1 / 35

Florida State Emergency Operations Center

ESF-17 Emergency Response Efforts by Greg Christy State ESF17 Coordinator. Florida State Emergency Operations Center. In Florida we are fortunate!. Florida State Emergency Operations Center. We have a great team!. SEOC War Room. Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan (CEMP).

larrymclark
Télécharger la présentation

Florida State Emergency Operations Center

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. ESF-17 Emergency Response Efforts by Greg Christy State ESF17 Coordinator Florida State Emergency Operations Center

  2. In Florida we are fortunate! Florida State Emergency Operations Center

  3. We have a great team! SEOC War Room

  4. Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan (CEMP) • Provides guidance to state and local officials on procedures, organization and responsibilities. • Adopts a functional approach that combines the types of assistance to be provided under each Emergency Support Function

  5. State Emergency Operations Center Governor State Coordinating Officer State Emergency Response Team Chief Operations Planning Logistics Finance/Adm.

  6. Operations Section Emergency Services Human Services Infrastructure Support Operations Support

  7. Emergency Support Functions • ESF 1: Transportation (DOT) • ESF 2: Communications (DMS) • ESF 3: Public Works (DOT) • ESF 4: Fire Fighting (DOI) • ESF 5: Info and Planning (DCA)

  8. Emergency Support Functions • ESF 6: Mass Care (DBPR) • ESF 7: Resource Support (DMS) • ESF 8: Health and Medical (DOH) • ESF 9: Urban Search and Rescue (DOI) • ESF 10: Hazardous Materials (DEP)

  9. Emergency Support Functions • ESF 11: Food and Water (DACS) • ESF 12: Energy (PSC/DCA) • ESF 13: Military Support (DMA) • ESF 14: Public Information (DCA)

  10. Emergency Support Functions • ESF 15: Volunteers and Donations (FCCS) • ESF 16: Law Enforcement (FDLE) • ESF 17: Animal Protection & Agriculture (DACS)

  11. For more information about Florida’s Division of Emergency Management www.floridadisaster.org

  12. State Agricultural Response Team State Agricultural Response Team 14

  13. SART Mission • Empower Floridians through training and resources to enhance animal and agriculture disaster response • Support ESF 17 at the SEOC State Agricultural Response Team 15

  14. SART Organization • SART operates at the state, regional and county levels • SART supports existing emergency management plans State Agricultural Response Team 18

  15. Create a County SART Bring SART to your county… State Agricultural Response Team 25

  16. Participating Agencies • USDA/Farm Service Agency • USDA/APHIS/Veterinary Services • Univ. of Florida/Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences • Univ. of Florida/College of Veterinary Medicine • Univ. of Florida/Department of Plant Pathology • Department of Community Affairs/Division of Emergency Management State Agricultural Response Team 19

  17. Participating Agencies • Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Division of Animal Industry Division of Dairy Division of Plant Industry Division of Ag. Environmental Services Division of Aquaculture Office of Bio and Food Security Preparedness State Agricultural Response Team 20

  18. Participating Agencies • Florida Veterinary Medical Association • Florida Animal Control Association • Southeast Regional Office of the Humane Society of the United States • Florida Cattlemen’s Association • Florida Sunshine State Horse Council • Florida Sea Grant State Agricultural Response Team 21

  19. Participating Agencies • Florida Farm Bureau • Emergency Animal Rescue Society • Florida Nursery, Growers and Landscape Assoc. • Southeast Milk Inc • Florida Assoc. of Kennel Clubs • Farm Credit of South Florida State Agricultural Response Team 21

  20. SART Web Site • Communication bridge between SART and county SART participants and participating agencies • Web portal where all county SARTs and all participating agencies can input information • Alert system through which information can be sent to all county SARTs and all participating agencies State Agricultural Response Team 31

  21. SART Web Site • Schedule of available training opportunities • Resource library • Related web links • County-level resource lists for mutual aid • Contact information for county and state emergency management personnel State Agricultural Response Team 32

  22. For more information aboutFlorida’s State Agricultural Response Team www.flsart.org State Agricultural Response Team 32

  23. Please SIGN IN when reporting for work and SIGN OUT when l leaving for the day! ESF-17Incident Command Post

  24. Hurricane Dennis ICS Org Chart

  25. ESF17 Incident Command Post Morning Briefing

  26. Zoonotic Event By its nature, a zoonotic event involves multiple agencies DOH DAI USDA/APHIS/VS DEP

  27. Definition of Unified Command A team effort which allows all agencies with responsibility for the incident, to jointly provide management direction to an incident through a common set of incident objectives and strategies established at the command level

  28. Unified Command Applications B Incidents that affect more than one political jurisdiction A C A Incidents involving multiple agencies within a jurisdiction DOH FDACS USDA A B Incidents that impact on multiple geographic and functional agencies C D E

  29. Advantages of Using Unified Command One set of objectives is developed for the entire incident, and a collective approach is made to developing strategies. Information flow and coordination is improved between all jurisdictions and agencies involved in the incident. No agency’s authority or legal requirements will be compromised or neglected.

  30. Advantages of Using Unified Command Each agency is fully aware of the plans, actions, and constraints of all others. The combined efforts of all agencies is optimized as they perform their respective assignments under a single Incident Action Plan. Duplicative efforts are reduced or eliminated, thus reducing cost and chances for frustration and conflict.

  31. Unified Command = Unified Team

  32. Questions?

More Related