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Situational Awareness & Assessment

Situational Awareness & Assessment. James R. Kish, Director Technological Hazards Division National Preparedness Directorate . Part of FEMA’s National Preparedness Directorate Charged with emergency preparedness for technological hazards

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Situational Awareness & Assessment

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  1. Situational Awareness & Assessment James R. Kish, Director Technological Hazards Division National Preparedness Directorate

  2. Part of FEMA’s National Preparedness Directorate Charged with emergency preparedness for technological hazards Responsible for community preparedness around national chemical weapons stockpiles (CSEPP) and commercial nuclear power plants (REPP) Coordinate with multiple federal, state and local partners Technological Hazards Division

  3. Critical to coordinate information among local, state, federal, and private sector Provide timely, accurate information for public awareness and decision making Informs decision-making Protective actions – evacuation and sheltering Anticipation and deployment of response resources Helps build public confidence Immediate area Regional National/international Importance of Situational Awareness and Assessment

  4. Determine where and how to deploy resources Government response activities (local/state/federal) Private sector, NGO/faith based Coordinate information for decision-makers at all levels Role of technology Effectiveness of prior planning, coordination, and rehearsal Impact of poorly coordinated, inaccurate, or late information TMI Katrina How Situational Awareness Supports the Response Effort

  5. Situational Awareness: Steady State Situational Awareness (Steady State) NOC Federal Agencies National Watch Center Media State EOC Regional Watch Centers Other Sources State EOC State Warning Centers

  6. Situational Awareness: Monitoring Situational Awareness (Monitoring) NOC Federal Agencies National Watch Center National Response Coordination Center Media State EOC Regional Watch Centers Regional Response Coordination Center Other Sources State EOC State Warning Centers State EOC Incident Command

  7. Situational Awareness: Response Situational Awareness (Response) NOC Federal Agencies National Watch Center National Response Coordination Center Information and Planning Media State EOC Regional Watch Centers Regional Response Coordination Center NIMS/ICS Other Sources Command Staff State EOC State Warning Centers State EOC Emergency Support Functions State EOC Incident Command State EOC

  8. Planning for the Whole Community Integrating and Coordinating Emergency Preparedness, Response and Recovery for Children and Adults with Disabilities and Others with Access and Functional Needs Before, During and After a Disaster. July 19, 2010 FEMA “Whole of Community” Approach

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