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Approach

Review of the Civil Defence Emergency Management Response to the 22 February Christchurch Earthquake Ian McLean Stuart Ellis. Approach. Ian McLean Outline of review and how it was conducted Broader issues beyond CDEM Response Utilising volunteers Supporting community responses

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Approach

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  1. Review of the Civil DefenceEmergency Management Responseto the 22 FebruaryChristchurch EarthquakeIan McLeanStuart Ellis

  2. Approach • Ian McLean • Outline of review and how it was conducted • Broader issues beyond CDEM Response • Utilising volunteers • Supporting community responses • Information to communities • Links to business and response • Stuart Ellis • Agency Response • The role of doctrine (CIMS) in determining structures • Policing vs CDEM roles in overall control of emergencies • Generating a common operating picture and the role of Intelligence • Pre-determined IMTs

  3. Background to Review of the Response Tragedy • I wasn't out there among the dust and the rubble, the devastation and the danger, the heat and then the cold southerly, and the hundreds of people - many wanting to help and many needing it. • I wasn't trying to make sense of the unfathomable, control the overwhelming, or build a plan on a foundation of uncertainty, rumour and conjecture. • What a hell of a job and, under the circumstances, they did a hell of a job. Let's not forget that. Professor Mike Ardagh; Christchurch hospital ED

  4. The Review was • Reporting to Director CDEM • independent • covered the response period • interviews – 1st hand in response • very experienced team www.civildefence.govt.nz/memwebsite.nsf/wpg_URL/For-the-CDEM-Sector-Publications-Review-of-the-Civil-Defence-Emergency-Management- Response-to-the-22-February-Christchurch-Earthquake?OpenDocument

  5. Review Team • Ian McLeanRotorua • David OughtonWellington • Stuart EllisAdelaide, Australia • Basil WakelinWellington • Claire B. RubinWashington DC, USA.

  6. Findings • Overall Response was well managed and effective • CRC difficult internally • No prior planning for NC move to disaster site • Merger of disparate organisations • Emergency services - impressiveresponse overall • Most lifelines were well prepared • Community organisations of immense value • Significant improvements suggested for most aspects of response

  7. Volunteers Prior doctrine Established volunteers are: • affiliated (a member of a recognised group); • trained with CDEM relevant skills; • accountable and responsible (through their organisation). Spontaneous volunteers are: • unaffiliated (not a member of an organised, recognised group); • untrained in CDEM relevant skills; • not responsible or accountable to any given organisationCDEM “Group planning should include arrangements with local voluntary organisations that have community welfare as a principle objective “The Guide v1.2

  8. Volunteers - Christchurch Spontaneous • Most immediate rescues by “volunteers” CDEM Volunteers at Christchurch • Managed welfare centres • NZ Response Teams • Role ‘light rescue’ • little prior liaison with USAR Also • Red Cross, Salvation Army, Volunteer Fire, etc

  9. Spontaneous Organisations Student Army

  10. Spontaneous Organisations Farmy Army

  11. Spontaneous Organisations Well organised • Planning • Briefing • Health and safety • Leadership in the field • Debrief and wind-down. But there’s more

  12. Spontaneous Organisations Flexible and very responsive Innovative Student army:social media Farmy Army: morning reconnaissance Essential did task beyond official response’s • resources; or • management

  13. Spontaneous Organisations Liaison with CRC • Not easy – little place in doctrine • Improved when CRC manager moved to their HQs at Showgrounds • Succeededbecause CRC didn’t try to manage groups internally • Channels into policy inadequate

  14. Supporting Community Responses CRC not able to support wellbeing • CCC service centresin East not re-opened • Welfare centres in East closed – Burnside instead - across city from most impacted suburbs

  15. Location of Burnside High

  16. Supporting Community Responses CRC not able to support wellbeing - (2) • Food requirements much beyond contracts • Information flow to CRC inadequate • Informationfrom CRC dated, not local - delayed to produce glossy document

  17. Supporting Community Responses Who did provide response? Major response in badly impacted suburbs provided by community groups: Community associations plus

  18. Supporting Community Responses Grace Vineyard Church

  19. Supporting Community Responses Marae

  20. Supporting Community Responses Sumner lifeboat Institution

  21. Supporting Community Responses Sen/Sgt Roy Appley

  22. Supporting Community Responses • Liaison with CRC • Locals felt isolated • Local Police and Fire aware of situationSevere impact – the needy most affected • Lower income suburbs (no reserves food or money) • Ethnic minorities (CALD) Christchurch Migrant Inter-Agency Group — lessons learned following the earthquakes

  23. community and voluntary response • Major component of resilience • Crucial element of social ‘coping’ • Therapeuticfor those not directly impacted to assist others

