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U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS EMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTIONS

U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS EMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTIONS. EMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTIONS. ESF#1 – Transportation ESF#2 – Communications ESF#3 – Public Works and Engineering ESF#4 – Firefighting ESF#5 – Emergency Management ESF#6 – Mass Care, Emergency Assistance, Housing & Human Services

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U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS EMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTIONS

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  1. U.S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERSEMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTIONS

  2. EMERGENCY SUPPORT FUNCTIONS • ESF#1 – Transportation • ESF#2 – Communications • ESF#3 – Public Works and Engineering • ESF#4 – Firefighting • ESF#5 – Emergency Management • ESF#6 – Mass Care, Emergency Assistance, Housing & Human Services • ESF#7 – Logistics Management and Resource Support • ESF#8 – Public Health and Medical Services • ESF#9 – Search and Rescue • ESF#10 – Oil and Hazardous Materials Response • ESF#11- Agriculture and Natural Resources • ESF#12 - Energy • ESF#13 – Public Safety • ESF#14 – Long-Term Community Recovery • ESF#15 – External Affairs

  3. ESF#3 – Public Works and Engineering • Infrastructure Protection and Emergency Repair • Infrastructure restoration • Engineering Services and Construction Management • Emergency Contracting Support for Life-Saving and Life-Sustaining Services

  4. ESF#3 TEAM MISSIONS • Emergency Power (7 Districts) • Temporary Housing (Los Angeles District (6 Districts)) • Commodities Mission (7 Districts) • Temporary Roofing (5 Districts) • National Ice and Water (4 Districts) • Debris Removal (8 Districts) • Infrastructure Assessment (4 Districts) • Urban Search and Rescue • DTOS Support

  5. PATH OF HURRICANE KATRINA

  6. Operation Blue Roof (Katrina) • Prevent additional damage to inside of structure until owner can get roof repair. • Cover only “living space”

  7. JOPLIN TORNADO DAMAGES Area destroyed by tornado – 1 mile wide 6.5 miles long (Overall path of tornado was 13.8 miles) 159 Fatalities, over 1,000 injured (149 died 22 May, 10 have since died from injuries) 30% of City destroyed 2,000 buildings destroyed 8,000 housing units and 400 businesses damaged 4 Schools and 2 Fire Stations destroyed 1 Hospital and 2 Nursing Homes destroyed 18,000 vehicles damaged or destroyed

  8. TORNADO TIMELINE 5:55pm 5:49pm 5:57pm 5:46pm 5:43pm 5:41pm

  9. DEBRIS REMOVAL (JOPLIN) MORE THAN ONE MILLION CUBIC YARDS OF DEBRIS WERE REMOVED DURING THE FIRST 4 WEEKS OF THE RECOVERY MISSION

  10. TEMPORARY HOUSING (ALABAMA) During the Los Angeles District’s Housing Team deployment to Alabama more than 400 housing units were acquired, delivered, connected to utilities, furnished, and turned over to families who had lost their homes due to the tornadoes.

  11. THE DEPLOYABLE TACTICAL OPERATIONS SYSTEM (DTOS)

  12. AGENDA • What is DTOS? • Mission • Assets • Custodial Districts • DTOS Operations

  13. DTOS Defined A multi-level national emergency response system strategically located within USACE Divisions to provide timely tactical support for CONUS and OCONUS emergency response operations.

  14. MISSION Provide a tactical operations and communications platform in forward areasto support rapid ramp-up of initial emergency response missions.

  15. ASSETS • Emergency Command and Control Vehicle (ECCV) • Mobile Communications Vehicle (MCV) • Containerized Tactical Operations Center (CTOC) • Emergency Support Unit (ESU)

  16. Emergency Command and Control Vehicle (ECCV)

  17. ECCV Specifications • International Truck Chassis • Length – 47 feet • Height – 13 ft 6 inches • Width – 8ft 6 inches (15 feet deployed) • Weight – 39,000 lbs. (dry) 44,000 lbs (operational) • Engine – 12.4 Liter twin turbo diesel (430 hp. 1,550 lb-ft torque) • Transmission – 6 speed automatic • Fuel Capacity – 140 gal. (twin 70 gal tanks) • Water – 40 gal. potable water • Cost - $600,000

  18. ECCV Layout & Capabilities • Network Connectivity (LAN/WAN) • For up to 25 computers • Backup Computers (4) • Multi-function Phones (11) • VOIP – VSAT based • Cellular – provides fax capability • Iridium – voice only • Radio (ACU1000) • VHF Handheld Radios (8) • HF/UHF/VHF Radios • BGAN (Voice & Data) • Multi-function Printer • Laser Printer • Wireless AP/Bridge • Onboard Generator

