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Emergency Transportation Operations (ETO) Plan

Wisconsin Department of Transportation. Emergency Transportation Operations (ETO) Plan. WisDOT Organizational Chart–Key ETO Roles. Secretary’s Office. Office of Public Affairs (OPA). WEM/EOC OPA Liaison. Division of Transportation System Development (DTSD). Division of

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Emergency Transportation Operations (ETO) Plan

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  1. Wisconsin Department of Transportation Emergency TransportationOperations (ETO) Plan

  2. WisDOT Organizational Chart–Key ETO Roles Secretary’s Office Office of Public Affairs (OPA) WEM/EOC OPA Liaison Division of Transportation System Development (DTSD) Division of State Patrol (DSP) Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV) Division of Business Management (DBM) • ETO Personnel* • Regional Incident • Management Coordinator • STOC • DTSD Duty Officer • ETO Personnel* • Trooper • IMT • Duty Sergeants • Communication • Centers • ETO Personnel* • Motor Carrier • Staff • Technical Staff • ETO Personnel* • Procurement • Specialist • Webmaster • DBM Duty Officer • Technical Staff • WEM/EOC DTSD • Liaison • County/Regional • EOC Liaison • WEM/EOC DSP • Liaison • County/Regional • EOC Liaison *Typical

  3. Regional Incident Management Coordinator (RIMC) Overview

  4. RIMC Mission Serve as DTSD’s first responder for incidents that involve state-owned infrastructure Objectives • Provide on-scene response support to public safety first responders during any incident that involves state-owned infrastructure • Respond as the owner representative and actively participate in incident response and management • Improve the safety of first responders and the traveling public by monitoring infrastructure integrity and ensuring that proper traffic control measures are in place • Remain involved until the incident is completely resolved

  5. Communication Flow Chart

  6. RIMC Responsibilities Communication • Evaluate Response Needs • It is expected that RIMCs will respond on-scene to all incidents they are notified of or that they will justify their reasons for not responding • Expected on-scene response is a recent, foundational change based on the ETO Plan • If a RIMC is unsure as to whether or not they should respond to the incident scene, contact should be made with the reporting agency and ideally with someone that is already on-scene

  7. RIMC Responsibilities Communication (cont.) • Coordinate Resources • RIMCs have the authority to request additional resources as they deem necessary during the course of an incident • Coordinate County Highway Dept Response • Determine level of response necessary • Assess county’s ability to provide needed services • Coordinate response activities during a multi-county response • Notify Additional WisDOT Personnel • Contact the DTSD Regional Duty Officer for incidents of significant impact • Will not be in contact with WisHELP

  8. Incidents of Significant Impact • A major highway incident involving fire, explosion or the release of hazardous materials which causes the evacuation of the immediate area and the closing of the roadway • Any incident that is posing an immediate threat to the traveling public or causing motorists to be stranded • A highway accident which causes the death of five or more people • A chain collision involving 15 or more vehicles - the amount of damage caused is not a determining factor • Any accident involving a school bus and causing fatalities or disabling injuries

  9. Incidents of Significant Impact • Any incident that causes an unexpected closure of the interstate or a major state highway for more than 6 hours • Any incident that causes major damage to highway facilities • Natural disasters that impede the free use of a highway for more than 6 hours • Any incident which is potentially hazardous, like a bomb threat • Any incident that prevents the free use of highways, such as intentional truck blockage or sniper fire • Other politically sensitive incidents that may be of major concern to the Governor, the Legislature or the federal government • Any incident where the media are on-scene

  10. RIMC Responsibilities On-Scene Field Response • Arrive Prepared • Always respond with proper identification (on your person and on the RIMC vehicle), business cards, and wearing high-visibility safety apparel • Follow ICS • Report to the Incident Commander upon arrival at the incident scene • For larger incidents, report to the Liaison Officer • Assess and Monitor Infrastructure Integrity • RIMCs have the authority to request law enforcement close a road and/or bridge if they deem it necessary

  11. Contacting the Regional Duty Officer • While on-call a RIMC should consider the Regional Duty Officer to be their acting “Supervisor” • Will not be in contact with WisHELP • RIMCs should contact their Regional Duty Officer: • Beyond comfort level • Need for resources • Becomes an incident of significant impact • Incident escalates to a regional response

  12. Regional Duty Officer (RDO) Overview

  13. Role of the Regional Duty Officer Serve as the single point of contact for their area of operations during an emergency Serve as the DTSD representative in unified command Serve as the liaison to the DTSD Division Operations Director Serve as the Incident Commander, if designated Understand available resources and allocate as required Initiate the WisDOT Internal ETO Response

  14. Regional Duty Officer Objectives • Coordinate with the appropriate field staff, including WisHELP, to jointly evaluate the need for regional or statewide response • Evaluate emergency situations and determine if a situation requires additional regional assistance • Determine the need for the DSP Incident Management Team • Determine if a liaison is needed for other agencies • Ensure that the WisDOT ETO Response is initiated

  15. Regional Duty Officer Activation • The RDO may be activated by BHO Management, not typical • The RDO typically will be activated by the RIMC using the following guidelines: • “Incident of Significant Impact” guidelines • Unable to obtain resources • RIMC is uncomfortable with the situation

  16. WisHELP Role

  17. WisHELP Role in ETO • Serves as WisDOT’s DTSD liaison at the EOC • Act under the direction and authority of the WISDOT BHO Management • The WisHELPer is a conduit for highway-related information at the EOC and between the EOC and WisDOT DTSD management • The WisHELPer works directly with the EOC State Patrol representatives at the EOC • On behalf of WISDOT, the WisHELPer’s main function is to assist WEM staff during the event

  18. WisHELP Response Flow Diagram • Initial response occurs when SEOC is activated • BHO Management and RDO are notified if warranted • Coordinate with DSP at SEOC and provide information to WisDOT staff

  19. WisDOT ETO Response Process

  20. WisDOT Internal Incident Command/Response Response Escalation Local (Scene Only) SEOC Activation? Regional Area (Statewide)

  21. WisDOT Emergency Response - Local • Initial response occurs at local level & first responders contact STOC • STOC activate RIMC, who coordinate with Law Enforcement/DSP • If DSP is involved, RIMC & DSP will determine if additional WisDOT response is warranted

  22. WisDOT Emergency Response - Regional • RIMC will contact Regional Duty Officer (RDO) • RDO & DSP Management determine WisDOT internal command structure/Incident Commander • WisDOT Regional response follows ICS process • SEOC activation may or may not occur at this level

  23. WisDOT Emergency Response - Area • WisDOT Incident Commander follows ICS process • If WisDOT Incident Commander determines Area response is required they contact the DTSD Operations Director • Incident Command is transferred to state level • SEOC activation may or may not occur at this level

  24. Questions?

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