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Tactical Interoperable Communication Plan TICP. March 3, 2011. Introductions . Tim Pierce – Southwest SCIP Coordinator. Agenda . What is a TICP? Parts of the TICP Why you should have a TICP How you can get a TICP. What is a TICP. TICP = Tactical Interoperable Communication Plan
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Tactical Interoperable Communication PlanTICP March 3, 2011
Introductions Tim Pierce – Southwest SCIP Coordinator
Agenda • What is a TICP? • Parts of the TICP • Why you should have a TICP • How you can get a TICP
What is a TICP TICP = Tactical Interoperable Communication Plan TICP is intended to document the interoperable communications resources available within the County Who controls each resource, and what rules of use or operational procedures exist for the activation and deactivation of each resource. A tool used for incidents and planned events
What is Tactical Interoperable Communication Defined as the rapid provision of on-scene, incident based mission critical voice communications among all first-responder agencies (EMS, fire and law enforcement), as appropriate for the incident, and in support of an incident command system as defined in the National Incident Management System (NIMS) model.
Why you should have a TICP Expand participation in its decision-making group. Execute formal agreements among participating agencies to include Federal, State, and tribal agencies. Expand multi-disciplinary participation to develop standard operating procedures (SOPs). Ensure that all participating first responder agencies attain and maintain National Incident Management System (NIMS)/Incident Command System (ICS) compliance. Also helps to identify weaknesses
Why you should have a TICP Expand participation in its decision-making group. Execute formal agreements among participating agencies to include Federal, State, and tribal agencies. Expand multi-disciplinary participation to develop standard operating procedures (SOPs). Ensure that all participating first responder agencies attain and maintain National Incident Management System (NIMS)/Incident Command System (ICS) compliance. Also helps to identify weaknesses
Parts of the TICP • County Name Information • Participating Jurisdictions/Agencies/Disciplines • TICP Point of Contact • Governance
Parts of the TICP • Interoperability Equipment, Policies, and Procedures • Shared Systems • Intra-System Shared Interoperability Channel(s) • Inter-System Shared Channel(s) Policies and Procedures • Gateways • Cache Radios
Parts of the TICP Mobile Communications ARES/RACES Satellite Phones Mobile Repeaters or Transportable Communications Systems Alternate Public Safety Answering Points (PSAPs) County Emergency Resource Staffing CASM
Parts of the TICP - Appendix Points of Contact Shared Systems Inter-system Shared Channels Gateways Radio Caches Mobile Communications Units Policy Documents, Governing Documents, MOUs, and Agreements
Parts of the TICP - Appendix State of Wisconsin Communications Assets and other Information/DNR Information Incident Command System Planning Reference Materials Glossary
How you can get a TICP Your Regional Coordinator will hold a workshop with a “get-it-done” approach. A template and guidance document is provided as a starting point but is flexible to meet your needs
How you can get a TICP • Contact your Regional SCIP Implementation Coordinator • Work with stakeholders in your county • Yes it will take you some time and effort to create a TICP for your county
More Information • www.interop.wi.gov • Sign up for OJA Email notifications & RSS feed • Tim Pierce • Pierce.timothy@countyofdane.com • 608-284-6891