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New York City Office of Emergency Management

New York City Office of Emergency Management. Radiological Response and Recovery Operational Planning Activities in NYC Regional Response Team II Conference October 28, 2008 Presented by: Kevin Clark, Operations Manager / Response Supervisor. Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor

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New York City Office of Emergency Management

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  1. New York CityOffice of Emergency Management Radiological Response and Recovery Operational Planning Activities in NYC Regional Response Team II Conference October 28, 2008 Presented by: Kevin Clark, Operations Manager / Response Supervisor Michael R. Bloomberg, Mayor Joseph F. Bruno, Commissioner

  2. This is a story about herding cats……

  3. Contextual Programs Leading to the Plan • NARAC / LINC Plume modeling • SMART / RAD Program • NY/NJ Regional Radiological Pilot Program • Urban Dispersion Program • RDD Playbook Project • Securing the Cities • Regional Catastrophic Planning Program

  4. Contextual Programs Leading to the Plan NARAC / LINC Plume modeling SMART / RAD Program NY/NJ Regional Radiological Pilot Program Urban Dispersion Program RDD Playbook Project Securing the Cities Regional Catastrophic Planning Program

  5. Regional Catastrophic Planning • $11M program developed in 2007 • NY/NJ UASI participation • Nine total projects (separate plans) • $500K for Radiological Response and Recovery Plan • Uses an “All Hazard” Framework • Established timeline and contractor deliverables

  6. Planning Context

  7. Further Context

  8. Coordinating Citywide Emergency Response and Recovery

  9. Response Recent Response Incidents: • Deutsche Bank Fire (130 Liberty St) • Brooklyn Tornado • Lexington Ave Steam Pipe Explosion • Crane Collapses Special Projects: • WTC Human Remains Recovery Project • 130 LibertyPlanned Events: • Papal Visit • MLB Events • US Open • Thanksgiving Day Parade

  10. Field Response OEM’s Citywide Interagency Coordinators play a crucial role when emergencies occur • Facilitate interagency communication • Coordinate resource requests • Ensure response agencies’ correct use of command protocols

  11. Command Vehicles Interagency Coordination Center (ICC) Mobile Data Center (MDC) Interagency Communications Vehicle (ICV) • Mission: To provide an on-scene emergency command center and meeting area for interagency coordination. • Staging Area: 930 Flushing Ave • Dimensions: 8.5’W x 47’L x 13’H • Drivers: CDL-drivers • Meeting Capacity*: approx. 24 per. total • - 16 personnel sitting • - 8 personnel standing • Mission: To provide on-scene planning, audio/visual, GIS and Planning support. • Staging Area: 930 Flushing Ave • Dimensions: 8.5’W x 37.5’L x 12’H • Drivers: CDL-drivers • Meeting Capacity: 9-12 per. total • - 6-7 personnel sitting • - 3-5 personnel standing • Mission: To support on-scene communications for response personnel by performing interoperability functions. • Staging Area: 165 Cadman Plaza • Dimensions: 6.5’W x 22’L x 9’H • Drivers: All OEM vehicle drivers • Meeting Capacity: 6 per. total • - 4 personnel sitting • * With table, vehicle can act as dispensing point for gear and/or meds * All meeting capacities are assumed personnel are not in bunker gear. If personnel are wearing bunker, subtract 2-4 personnel from that capacity.

  12. Citywide Incident Management System • NYC’s emergency management operations structure • Defines roles, responsibilities, core competencies for any emergency • All government entities • Non-profit organizations supporting emergency response • Private sector partners • Full compliance with National Incident Management System • Compatible with systems used by other government agencies • Example: • INCIDENT TYPE PRIMARY AGENCY • Confined Space Rescue FDNY • INCIDENT TYPE PRIMARY AGENCIES POTENTIAL PRIMARY • Aviation Incident FDNY, NYPD, PANYNJ USCG, NTSB

  13. CIMS / NIMS Basis

  14. Emergency Operations CenterOEM activates the EOC for large-scaleemergencies or special events • Brings together senior officials from government agencies and private sector and non-profit partners • Central location for response efforts, decision-making, and dissemination of information • Continuous monitoring and immediate response to developing situations • Utilization of CALMS/PALMS

  15. Early Version of ICS Structure

  16. ICS Structure Refined

  17. Leveraged Response Aspects Local agency assets and personnel would provide earlier initial response in the following areas: • Assessment – dual use detection • Stabilization – public works / private resources • Emergency Recovery – after 48 hours / state and federal assistance in scoping the problem • Long-Term Remediation – joint efforts benefited by advance planning and earlier resources

  18. Educating and Informing the Public

  19. Public Information • Ensures the public receives accurate emergency information • Press • Website • Email alerts • 311 • Emergency Alert System • Joint Information Center (JIC) for emergencies • Coordinates unified City outreach to media outlets • Monitors accuracy of information reported in media

  20. Notify NYC is a new service designed to enhance the delivery of emergency information to the public. During the pilot phase, the City will test different kinds of public messaging, including email, text messaging and telephone, to determine the best way to launch a citywide program. There are currently four communities involved in the pilot: Lower Manhattan, Northeast Bronx, Rockaways and Southwest Staten Island. www.NYC.gov/notifynyc

  21. Ready New York • The Ready New York program teaches New Yorkers to prepare for all types of emergencies. Guides are available in up to 15 languages, as well as in Braille and on audio tape. • Chinese • Haitian-Creole • Korean • Arabic • Russian • English • Bengali • Spanish • French • Russian • Yiddish • Urdu • Japanese • Italian • Polish

  22. QUESTIONS? nyc.gov/oem

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