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Who is BENS?. National non-partisan, non-profit organization of business leaders who apply their skills to improve the nation's security ? founded 1982Post 9/11, BENS created regional public-private partnerships to improve homeland security and natural disaster response (?All hazards")RegionsNew
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2. Who is BENS? National non-partisan, non-profit organization of business leaders who apply their skills to improve the nations security founded 1982
Post 9/11, BENS created regional public-private partnerships to improve homeland security and natural disaster response (All hazards)
Regions
New Jersey (2003)
Georgia (2004)
Mid-America (Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska)
Ad-hoc Massachusetts (Democratic convention)
Safeguard Iowa (2007)
California (2006)
Bay Area Business Force
Homeland Security Advisory Council (BENS-HSAC) in Southern California (LA/Orange)
3. Business Role and BENS Focus
4. How Businesses Can Help
5. BENS-Georgia Public Health Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) Mass Dispensing Program
Businesses assist in the distribution and dispensing of medications and supplies in response to bioterrorism
Provide volunteers as non-medical staff at Points of Dispensing (POD) sites
Host PODs (cafeteria or warehouse) for employees, families and community
Advise and assist in logistics/supply chain
SNS Field Exercise in Atlanta (July 2005)
1,200 corporate volunteers
Company served as POD site
After-Action Report
2007: Expanded Atlanta and Los Angeles
Relationships Built through SNS Work Became Foundation for Joint Pandemic Planning
6. Emory University (Buehler) Case Study Initial Challenge: Culture Gap/Stereotypes
Limited familiarity and contacts
Limited precedent for collaboration
History shaped by
Regulation, procurement rules
Differences
Management styles
Business: Centralized authority, standardized procedures
PH: Decentralized authority, local flexibility
Accountability
Business: Shareholders (value efficiency)
PH: Political process
Legal Issues
Confidentiality, liability
7. What Made It Easier to Work Together? BENS focus on:
Volunteer service
Not part of post-9/11 vendor avalanche
Engagement
Senior govt and business leaders
Multiple govt preparedness agencies
Multiple area businesses
Business model
Identify priority tasks
Mesh partners assets
Ambitious, feasible, measurable projects
PH & BENS: Willingness to develop new relationship & commitment to stick with it Emory University (Buehler) Case Study
8. Evidence of Benefit:
Working relationships & trust established
Were on each others speed dials.
"We're learning to think like them and they're learning to think like us.
SNS dispensing
Substantial engagement of private resources & expertise
Successful test of collaborative model & commitment to expand
"Are we better prepared? Absolutely, but we're not ready. We're halfway through the first quarter.
Georgias response to Katrina
Easier for businesses to offer services
Easier for government to ask for help
Expansion to pandemic influenza planning Emory University (Buehler) Case Study
9. Business Response Task Force Report Download PDF at www.bens.org
10. Public-Private Collaboration
Finding
The private sector must be systematically integrated into the nations response to disasters. Government cannot respond alone.
Government and business know intuitively that they need to work together during crisis, but how to do so does not come without effort on both sides.
Recommendations
Institutionalize private sector EOC collaboration in states, urban areas, FEMA regions and FEMA headquarters
11. Accenture
AGL Resources
AirTran Airways
Bank of America
BellSouth
Childress Klein
ChoicePoint
Coca-Cola Enterprises
Colonial Pipeline
Cox Enterprises
DataPath
Deloitte
Delta Airlines
FedEx
Georgia Power
Global Payments
Home Depot
Manhattan Associates
National Business Aviation
Pattillo Construction
Rollins, Inc
Southern Company
SunTrust Bank
Tenon Consulting
The Coca-Cola Company
W.W. Grainger
Wachovia
Wal-Mart
Business Operations Center
12. Golden Guardian Private Sector
13. Surge/Supply Chain Management
Finding
Government needs to improve how it accesses the private sectors vast and efficient supply chains.
Often because of a lack of pre-defined procedures or mechanisms for doing so.
Recommendations
Build a Business EMAC structure
Improve government emergency-purchasing protocols
Modernize logistics processes across the board
14. Business Response Network Secure Web database of private sector resources that businesses pre-register
Resources include:
Equipment (trucks, vans, telecom, etc.)
Buildings (warehouse, cafeteria, office space)
Volunteers (specialties, language skills, etc.)
National Incident Management System (NIMS)-compliant
BENS New Jersey, Mid-America, Southern California
National, state efforts:
BEMAC (Business Emergency Management Assistance Compact): NEMA/BENS Task Force
CDRACPAP (Calif. Disaster Resource and Capability Preparedness Assessment Project)
15. Legal & Regulatory Environment
Finding
Business needs a predictable and less punitive legal regime to contribute more effectively in disaster response
Recommendations
Enact a nationwide body of disaster law
Strengthen and standardize Good Samaritan laws
Calif. Assembly bill AB880
Establish procedures to temporarily relax regulations that can save lives and accelerate response (e.g., truck driver time, state fuel mix, currency reports, anti-trust)
Modify Stafford Act to include the private sector
Hold hearings to determine which recommendations can be implemented under existing law
16. Bay Area Implementation Teams Business Operations Center and Resources Team
Private sector liaison network
Build liaison pool (BARC, BRMA)
Compile emergency contacts
Work with EOCs on training, procedures
Business resources
Recommend database
Technology Tools Team
Specifications and evaluation
Joint Venture: Silicon Valley
Work with EOCs on datafeeds
Public Health Team
Pandemic flu cross-sector collaboration
April 20th Summit & CIDER
Strategic National Stockpile (SNS)
Provide distribution/logistics expertise
Share dispensing best practices
17. Cross-Sector Pandemic Issues Private Sector Communications/Liaison Structure with State and County Public Health Agencies
Private Sector Support for Public Health Medical Surge and Influenza Care Centers
Essential Services Continuity
Internet Continuity
Private Sector Early Detection/Syndromic Surveillance
Other Issues?
18. How/Why the Partnership Works
19. Why Business Needs to Partner with Government
20. Further Information www.BENSbusinessforce.org www.bens.org
Peter Ohtaki, Director BENS Bay Area Business Force
POhtaki@bens.org
(650) 591-7770
Headquarters:
1717 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20006
(202) 296-2125
Other Regional Offices in Los Angeles, New Jersey, Georgia, Missouri, Texas, and Iowa.
21. Backup Slide
22. Local Initiatives Regional Public Sector
Super Urban Area Security Initiative (S-UASI)
Regional Emergency Coordination Plan (RECP)
State Initiatives
Emergency Partnership Advisory Workgroup (OES-DGS-CDHS)
OES SEMS Technical Working Group: Private sector committee
OHS/OES Calif. Disaster Resource and Capability Preparedness Assessment Project (Metrics)
Joint Venture: Silicon Valley Network
Bay Area Response Coalition (BARCFirst) financial services
ORC Worldwide Business Preparedness Leadership Network
San Mateo County Corporate Emergency Preparedness Forum
Pandemic Network
Fritz Institute Bay Area Disaster Preparedness Initiative