1 / 33

Haz Mat/WMD First Responder Operations Law Enforcement Field Support Course

Haz Mat/WMD First Responder Operations Law Enforcement Field Support Course. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel. Safe Response to Weapons of Mass Destruction & Hazardous Materials Incidents. First Operational Thought – Safety

liliha
Télécharger la présentation

Haz Mat/WMD First Responder Operations Law Enforcement Field Support Course

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. Haz Mat/WMDFirst Responder OperationsLaw Enforcement Field Support Course Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel

  2. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Safe Response to Weapons of Mass Destruction & Hazardous Materials Incidents • First Operational Thought – Safety • Safety starts with the • First Responder on-scene • Responders must have a • Positive Safety Attitude

  3. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Three Techniques to Ensure Safety & • a PositiveSafety Attitude • Safe Approach • Safe Assessment • Safety Guidelines

  4. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Conduct a safe Assessment • (Size-up) • Do not get close enough for positive identification • Slow vehicle down, shut off air/ventilation & observe • Position vehicles headed away from incident • Use binoculars to assess & identify the incident

  5. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Ten Key Safety Issues • 1. Be cautions – treat all unknown substances as hazardous until proven otherwise • 2. Approach from a Safe direction – remain up-wind, up-grade & up-stream • 3. Keep safe distance until an Identification & Hazard Assessment (IDHA) is complete & risks confirmed

  6. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Ten Key Safety Issues (cont’d.) • 4. Isolate the scene & Deny Entry • 5. Do not rush to victims without doing a risk assessment (Risk v. Gain) & without wearing proper chemical protective clothing & equipment • 6. Do not touch, taste or breathe unknown released substance • 7. Do not eat, drink or smoke in incident area

  7. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Ten Key Safety Issues (cont’d.) • 8. Eliminate all sources of ignition near incident area • 9. Establish & observe safety perimeters & control zones • 10. Do not worry about looking foolish (Your health & the health of other is at stake!)

  8. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Isolate the WMD/Haz Mat Incident Scene • First Operational Priority – Isolate the Scene & Deny Entry • Responders can safely isolate & deny entry by establishing Perimeters and Control Zones • The Dilemma of Distance – Safety v. Isolation (distance is safety’s #1 ally – isolation’s #1 enemy

  9. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Perimeters & Zones • Purpose – (1) to ensure safety & isolation, (2) control the scene, (3) limit contamination spread, (4) allow for safe work areas • Main Difference – • FRO’s usually delineate initial isolation perimeter • Tech/Spec’s establish Control (work/safety) Zones

  10. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Perimeter & Zone Terminology • Perimeter – Outside security line and/or line separating Control Zones • Exclusion (Hot) Zone – Area of isolation, the area surrounding the incident, large enough to prevent adverse effects to personnel outside the zone • Contamination Reduction (Warm) Zone – Area between the Exclusion Zone & Support Zone where decon and EZ support activities take place • Support (Cold) Zone – Safe area where CP, medical aid, & support activities take place

  11. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Perimeter Control Objectives • Control of all entry & access points • Use natural terrain & structural features to enhance perimeter delineation, security & control • Control the perimeter between access points • Control access within the perimeter (including responders)

  12. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Perimeter Control Tactics • Determine size & extent of perimeter per ERG • Identify & control all entry points • Identify and establish boundaries for perimeter • Un-staffed barricaded and barrier tape are generally ineffective • Be aware of sources of ignition (vehicles, flares, electronic devices) • Observe and reinforce existing barriers, terrain & structural features

  13. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Perimeter Control Tactics (cont’d.) • Control access to the perimeter: • Deny entry to all unauthorized personnel • Stage all responders without an immediate deployment mission • Establish emergency exit signals & procedures • Haz Mat Group will establish the Control Zones • Be aware of present and future weather conditions

  14. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Essential Notifications for WMD/Haz Mat Incidents • Generally three types of Notifications: • Mandatory Notifications • Requests for Specialized Resources and Reinforcements • Reports of Conditions (SITREPS)

