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What is a Major Marine Disaster. Involves large numbers of peopleIn a Marine Environment, outside jurisdiction of shore authoritiesMay involve more than one vesselProbably involves removing large numbers of persons from a ship to a place of safetyNote: A liferaft at sea is not a place of safety
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1. Derek Smith
Senior Analyst
National Search and Rescue Sectretariat
15 October 2004
MAJOR MARINE DISASTER PLANS
2. What is a Major Marine Disaster Involves large numbers of people
In a Marine Environment, outside jurisdiction of shore authorities
May involve more than one vessel
Probably involves removing large numbers of persons from a ship to a place of safety
Note: A liferaft at sea is not a place of safety
3. International Correspondence Group on Large Passenger Vessel Safety 3.2 Radiocommunications and SAR have a part to play in any incident before a ship is actually evacuated – even before the decision to evacuate is made. Ideally, communications with the RCC and other SAR facilities will have been initiated well before. And ‘SAR’ should not be considered only as a matter of finding and recovering people in distress. SAR service assistance can be provided to the ship before it is evacuated, preferably to prevent evacuation becoming necessary – firefighting or medical teams may be transferred aboard, emergency towing assistance supplied, etc.
4. International Correspondence Group on Large Passenger Vessel Safety 3.4 Similarly, as the group also noted in its first report, the response to any incident extends beyond the safe delivery of survivors to the shore. The maritime SAR services are (or should be) closely involved with their shore-side counterparts in arranging efficient transfer of the survivors into shore-side care. In the case of a large passenger ship evacuation this will be a very complicated process, with the need for extensive communication – at the contingency planning stage as well as during any incident.
10. International Air and Marine Search And Rescue (IAMSAR) Manual Introduced in 1998
Has three volumes
1. Organization and Management
2. Mission Co-ordination
3. Mobile facilities
11. International Air and Marine Search And Rescue (IAMSAR) Manual Introduit en 1998
Comprend trois tomes
1. Organisation et gestion
2. Coordination de la mission
3. Installations mobiles
12. MARINE SAR IN CANADA A federal responsibility
Co-ordinated by a Joint Rescue Co-ordination Centre (JRCC) or a Maritime Rescue Sub Centre (MRSC)
A joint operation by Canadian Forces and Canadian Coast Guard
A major operation will involve many authorities and organizations outside the SAR system
15. JRCC/MRSC will alert : Rescue resources
Helicopters
Lifeboats
Other Coast Guard vessels
Merchant vessels nearby
Warships
Fixed wing SAR aircraft
The SAR command and control structure
16. Who else needs to know ? The Ship Owner (shipping company)
Local Authority (EMO)
Police
Harbour Master
Fire Department
Ambulance Department
Hospital
17. Qui d’autre doit savoir ? Le propriétaire du navire (société)
Les autorités locales (OMU)
Les services policiers
Le capitaine de port
Les services d’incendie
Les services ambulanciers
L’hôpital
18. BEWARE Some of these authorities and organizations may have different command and control systems
Emergency Site Management (ESM)
Incident Command System (ICS)
System in Canadian Unified Command Centres is a mix of IAMSAR and ICS
19. Command Considerations Additional air resources
Where will survivors be landed
Where will injured persons be landed and will it be by air or sea
Are the facilities in these locations adequate
If additional resources are required at these locations how will they get there and how quickly
21. Unified Command Structure in Canada
23. And did you remember The media
Salvage/recovery of the ship(s)
The media
Pollution
The media
Record keeping and the subsequent enquiry
24. Media Handling Interest in a major incident will be intense
‘No comment’ will not be adequate
A co-ordinated media strategy is vital
Be prepared to provide information and facilities to assist the news media to do its job
Be prepared to provide operational ‘talking heads’ for news conferences and interviews
25. What Has Canada Done To Prepare A SAR structure which meets international commitments
A well integrated system of regular and volunteer response units
Well trained response units, military and civil
CF/CCG Project Team to update Major Marine Disaster Plans in February 2001(NIF)
A review of the Command and Control framework in February 2004 (NSS Co-hosted)
Regular exercises
26. What needs to be remembered Keep the Major Marine Disaster Plan up to date- review it regularly
Exercise realistically but in a controlled manner- remember to include external agencies in exercises
Continue exercises beyond the shoreline
Speak to stakeholders – shipping interests
Every major incident will be different – be prepared to improvise around the basic plan
29. NSS TELEPHONE NUMBERSGeneral number 1 800 727 9414Derek Smith 613 996 3590 (marine)Pat McSorley 613 996 3604 (air)Carole Smith 613 996 3727 (ground)Marc Parent 613 995 3066(RCMP)