  19. ECCV

  20. ECCV Interior

  21. RRV and Satellite Trailer(State of the Art in1988)

  22. RRV Interior (How it used to be)

  23. Mobile Communications Vehicle (MCV)

  24. MCV Layout & Capabilities • Network Connectivity (LAN/WAN) • For up to 25 computers • Backup Computers (2) • Multi-function Phones (2) • VOIP – VSAT based • Cellular – provides fax capability • Iridium – voice only • VHF Handheld Radios (6) • HF Radio • BGAN (Voice & Data) • Multi-function Printer • Wireless AP/Bridge • Onboard Generator

  25. Containerized Tactical Operations Center (CTOC) Capabilities • Network Connectivity (LAN/WAN) • For up to 25 computers • Backup Computers (6) • VOIP – VSAT based (6) • Iridium – voice only • BGAN (Voice & Data) • VHF Handheld Radios (25) • HF/VHF Radios • Multi-function Printer • Fax • Scanner • Printer • Copier • Wireless AP • Generator (Two - 3500W)

  26. CTOC Pieces, Weight and Cube Pieces: 41 Weight: 3,700 pounds Cube: 345 cubic feet Packaging: Two 463L pallets 13 standard pallets

  27. Emergency Support Unit (ESU) • Extra Fuel Supply • Generator • Tools • Supplies • Computer • TV • Air Conditioned • One Chase Vehicle (F250-dually) • One Support Trailer (28ft) • Total length 47ft

  28. MISSIONS • Emergency Command and Control Vehicle • Primarily used to support PRTs • Mobile Communications Vehicle • Used to provide communications support to available workspace (i.e. leased office space, motel, etc.) • Containerized Tactical Operations Center • Same capabilities as MCV but containerized for OCONUS deployment • Emergency Support Unit • Used to support ECCV and MCV to sustain operations

  29. CAPABILITIES

  30. CUSTODIAL DISTRICTS Mobile Sacramento Portland Los Angeles Ft. Worth St. Louis Nashville Baltimore Puerto Rico Hawaii

  31. EQUIPMENT DISPERSION

  32. DTOS OPERATIONS • ER 500-1-30, Dated 31 May 2006 • (Currently under revision) • DTOS Management Team • Custodial Districts • Deployment Teams • Emergency Operations • Non-Emergency Operations

  33. DTOS MANAGEMENT TEAM • Located in Mobile, Alabama • Five-person team • Manages the operation, maintenance, and deployment of DTOS assets and deployed team members • During emergency response, the DTOS Management Team works directly for HQ UOC

  34. CUSTODIAL DISTRICTS • USACE District to which DTOS Equipment has been issued on sub-hand receipt • TEN districts: Baltimore, Ft. Worth, Honolulu, Jacksonville (San Juan, PR), Los Angeles, Mobile, Nashville, Portland, Sacramento, and St. Louis • Custodial District function is care and maintenance of asset according to DTOS SOP

  35. DEPLOYMENT TEAMS • ECCV, MCV and CTOC are crew-served…all trained USACE civilian volunteers • Custodial districts required to have minimum two teams (primary and alternate) • Each ECCV has a 2-person team: Team Leader and Support Specialist • Each MCV has a 2-person team: Team Leader and Support Specialist • The CTOC has a 2-person team: Team Leader and Support Specialist • Approximately 80 volunteers are required to staff the program

  36. DTOS EMERGENCY OPERATIONS • Natural and man-made disasters • DTOS assets are requested • HQ UOC authorizes mission • DTOS Management Team manages deployment • Team deploys within 6 hours of notification

  37. DTOS OPERATIONS Command and Control • DTOS Management Team manages deployment • Management team located at DTOS Operations Center in Irvington, AL (20 miles southwest of Mobile, AL) • During deployment C2 is not transferred to supported command • C2 always with HQ, USACE (UOC) (National Assets)

  38. DTOS OPERATIONS (non-emergency) • DTOS assets are requested • HQ UOC authorizes mission • DTOS Management Team manages deployment • Requesting entity assumes cost • Parades, Festivals, Engineer Day support • Special Training and Exercise Events

  39. EMERGENCY CONTRACTS • During Emergency situations, getting contracts in place to assist in the recovery is time critical. • Normal contracting procedures will not work. • The Corps utilizes existing POCA contracts at the local level, and Headquarters utilizes the Advance Contracts Initiatives (Multi-year contracts). • Stafford Act includes a “local preference” provision which requires preference must be given when feasible and practical to local firms. ( Ex. During the 2011 Alabama Housing Mission the contract requirements included the use of In-State 8A Contractors )

  40. EMERGENCY CONTRACTS For additional information on being added to the list of Contractors who are available for emergency work, and for specific information on contracting requirements, please contact: Mary Spencer, Small Business Specialist US Army Corps of Engineers Los Angeles District (213) 452-3938 Email: mary.e.spencer@usace.army.mil

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