Loading...
2018-036 Emergency Response FrameworkDate: March 30, 2018 Report No.2018-036 INFORMAL STAFF REPORT TO MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL SUBJECT: City’s Emergency Response Framework EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: The purpose of this report is to provide City Council with details regarding the Emergency Response Framework. DISCUSSION: Emergency Management Plan Framework The State Disaster Act requires jurisdictions to prepare Emergency Management Plans (EMPs) that follow the Texas Division of Emergency Management (TDEM) planning standards. The purpose of these plans is to reduce vulnerability of the communities’ damage, injury, and loss resulting from natural or man-made catastrophes. There are basic, intermediate, and advanced level plans that cover mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. The City of Denton maintains an advanced level plan, which enables the City to be eligible for homeland security and other federal preparedness grants. The EMP is updated on a five year cycle. The current version is dated July 2014, and is undergoing revisions for renewal submission to TDEM late summer or early fall of 2018. Additionally, the EMP is supplemented by companion documents including the Technology Services’ Business Continuity Plan, Local Mitigation Strategy, Emergency Operations Center Standard Operating Framework, and departmental response procedures. Emergency Operations Center The City’s Emergency Operations Center (EOC) is located at Central Fire Station. The EOC is the physical location designed to support emergency response, business continuity, and crisis communications activities. The City’s Executive Staff and/or the Incident Management Team meet at the EOC, as needed for table top planning exercises. During activation the EOC is used to manage preparations for an impending event, or an ongoing incident. By gathering the decision makers together in a central location and supplying them with the most current information, better decisions can be made. Activating the EOC The City has four emergency alert levels. The Emergency Management Coordinator will issue the alerts to the City’s Emergency Response Teams: High Water Group, Swift Water Rescue Team, and/or Incident Management Team, as conditions warrant through the Hiplink messaging system. Level 4 is activated when the forecast is predicting possible severe storms threatening the City of Denton in the next 24 hours. Potential technological emergencies may necessitate the issuance of Date: March 30, 2018 Report No.2018-036 a Level 4 Alert as a precaution including a suspicious explosive device, planned civil protest/potential unrest, small-scale hazardous material incident, etc. Additional weather conditions include: tornado watch, flash flood watch, severe thunderstorm watch, and winter storm watch. Level 3 is activated when a situation has escalated to hazardous conditions such as active flash flooding, sustained high winds, tornado, large grass fires, major hazardous material incident, etc. Additionally, hurricane shelter operations are included in this level along with: tornado warning, flash flood warning, and severe thunderstorm warning. Level 2 occurs when a major disaster event with extensive damage to the city such as from a large tornado, wide-scale flash flooding, a significant hazardous materials incident, or other substantial natural or technological disasters. Shelter operations where City of Denton recreation center(s) are used as shelter sites following an evacuation, would typically be a Level 2 Alert requiring a significant amount of City resources and coordination of activities by Incident Management Team. Level 1 is activated when a catastrophic disaster is impacting or imminent for the City of Denton. This severe situation will necessitate use of all or a vast majority of available City personnel and resources over an extended period of time. Mutual-aid assistance may be needed from other communities, state, and federal agencies. Examples include a direct hit from an EF4 or EF5 tornado with mass casualties and numerous fatalities, hazardous materials release involving a substance immediately dangerous to life and health requiring mass evacuation and shelter operations, massive flash flooding impacting a significant portion of the city, domestic terrorism incident, and other large-scale events that will overwhelm local response capabilities. STAFF CONTACT: Michael Penaluna, Emergency Management Coordinator (940) 349-8836 Michael.Penaluna@cityofdenton.com