1 / 13

Public Safety & Electric Utility Coordination Round Table Discussion Scott Mount

Public Safety & Electric Utility Coordination Round Table Discussion Scott Mount. Before Sept 11, 2001 Utility Industry Trends . Reactive Response to System Maintenance Smaller customer base Infrastructure was primarily manually operated

shaman
Télécharger la présentation

Public Safety & Electric Utility Coordination Round Table Discussion Scott Mount

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. PublicSafety & Electric Utility Coordination Round Table Discussion Scott Mount

  2. Before Sept 11, 2001 Utility Industry Trends Reactive Response to System Maintenance Smaller customer base Infrastructure was primarily manually operated Focus was on De-Regulation, Environmental, & Company Mergers

  3. Before Sept 11, 2001 Public Safety Trends Reactive to Calls For Service Tactics and Training change slowly Reluctant to embrace technology Intelligence is for CID Coordination with other agencies only on special circumstances

  4. Post-Sept 11, 2001 Utility Industry Trends Implement and Practice Incident Command System Document Critical Infrastructure Create Emergency Management Coordinator Position Enhanced System Automation: Scada, Outage Management, GIS Homeland Security Presidential Directive 7

  5. Post-Sept 11, 2001 Utility Industry Events Hurricane Katrina Hurricane Rita Cat 5 Tornadoes Major Ice Storms Oil Refinery Explosions

  6. Homeland Security Presidential Directive 7 • Homeland Security Presidential Directive 7 establishes a national policy for Federal departments and agencies to identify and prioritize critical infrastructure and to protect them from terrorist attacks. The directive defines relevant terms and delivers 31 policy statements. These policy statements define what the directive covers and the roles various federal, state, and local agencies will play in carrying it out.

  7. Post-Sept 11, 2001 Public Safety Trends Homeland Security Agency Created Funding for Training and Equipment Emergency Operations Centers Embrace Technology: CAD Systems, Video Surveillance, Communications

  8. Post-Sept 11, 2001 Public Safety Events Domestic Terrorism/Anti Government Mass Shootings/Active Shooter Iraq and Afghanistan Wars Drug Cartels Sovereign Citizen Movement Failing Economy

  9. Current Public Safety Trends Fusion Intelligence Centers ARIC Mandatory Incident Command Training Vital Information is sent to First Responders Increasing use of technology Creation of TLO Position Tactical Scenario Training: Urban Shield

  10. The next steps • Policy Directive 21 (Presidential PPD-21): Critical Infrastructure Security and Resilienceadvances a national policy to strengthen and maintain secure, functioning, and resilient critical infrastructure. This directive supersedesHomeland Security Presidential Directive 7.Effective Feb 2013

  11. Challenges Employee Retirements ( experience with major events) Reliance on technology, less human inspections Budget Constraints Increase of Domestic Terrorism Coordinated Communication Lack of knowledge / Silo mentality

  12. Closing the GAP Training for Utility Personnel on Suspicious Activity Training for Public Safety on Basic Utility Operations Use Liaison person between Public Safety or TLO and Utility Provider Include Utility Infrastructure Damage during Tactical Training Scenarios

  13. Resources www.dhs.gov/critical-infrastructure-sectors www.dhs.gov/fusion-center-locations-and-contact-information www.txdps.state.tx.us/dem/index.htm

More Related