| 
  • If you are citizen of an European Union member nation, you may not use this service unless you are at least 16 years old.

  • Whenever you search in PBworks or on the Web, Dokkio Sidebar (from the makers of PBworks) will run the same search in your Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive, Gmail, Slack, and browsed web pages. Now you can find what you're looking for wherever it lives. Try Dokkio Sidebar for free.

View
 

Hazards

Page history last edited by indychristian 9 months ago

[Return to Ready Indy Training page]

 

[Future:  We need to develop an HVA (Hazards Vulnerability Assessment) (course) from our ReadyIndy perspective.]

 

5 Types (Levels) of Incidents (Scope/Size/Complexity)

  • Type 5 -- very localized - one or two resources usually - most are this size.
  • Type 4 -- several resources needed -- one operational period control-phase.
  • Type 3 -- multiple operational periods.
  • Type 2 -- beyond local capabilities.
  • Type 1 -- most complex - national.

 

 

7 Broad Categories of Incidents Annexes:

 

 

Specific HAZARDS info... as we develop our generic EOP, with available Hazard-specific nuances...

 

 

Special Vulnerabilities:

 

And some special CONSIDERATIONS and SOLUTIONS:

The NRF Emergency Support Function Annexes include the following enumerated protocols:[4]

 

 

Potential ReadyIndy (SEE OPERATIONS) Plans in Response:

 

 

Specific Plans for Certain Hazards

 

 

 

 

Yet To Do:  ReadyIndy -- Develop RESPONSE ACTIONS (in context of which hazards The Church can best help with):

  • Warning the public and providing accessible emergency public information.
  • Implementing evacuation and sheltering plans that include provisions for special needs populations and household pets.
  • Sheltering evacuees in preidentified, physically accessible shelters.
  • Providing food, water, and other necessities to meet the needs of all people, including persons with disabilities and other special needs.
  • Performing search and rescue.
  • Treating the injured.
  • Providing law enforcement and investigation.
  • Controlling hazards (extinguishing fires, containing hazardous materials spills, etc.).
  • Ensuring responder safety and health.

 

 

 

 

Ref:  Also see SimulatedEmergencies

 

 

 

 

 

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.