  15. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Mandatory Notifications • Responsible Party – Reportable Quantity • Local Dispatch • CUPA or Local Administering Agency • State Warning Center • National Response Center • Investigative Authority – Criminal Acts – (arson, homicide, terrorism, vandalism, clandestine drugs, improvised explosives, vandalism, environmental crime)

  16. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Resource Requests • Types of Resources – • Agencies & Personnel (Law, Fire, EMS, Health etc.) • Materials & Equipment (Haz Mat Team, Bomb Squad, SWAT etc.) • Facilities & Support (ICP, EOC, shelters, transportation etc.) • Other (EPA, USCG, CST, DOHS, OSHA, OES etc.)

  17. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Resource Request Criteria • Size, type and nature of incident v. resources immediately available • Availability of trained personnel • Availability of specialized equipment • Amount, type of & access to supplies & expertise • Commercial sources • Professional authorities

  18. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Know Your Local Resources • Request WMD/Haz Mat Response resources early • Know your area’s mutual aid system • Stage incoming resources until needed • Provide safe access routes to staging or reporting locations • Your are not alone – contact, coordinate & manage resources properly

  19. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • WMD/Haz Mat Response & Scene Management • Incident Command System (ICS) in California is the required scene management system • ICS is an organized system of roles, responsibilities & SOP’s used to manage & direct operations • CCR 5192(q)(3) requires ICS for Haz Mat events • CFR 1910.120 requires the use of a site-specific ICS • CGC 8607 (SEMS) requires the use of ICS in field emergencies involving two or more agencies

  20. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • ICS General Premise & Basic Principles • Customized Organization & • Management Tool – • Incident Operating Procedures • Common Terminology • Structural Organization

  21. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • So Who’s In-Charge at WMD/Haz Mat Incidents? • WMD/Haz Mat incidents require establishing Command early (more like immediately) • Can be a Single Command with many deputies • Can be a Unified Command with many agencies or jurisdictions • The first arriving FRO – • Assumes temporary command • Establishes a temporary command post • Manages the incident until relieved

  22. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • ICS Organization • Critical components: • Unified organization • Clear functional elements • Flexibility & expandability • Unity of command (w/ chain of command) • Manageable span of control • Effective communications & coordination

  23. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Major ICS Sections & Functions • Command (overall management) • Operations Section (manages tactical operations • Planning/Intelligence Section (does incident action planning) • Logistic Section (procures incident resource needs) • Finance/Administration Section (manages incident financial aspects)

  24. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Know Where You Fit in the Organization • Assisting Agency – contributes service resources to another agency (Law Enforcement Task Force) • Isolate the incident area • Manage crowd control • Manage traffic control • Manage public protective action • Provide scene management for on-highway incidents • Manage criminal investigations

  25. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel

  26. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel

  27. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Protective Actions • Two Key Protective Actions • Evacuation • In-Place Protection • (Shelter-in-Place)

  28. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Evacuation • Purpose – Remove people from threatened area of hazard to safe area of refuge • Evacuation may be the preferred protective action • But it can be logistically and operationally difficult to execute

  29. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • In-Place Protection (Shelter-in-Place) • Purpose – Keep threatened people inside a protective environment • Sometimes it is the only practical protective action

  30. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Protective Action Considerations • Materials involved • Population threatened • Responder resources & capabilities • Time factors involved • Current & predicted weather • Ability to communicate with public

  31. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Protective Action Issues • Coordination with all involved agencies • Clear & concise evacuation message • Traffic control measures specified and in-place • Shelters designated to care for evacuees • Management Problems • Planning Resources • Organizing Resisters • Coordinating Re-entry

  32. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Special Populations & Protective Actions • Hospitals, high rise building, institutions – • evacuation may not be practical • Issues to address – • Pre-planning • Effective communication with institution • Expect problems • Feeding and securing the population • Shift changes for staff • Shortage of needed supplies • Transportation of residents/patients/inmates

  33. Response Actions for Law Enforcement Personnel • Block Summary • Questions • Closing Remarks

More Related