Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTER

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTER"— Presentation transcript:

1 EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTER
Training Program: DFW Style

2 Office of Emergency Management Mission Statement
It is the mission of the DFW Airport Department of Public Safety to provide the highest level of PROFESSIONAL services to the Airport community through efficient planning, mitigation, response and recovery from natural and manmade events that threaten lives, critical assets or business continuity. 2

3 DFW Overview 3

4 DFW’s 18,000+ acres of land will ultimately support eight runways, six terminals and a variety of land development opportunities. 7 runways 4 are 13,400 feet 4 aircraft can land simultaneously under VFR/IFR Cat I conditions 3 aircraft can land simultaneously under IFR CAT III conditions Any aircraft at maximum payload can land at DFW 24-hour operations No slot constraints or curfews 3 control towers (2 active) 5 terminals 152 active gates 3rd Busiest Airport in the world When runway 7 opened, it reduced delays and increased capacity at DFW Airport and all over the country Extended four runways as part of CDP DFW can handle more operations than any other U.S. airport under any weather condition Only airport in the world able to land four aircraft simultaneously In last 30 years, have built huge infrastructure 174 total gates Still room to grow Approximately nine miles long and seven miles wide, and is larger than the island of Manhattan Only airport in the world with seven operational runways

5 Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport Overview
Approximately 78 miles of taxiways and runways 7 Runways - 13,850,500 sq. ft. of concrete - 80,403 linear feet 110 Taxiways - 52,612,980 sq. ft. of concrete – 330,452 linear feet 652,782 Operations in 2010 18,953 total runway and taxiway lights 6,885 acres in the Air Operations Area (AOA) 1,000 acres of safety areas 934 total number of signs 56 Navigation facilities; 19 windsocks; 135 obstruction lights 38 miles of AOA fence line with 71 AOA gates

6 EOC Activations Level 3 Level 2 Level 1 Classified
Local emergency exists – ICS and responders at scene Level 2 Escalation to non-routine emergency, multi-departmental response Level 1 Assistance from other jurisdictions or mutual aid may be needed Local area disaster or multi-site incident S.E.A.D.O.G. Classified Any readiness level may be deemed classified National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) M.A.S.H. type operation was established at DFW/AA Hanger 5 Received 25 patients Coordinated with mutual aid MICUs for transportation to local hospitals Expenses, will be reimbursed by FEMA. FEMA Camp at Terminal E Satellite Was not activated during IKE Texas Task Force 2 – One firefighter deployed Sergeant Bob Gerisch Texas Incident Management Team – One Police officer deployed Lieutenant Gary Bills Texas Intrastate Fire Mutual Sid System – Four firefighters to Galveston Sgt. Aaron Smith, FF/PM Darren Himes, FF Mitch Gray, FF/PM Kerry Hill SEADOG –(Southeast Airports Disaster Operations Group) Arranged for one 50KVA generator for Sugarland Regional Airport

7 Major Activations Hurricane Ike 7

8 Hurricane Ike DFW Airport Provides Support During Hurricane Ike
National Disaster Medical System Handled twenty-five patients Texas Task Force 2 Deployed one firefighter State Incident Management Team Deployed one police officer Texas Intrastate Mutual Aid System Deployed four firefighters S.E.A.D.O.G. Participated in conference calls with TSA, State and Regional Emergency Management groups. National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) M.A.S.H. type operation was established at DFW/AA Hanger 5 Received 25 patients Coordinated with mutual aid MICUs for transportation to local hospitals Expenses, will be reimbursed by FEMA. FEMA Camp at Terminal E Satellite Was not activated during IKE Texas Task Force 2 – One firefighter deployed Sergeant Bob Gerisch Texas Incident Management Team – One Police officer deployed Lieutenant Gary Bills Texas Intrastate Fire Mutual Sid System – Four firefighters to Galveston Sgt. Aaron Smith, FF/PM Darren Himes, FF Mitch Gray, FF/PM Kerry Hill SEADOG –(Southeast Airports Disaster Operations Group) Arranged for one 50KVA generator for Sugarland Regional Airport

9 Hurricane Gustav DFW Airport Preparations and Response
On August 28, 2008 DFW was notified to prepare for two major operations related to Gustav National Disaster Medical System FEMA Camp for evacuated DHS Employees National Disaster Medical System (NDMS) M.A.S.H. type operation was established at AA Hanger 5 Flights never materialized Expenses, will be reimbursed by FEMA. Overtime Equipment rental (generators, lights) Fuel FEMA Camp Prepared Terminal E Satellite to receive up to 1000 evacuated employees. Processed 800 employees but only 250 stayed for three days. Expenses will be reimbursed by the General Services Administration (lease of building at $16,207. per day) and by FEMA (actual expenses). Contractor support Equipment rental , Fuel Supplies SEADOG –Todd Haines, Jerry Dennis, Milton Earl, Peter Mankarious, Eddie Tovar, Charles Hamilton, Albert San Miguel Texas Task Force 2-Sgt. Bob Gerisch, Captain Adrian Garcia

10 Training and Exercises

11 Emergency Management Institute Emmittsburg, MD
Center for Domestic Preparedness Anniston, AL

12 Emergency Operations Center Function is to Collect, Gather and Analyze Data
Station 4 Station 2 Station 3 Station 1 Alert Site Terminal B Terminal D Alert Aircraft Path

13 Emergencies That Potentially Require An EOC Activation

14 “Go Teams” 14

15 “Go Teams” 15

16 The Mitigators “…to train a core group of Airport staff in the art of EOC Management” “…anticipate a high level of training and opportunities”

