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The Changing Risk Environment

The Changing Risk Environment. Public Health & Mapping Workshop 2005-11-21. Purpose Provide a *brief* provincial perspective on: Emergency Management 1000 Changing Risk Environment Recent Lessons Learned What’s Needed. Emergency Management Arrangements … and policy plans process

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The Changing Risk Environment

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  1. The Changing Risk Environment Public Health & Mapping Workshop 2005-11-21

  2. Purpose Provide a *brief* provincial perspective on: • Emergency Management 1000 • Changing Risk Environment • Recent Lessons Learned • What’s Needed

  3. Emergency Management Arrangements … and policy plans process systems training program resources education Relationships knowing who to call knowing who you’re calling

  4. Emergency Management Not just planning and response; pillars are: • Prevention; • Mitigation; • Preparedness; • Response; and • Recovery . . . for all hazards, risks and vulnerabilities.

  5. What has Changed? • Environment • Diversity of threats, risks and hazards • Impacts of climate change • Science and technology • Public expectations • Public policy • Executive

  6. What has Changed? • Structures • Departments of Public Safety, 2000 • National Security Policy, 2003 • Public Safety & Emergency Preparedness Canada, 2003 • Emergency Management & National Security Branch, 2004 • Governance Structures (Federal and FPT Fora), 2005

  7. What has Changed? • Consequently: • Emergency Management and public health being redefined as key components of national security. • Increased interaction among emergency management, health and security actors. • Increased requirements for information and application sharing and integration. • Comprehensive risk based programs

  8. Point Lepreau Generating Station Industrial Accidents

  9. Hurricane Juan 2003 Natural Disasters

  10. Infectious Disease Infectious Disease

  11. September 11, 2001 Deliberate Acts

  12. Executive Roles

  13. Incident Management Systems

  14. Systems Approach

  15. To send a Notification

  16. Web Conferencing

  17. Web Conferencing

  18. Real-Time Communications

  19. Business Requirements … • Centralized infrastructure, applications and databases • Consistent process and tools, across organizations • No special user or client side requirements • Remote access / distributed access • Real time communications • Security

  20. Security Requirements … • Secure Server Environment (Government Standard) • Managed Access (Secure Internet Portal) • Encrypted Transactions (SSL) • Site / User Administration

  21. What is Needed? The changing environment for EM requires: • all emergency agencies to work closely together, • risk based emergency programs, • a community of practice, • public participation, • collaboration tools, • standardization.

  22. What is Needed? • Emergency Management Culture (Community of Practice) • Emergency Management Profession (Discipline & Practice) • Doctrine • Certification • Knowledge Base • Program Standards • Program Evaluation

  23. Questions? Ernie MacGillivray ernest.macgillivray@gnb.ca 506-453-2133 800-561-4034

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