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Partnering in Practice

Partnering in Practice. Photo credit: Michael Vosburg. Carol L. Cwiak Dustin L. Jensen North Dakota State University. Presentation Overview. History & Partnership Opportunities (pre-grant) Grant Application Process A Few Tips… Benefit to EM Hi Ed Program

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Partnering in Practice

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  1. Partnering in Practice Photo credit: Michael Vosburg Carol L. Cwiak Dustin L. Jensen North Dakota State University

  2. Presentation Overview History & Partnership Opportunities (pre-grant) Grant Application Process A Few Tips… Benefit to EM Hi Ed Program Ready Campus Initiative Additional Objectives & Community Partnerships

  3. History & Partnership Opportunities (pre-grant) • Disaster Resistant University (completed 2007) • Student Group Projects • Interns – on and off campus • Faculty Presentations • Local school district – REMS K-12 grant

  4. Grant Application Process • Came through DRU listserv – academic side • Used K-12 experience to inform NDSU process • Partner letters – operational side • Proposal review – all partners • Many hours devoted to understanding the • submission process/system with on-campus protocols

  5. Grant Application Process • Time invested: • 80+ hrs. faculty • 60+ hrs. grad students • 30+ hrs. operational team • Time investment breakdown: • ~ 20% - researching prior awardees • ~ 60% - writing the application • ~ 20% - internal process, partners, etc.

  6. A Few Tips… • Read every single bit of guidance that comes with the grant and mark it up (make sure you have met • all the requirements prior to submission) • Review successful applications • Have others read it critically for consistency, clarity and conformity • Do not wait until the last minute

  7. Benefit to EM Hi Ed Program • Faculty serve as P.I.s on the grant • 4 grad student assistantships funded as part of • grant activity • Solidified academic/operational partnership • Heightened academic program profile across campus • Greater awareness about emergency management across campus with staff, faculty and students

  8. North Dakota State University –Ready Campus Initiative (NDSU-RCI) Funded on year 2 -$412, 352 Dual supervision Project Director – NDSU alumnus Included weather radios Included outreach to other institutions Included broader awareness piece

  9. RCI Project Goals Complete a comprehensive emergency management plan Provide training to students, staff, faculty and community members Conduct a series of exercises to test plan assumptions Integrate emergency management policies, procedures and protocols Increase the number of NIMS courses completed by key NDSU employees

  10. Crisis Management Response Team (CMRT) Critical infrastructure departments represented (i.e., primary responsibilities are critical to operations): • Command Section (President’s Cabinet) • University Police and Safety Office • Facilities Management • Media Relations • Finance and Administration • Student Life • Student Health Services • Information Technology

  11. RCI Team Integration with CMRT RCI Team (grad students): • Embedded within CMRT departments • Single point of contact • Foster relationships • Become trusted advisors • Gently move Ready Campus agenda

  12. RCI Phase One Activities

  13. RCI Phase Two Activities

  14. Phase One Overview Risk and Vulnerability Assessment: • Identify Potential Hazards/Events/Interruptions • Prioritized by Score • FREQUENCY + IMPACTS x LIKELIHOOD = Total Risk Score

  15. Mitigation Measures Identification of potential threats to department staff/students/employees and mitigatory activities: Examples: • Physical: • Smoke detectors/alarms/fire suppression • Security cameras • Broken doors/handrails/card readers • Policy: • Prioritization of snow removal • Additional security presence

  16. Responsive Procedures Compilation of checklists: • Protocols • Procedures • Mission Critical Tools/Equipment

  17. Recovery Continuity of Operations Planning (COOP) • Purpose: • Ensure impact and recovery time is minimal • Methodology: • Identification of departmental critical functions • Establishment of sufficient employee KSA depth • Identification of job duties and material/equipment needed for each position

  18. Interruption Alternatives Key Questions? • What do you need to do your job? • Who will provide/replace your necessary equipment? • Do you have a back up vendor? • What if you need additional assistance? • Do you have an MOU?

  19. Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan Utilizing the above planning steps we develop an all-hazards EOP capable of delivering mission essential information useful in all phases of emergency management operations

  20. Phase Two Overview Training Goals: • Inform NDSU students, staff, and faculty of safety considerations for the home, office and classroom. • Open Training (CERT, NWS SkyWarn) • Closed Training (Threat Assessment, DHS Soft Target, NIMS/ICS 300 and 400)

  21. Phase Two Overview Exercise Goals: Test planning assumptions utilizing: • Drills • Table Tops • Functional Exercises

  22. Phase Two Overview • Integration into key campus publications • Awareness campaigns • Ready Campus Summit

  23. Additional Objectives and Community Partnerships NWS StormReady Program Support of Hi Ed EM legislative agendas Piloting FEMA Course L363 in June ND NG full-scale hazmat exercise in August Sandbagging safety video Subject matter expertise and panel for “Quarantined” EM PSA Program Preparedness Expo/Ready Campus Summit

  24. Contact Us… Carol L. Cwiak, J.D., Ph.D. Assistant Professor/Internship Coordinator Emergency Management ProgramNorth Dakota State University (701) 231-5847Carol.Cwiak@ndsu.edu Dustin L. Jensen Emergency Management Project Director University Police & Safety Office North Dakota State University (701) 231-8598 Dustin.Jensen@ndsu.edu

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