  24. Supporting Community Responses Support needed • Good liaison on ground • Support resources • Effective contactin CRC • Links with CALD • Recognition of lower income groups’ needs

  25. information to communities Problems • No power – hence no TV, radio or cellphone • Limited newspaper circulation • Needed info continually - food water and sewerage disrupted

  26. Good daily local info - WDC 2010

  27. Christchurch brochure March 2011

  28. Christchurch brochure March 2011

  29. information to communities Requirements • Local real needs – food water welfare today • Right up to date • Frequent – daily during critical times • Accurate • No PR spin • Distributed widely near every house

  30. business and the response Traditionally • Business ignored in response plan - left to recovery • Jobs unnecessarily lost • Response efforts can increase losses - e.g. initial cordon Why ignored? • Huge impact on a CBD unusual in recent times (apart from Kobe) • Hence little documentation

  31. business and the response Positive in Christchurch • Cashinjections - trust was the key • Liaisondeveloped • High percentage of businesses survived Negatives • CBD access initially poor • “Cordon” different meanings among agencies • No business “desk” in CRC • RMA consentingnot responsive enough to situation

  32. conclusions for response • Flexibility important – not just follow doctrine • Response needs to look outwards • Much of the effective response is outside CDEM structure • Community effectiveness enhanced by agencies’ support • Need to link community and business response to CDEM effort • 2 way information flows are vital

  33. Part Two: Stuart Ellis • Shifting focus from external to internal: • Should doctrine determine incident management structures? • The role of CDEM and Policing in overall control of out-of-scale events? • The need to generate a common operating picture? • Optimal models for multi-agency teams?

  34. 1. Should doctrine determine incident management structures?

  35. CIMS • With the movement of the National Controller from Wellington to Christchurch, it presented a dilemma regarding what structure should be developed. • National CDEM Plan and CIMS offers a ‘doctrinal’ solution, (CIMS designed for incident management). • But this was to support the National Controller in a never-before-considered deployment.

  36. Local politics • There was also the influence of local politics. • There was friction between CCC and the local CDEM Group after the Sep 2010 earthquake response. (Cracks appear during earthquakes when relationships are not robust). ‘Dysfunctionally divided’. • A structure was needed that would accommodate the local politics and the existing capabilities. • Politics is the art of the possible!

  37. ‘doctrinal’ Structure

  38. What we were told eventuated

  39. Neither is right of wrong • Those trained will look for doctrinal solution. It is the doctrinal solution probably because it has worked best in the past. • If not prepared/or able to establish the doctrinal solution, remember you have to live with what you have. • Would have benefited greatly from an effective ‘Chief of Staff’ capability. • Be flexible and have alternate plans.

  40. AIIMS

  41. Local politics

  42. Why is intelligence needed? • Only recently formally introduced within AIIMS-4. • Generates the ‘so what’. • Provides the best possible support to decision makers. • Reflects the incident management approach long adopted by the military and policing.

  43. CIMS has those elements in Local politics

  44. AIIMS is a system not a manual or doctrine in isolation

  45. So should doctrine determine incident structures? • Needs to be the base line foundation. • Options and alternatives need to be considered and planned for. • There needs to be good reason to adjust it during operations. • Your previous investment in training is eroded if you change at the time. • Relying on the adaptability of your people.

  46. 2. The role of CDEM and Policing in overall control of out-of-scale events

  47. Who is in control of out-of-scale events? • Initial duplication of control between EOC’s at CCC and Regional CDEM group. • EOCs became centralised at the CCC alternate EOC, the adjacent Art Gallery. • Structurally sound but floor plan inhibited a cohesive EOC. • Police continued to operate from Police HQ.

  48. CDEM were in control of event overall. • Police (and ES) were probably in control of much of the information. • EOC responded to media but may have failed to communicate with the people of Christchurch most needing advice. • ‘Information is power’ and we need to share it around to ‘em-power’ communities.

  49. Unity of Command • CDEM controlled incident from EOC. • Police and Fire Communications in Police HQ was the location of twice daily operational briefings. No CDEM staff were present. • Police in particular, became ‘very well informed’. • How can this be best shared across multi-agencies in a time critical way?

  50. Trained staff performed well • When all were concentrated at CCC EOC to become the single EOC, there were inadequately trained individuals operating within the EOC. The root cause appeared to be a lack of appreciation that management of major emergencies requires skills beyond those needed for day-to-day roles. • It became evident that those with the appropriate training performed well: Training does lead to positive operational performance! • This was reinforced by those from other sectors who were well trained and were supporting the EOC effort such as the health sector, the military, most lifelines and police.

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