17 FEMA Independent Study FEMA Resident Courses TDEM Courses
Training Methods DFW Board Policy SS FEMA Independent Study FEMA Resident Courses TDEM Courses National Domestic Preparedness Consortium Courses NIMS ICS All-Hazards Position Specific Courses Movies Games 17

18 Primary/Supporting Roles Required Training Timelines
DFW Board Policy SS To establish policy and procedure concerning compliance with state and federal requirements related to managing domestic incidents. Primary/Supporting Roles Required Training Timelines 18

19 FEMA Independent Study Program
The primary audience for the Independent Study Program is national emergency response and recovery personnel of the United States, as well as emergency management personnel of FEMA, and US citizens. 19

20 FEMA Independent Study Program
IS 700a IS 800b IS 100a IS 200a IS 703a IS 704a IS 701a* IS 702a* * Specialized Assignments 20

21 Integrated Emergency Management Course (E900 series)
FEMA Residence Course Integrated Emergency Management Course (E900 series) EOC/IMT Interface (E947) Situation Awareness and Common Operating Picture (L948) 21

22 Texas Division of Emergency Management Courses
G 230 Principles of Emergency Management G 235a Emergency Planning G 386 Mass Fatality Incident Response G703 Resource Management G720 Mitigation Grants G191/975 EOC Operations and ICS Interface (FW) 22

23 National Domestic Preparedness Consortium Courses
Center for Domestic Preparedness Energetic Materials Research and Testing Center National Center for Biomedical Research and Training National Emergency Response and Rescue Training Nevada Test Site’s Counter Terrorism Operations Support Program 23

24 Center For Domestic Preparedness Courses
Pandemic Planning and Preparedness Pandemic Planning and Preparedness is a three-day training course providing an overview of pandemic planning, its challenges, and the facets of community preparedness that will assist a community to prepare and effectively respond to a pandemic. DFW Airport Group (40 participants ) DFW Airport Group (8 participants 2012) 24

25 Texas Engineering Extension Service
Enhanced Incident Management/Unified Command Course “…enhance the participants' incident management and decision-making skills necessary to effectively and safely respond to a CBRNE terrorism incident” 25

26 NIMS ICS All-Hazards Position Specific
26

27 NIMS ICS All-Hazards Position Specific
Incident Commander Operations Section Chief Planning Section Chief Logistics Section Chief Finance/Admin Section Chief Liaison Officer Public Information Officer Safety Officer Resource Unit Leader Situation Unit Leader Communications Leader Supply Unit Leader Finance/Admin Unit Leader Division/Group Supervisor Facility Unit Leader 27

28 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Movies
28

29

30 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Games
30

31 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) EOC Jeopardy
31

32 Position Specific Training Quarterly Exercises
EOC Jeopardy Position Specific Training Quarterly Exercises ICS Training 100, 200, 300, 400 Regional Training – HSEEP, Pandemic Planning 32

33 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Name That Airport
33

34 DFW Regional Diversion Airport Map
TUL MEM OKC LIT LAW TXK SPS LBB GGG DFW DAL SHV ELP ABI TYR ACT GRK CLL AUS HOU IAH EFD SAT 34 34

35 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Planning “P” Board Game
35

36 Planning “P” Board Game
Planning Chief Logistics Chief Finance/Admin Chief Operations Chief EOC Manager

37 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Historical Event
37

38 Historical Events

39 Historical Events

40 Historical Events

41 Historical Events

42 Historical Events

43 Historical Events

44 Historical Events

45 Historical Events

46 Historical Events

47 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Wheel of Misfortune
47

48 Spin for the Disaster Spin for the Severity More Preparatory Time
Wheel of Misfortune Spin for the Disaster Spin for the Severity More Preparatory Time No One Knows 48

49 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Family Feud
49

50 Positions vs. Positions
Family Feud Positions vs. Positions Finance/Admin Logistics Operations Planning 50

51 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Survivor
51

52 Positions vs. Positions
Survivor Positions vs. Positions Finance/Admin Logistics Operations Planning 52

53 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Who Wants to Be the EOC Manager?
53

54 EOC Manager Section Chiefs Life Lines Who Wants to Be the EOC Manager?
54

55 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Are You Smarter Than the Disaster?
55

56 Varied Levels of Difficulty
Are You Smarter Than the Disaster? Varied Levels of Difficulty 56

57 Top 10 Disasters Data as of 8/2010 EVENT YEAR FEMA FUNDING
Hurricane Katrina (Region 6 States Only) $26.8 billion Attack on America-WTC (projected)(NY) $9 billion Northridge Earthquake (CA) $7 billion Florida Hurricanes [Charley, Frances, Ivan, Jeanne] $6.3 billion Hurricane Ike (TX,LA) $4.1 billion Hurricane Rita (TX,LA) $3.8 billion Hurricane Georges (AL,FL,LA,MS,PR,VI) $2.3 billion Hurricane Andrew (FL,LA) $1.8 billion Hurricane Gustav (TX,LA) $1.5 billion Tropical Storm Allison (FL,LA,MS,PR,TX) $1.4 billion Data as of 8/2010

58 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Scavenger Hunt
58

59 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Word Find/Crossword Puzzles
59

60 60

61 Emergency Operations Center (EOC) Other Games
61

62 62

63 Hurricane Party

64 Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport Department of Public Safety
David McCurdy, CEM Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport Department of Public Safety Office of Emergency Management 64


Download ppt "EMERGENCY OPERATIONS CENTER"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google