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Comprehensiveness. A Vital Principle in Emergency Management. Comprehensiveness. What does this principle mean to you? “of large scope; covering or involving much; inclusive” (Dictionary.com) Is broad, expansive and in-depth. Implies a holistic approach or view. Why Comprehensiveness?.
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Comprehensiveness A Vital Principle in Emergency Management
Comprehensiveness • What does this principle mean to you? • “of large scope; covering or involving much; inclusive” (Dictionary.com) • Is broad, expansive and in-depth. • Implies a holistic approach or view.
Why Comprehensiveness? • We can be affected by many hazards and vulnerability • Disasters have diverse causes and consequences • There are many phases and functions in emergency management • A variety of actors participate in disasters
Assumptions • We will be affected by many different hazards • There are more causes than poor land-use planning and more consequences than physical damages • We can reduce disasters and react to them • Emergency managers do not act alone
The All-Hazards Perspective • Is important to comprehensiveness • Meanings • Including all types of hazards that may affect us • Acknowledging functions that are common to most hazards
Group Project • Discuss types of hazards
Points to Consider • There are many different types of hazards • Hazards may be natural, technological, or man-made • Each area is affected by unique hazards • There are no hazard-free areas • Source of hazard can be hard to distinguish • You must understand hazards
Functions Common to Hazards • Land-use planning • Construction • Planning, training and exercises • Warnings • Evacuation • Sheltering • Medical Care • Special populations • Public information • Donations management • Volunteer management • Damage assessment • Debris removal • Disaster assistance
Importance of All-Hazard Approach • Emergency managers must be experts • Emergency managers must network with others • Emergency managers may work in other communities, states or nations • Emergency managers may provide mutual aid • Emergency managers must anticipate resource requests
Importance of All-Hazards Approach (cont.) • Emergency managers must anticipate the broad spectrum of hazards • Emergency managers can counter public apathy • Emergency managers must know that hazards will interact • Emergency managers must understand that the nature of hazards is changing
Importance of All-Hazards Approach (cont.) • Lessons from one hazard are transferrable • Financial investments have greater return • An all-hazards approach helps emergency managers anticipate what needs to be done locally in light of distant disasters • May prevent dramatic policy swings (e.g., natural hazards, technological, civil defense, Y2K, mitigation, sustainability, terrorism)
Assignment • Reflection paper
Vulnerability • Is important for comprehensiveness • We need to focus on vulnerability, and not just hazards • Vulnerability relates to structural and cultural causes of disasters
Examples of Vulnerability • Minorities • Disabled • Environmental degradation • Construction of buildings • Unplanned urbanization • Carelessness in industry • Neglect of emergency management • Poor decision making • Deteriorating health • Foreign policy decisions and cultural misunderstandings
Examples • Peru • Dominican Republic • Case Studies in Emergency Management
Impacts • Is important for comprehensiveness • Disasters produce deaths and injuries • Disasters damage and destroy buildings and the infrastructure • Disasters cause harm to animals, farmland and the environment • Disasters generate direct and indirect economic losses • Disasters lead to political changes
Impacts (cont.) • Disabled • Loss of bread winners • Homelessness • Impaired transportation • Business, school and hospital closings • Ceasing of HVAC, lighting and cooking • Loss of agriculture • Food shortages • Uninhabitable environment • Insurance losses • Increased taxes • Declining politician approval ratings • Other consequences
Power Point Presentations • The impacts of disasters
Disaster Phases • Is important for comprehensiveness • Emergency management includes mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery
Mitigation • Efforts to reverse the rising trend of disasters or minimize impact
Preparedness • Activities to increase the readiness of a community for disasters
Response • Implementation of life saving measures
Recovery • Steps to overcome impacts and minimize future vulnerability
Points to Consider • What has emergency management traditionally focused on? • Are there problems with this approach? If so, what are they? • Should emergency management focus more on mitigation and recovery? If so, why? • Should we give complete attention to mitigation and recovery? What are the consequences (both positive and negative) of doing so? • What does this imply for the importance of each phase of disaster?
Functions • Are important for comprehensiveness • Are relevant to each phase of disasters
Examples of Functions • Hazard and vulnerability assessments • Land-use planning • Structural mitigation • Industrial regulation/code enforcement • Planning • Training • Exercises • Mutual aid • EOC establishment/activation/management • Decision/policy making • Hazard detection • Warnings • Evacuation • Sheltering and mass care • Search and rescue • Medical care/surveillance
Examples of Functions (cont.) • Criminal investigations and prosecution • Mass fatality management • Critical stress management • Critical stress management • Media and public relations • Donations management • Volunteer management • Damage assessment • Disaster declarations • Debris management • Public and individual assistance
Stakeholders/Participants • Is important for comprehensiveness • The emergency manager needs to get others involved • Examples from the Round Table discussants
Other Stakeholders/Participants • Public • Private • Non-profit • Citizens
Working with Others • See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6ilz3tl5Vw.
Conclusion • Emergency management is a comprehensive profession • It includes all types of: • Hazards • Vulnerability • Impacts • Phases • Functions • Participants