri.badger@ncdps.gov 919-825-2568 desk 919-675-3278 cell

More Related