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Building Legal Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies April 19-20 East Lansing, Michigan

Building Legal Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies April 19-20 East Lansing, Michigan. Conducting an Effective Emergency Legal Training Exercise Mike Cox Attorney General. Michigan Presented by: Robert Ianni, Director Homeland Security and Special Projects. Some Philosophy.

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Building Legal Preparedness for Public Health Emergencies April 19-20 East Lansing, Michigan

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  1. Building Legal Preparednessfor Public Health EmergenciesApril 19-20East Lansing, Michigan Conducting an Effective Emergency Legal Training Exercise Mike Cox Attorney General. Michigan Presented by: Robert Ianni, Director Homeland Security and Special Projects

  2. Some Philosophy “In preparing for battle, I have always found that plans are useless but planning is indispensable.” Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower “Practice is the best of all instructors.” Publilus Syrus (100 BC)

  3. More Philosophy “Everyone has a plan, until they get hit.” Mike Tyson

  4. National Policy on Training “Our federal, state, and local governments would ensure that all response personnel and organizations ... are properly equipped, trained and exercised to respond to all terrorists threats and attacks in the United States.” National Strategy for Homeland Security, July 2002

  5. Why Exercise? • Test policies, plans, procedures, training, equipment, etc • Identify needed personnel • Clarify roles and responsibilities • Improve inter-agency coordination and cooperation • Identify deficiencies • Improve performance

  6. Types of Exercises • Seminar • Workshop • Tabletop • Functional • Full-Scale

  7. Seminar • Informal discussion • Involves agency planning seminar • Less than half a day

  8. Workshop • Informal group-facilitator led, breakouts • Cover specific issues/activities; develop product • Cross agency • Half a day

  9. Tabletop • Formal, using simulated scenario • Group discussion, facilitator led • Best to identify agency strengths and weaknesses • Usually more than one agency • Half a day

  10. Functional • More complex and realistic than tabletop • Uses simulated scenario • Activate Emergency Command Center • Attempts to simulate real time response • Multi-Agency • Full day

  11. Full Scale • Most complex, uses actors to simulate emergency • Multi-location and multi agency • Multi levels of response involved and tested • Emergency Command Center activated • Supervised by Exercise Manager • Usually 1-3 days

  12. Exercise Development ProcessFive Major Phases: 1. Baseline review 2. Exercise development 3. Conduct the exercise 4. Evaluation 5. Follow up

  13. Exercise Planning Team • Review existing plan • Assess capability • Estimate cost • Determine type and scope of exercise • Appoint design team • Appoint evaluation team • Establish schedule • Review design exercise

  14. Planning Team, con’t • Locate facility • Identify participants • Prepare facility • Provide materials • Brief participants • Conduct exercise • Document activities

  15. Design Team • Creates the factual scenario • Creates supporting documents, assist on logistics and planning • Ensures that scenario is interesting, challenging, and realistic • Consider agency’s goals, capabilities, assets, and expertise • Multi-disciplinary

  16. Exercise Design • Identify functions to be tested -mobilization -communication -coordination and control -access to research -access to judicial resources -alternate OP center

  17. Exercise Goals • Gives participants clear understanding of reason for the exercise • General and specific goals • general goal: test ability of agency to provide timely and accurate advice to health director. • specific goal: prepare and secure a quarantine order from a particular court w/in a set time frame

  18. Exercise Tools • Participant handbooks • Ground rules • Legal manual • Facilitator handbook • Evaluation guide • Computers, flip charts, projectors

  19. Exercise Events • Major and Detailed Events=Expected Actions • Major event: Problems that are likely to occur based on past experience or case studies • Detailed events: Springs from the major event = Expected Actions: Expected conduct based on emergency operations plan and known procedures

  20. For Example: • Tested function: Coordination and communication • Scenario calls for smallpox outbreak Major Event: Suspected carrier has been identified Objective: Prepare legal team, coordinate with health officials, prepare court quarantine order within 3 hours

  21. Example Con’tExpected actions: Legal: • notify legal team • secure evidence • alert judicial officers Public Health: • locate data and official to prepare affidavits • locate witnesses • secure medical team to execute court order

  22. Example Con’t Judiciary: • arrange emergency hearing • locate judge • secure appropriate site Detailed Event: Respondent not represented Expected action: Appoint counsel (stand-by) Respondent unable to attend Expected action: Create alternate participation procedure

  23. Elements for Success • Participants • dep’t lawyers • law enforcement agencies • health agencies • private sector • other gov’t personnel • Leaders a/k/a Controllers, Facilitators • Evaluators

  24. Messages Messages allow for communication during exercise • maintain order • maintain record • can be pre-scripted or spontaneous

  25. Enhancements Add realism to exercise • maps, radios, overheads, power points • visual aides • volunteers • judges, outside counsel

  26. Debriefing-”Hot-wash” • Feed-back needed for evaluation • Participants, Controllers, and Evaluators • Identify deficiencies • Record and Document

  27. Exercise Evaluation • Begins at earliest stage • Document what works as well as what needs to be worked on • Identify needed changes to procedures, emergency plan, or equipment • Involve a variety of disciplines • Use standard forms • Prepare post exercise report

  28. Post Exercise Actions • Adopt and implement changes based on evaluations and “hot-wash” debriefings • Appoint personnel to carry out changes • Establish timeline • Follow up in future exercises

  29. Wrap Up and Questions

  30. THANK YOU Robert Ianni Director, Homeland Security and Special Projects, 517-335-4810 Iannib@michigan.gov

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