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Arizona Mutual Aid: A Retrospective

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1 Arizona Mutual Aid: A Retrospective

2 Arizona Mutual Aid History
Arizona Mutual Aid Compact – 2008 AZ Emergency Management Master Mutual Aid Agreement – 2004 Arizona Fire Service Mutual Aid Plan Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) – July 2000 Southwest Caucus Supplement to ICD&DC – 1992 Governor’s Executive Order 76-2 re: Interstate Civil Defense & Disaster Compact

3 Types of Mutual Aid Ad-Hoc – assistance requested when emergency occurs. Automatic Aid/Cooperative Agreements – local mutual aid (usually fire resources), between districts, cities, tribes, and even counties. AZWARN – Arizona Water and Wastewater Alert and Response Network is resource specific mutual aid (city, district, tribe, county and state). AZMAC – Arizona Mutual Aid Compact is an comprehensive agreement between the state, political sub-divisions and tribes. REMAC - Regional mutual aid compacts such as the Southwest Caucus Supplement to the Interstate Civil Defense and Disaster Compact EMAC - Emergency Management Assistance Compact is a state to state compact. Private Sector – although not a signatory to AZMAC or AZMAC, they do play a part in mutual assistance. AZMAC represents a linkage from the smallest jurisdictions to the state and ultimately the federal government.

4 Mutual Aid Progression
County/Tribe Declares City/Town Declares Federal Declaration State Declares Disaster EMAC Other States Automatic Aid Other States REMAC AZWARN AZMAC Private Sector

5 AZMAC Purpose … to state for the participating Parties, the terms and procedures for the execution of Arizona political subdivisions’ and Tribal government’s full power to provide mutual aid in times of emergencies to any affected area in accordance with local ordinances, resolutions, emergency plans or agreements. Review ARS and We all agree to play by the same rules. Scope The Scope of this Compact is to (1) provide the procedures to notify the Providing Parties of the need for assistance; (2) to identify available resources and (3) to provide a mechanism for compensation for resources.

6 AZMAC (1) Notification Procedures
A Requesting Party, which needs assistance in excess of its own resources … is authorized to request assistance from any party to this Compact. Requesting jurisdiction shall consider the geographical proximity of jurisdictions providing assistance. Requests should specify what the emergency is, what resource is needed and the estimated duration of the assistance, if known.

7 AZMAC (2) to identify available resources
…Providing Party shall make reasonable efforts to assist the Requesting Party. … Providing Party shall render such mutual aid as it is able to provide consistent with its own service needs at the time. …Providing Party shall be the sole judge of what mutual aid it has available to furnish. Providing party decides what it can do.

8 AZMAC (3) to provide a mechanism for compensation for resources.
If the Providing Party desires reimbursement. (They may not) …Requesting party shall reimburse the Providing Party for all costs… …whether an incident has been declared an emergency or not. However, When mutual aid is extended under this Compact to the State… …reimbursement…pursuant to… ARS § , and AAC Title 8, R …

9 AZMAC Personnel Compensation and Insurance
The Requesting Party and the Responding Party shall be responsible for all compensation and insurance coverage of their respective employees and equipment Immunity The parties shall have such immunity as provided by state law. Review ARS Indemnification To the fullest extent permitted by law, each party agrees to defend, indemnify, and hold harmless the other party and the other party’s officers, agents, and employees from all claims, losses, and causes of actions arising out of, resulting from, or in any manner connected with this agreement, but only to the extent such claim, loss, cause of action, damage or injury is caused or contributed to by the negligent acts or omissions of the indemnifying party.

10 How is AZMAC used? Virtually any resource can be requested under AZMAC. Fire and rescue apparatus, law enforcement, public works, emergency management, supplies, services, etc. Examples of past use: Law enforcement personnel during the Wallow Fire Public works equipment during winter storm 2010 Medical Examiner's office services during the Yarnell Hill Fire

11 2014 Update Highlights Verbiage more conducive for School District participation Allows the agreement to be utilized for exercising of adopted emergency plans Will further reduce risk while improve financial recovery in situations that we will likely help each other anyhow…….. AZMAC can be used by state to request local resources for deployment on EMAC assignment out of state.

12 EMAC: The Cornerstone of Mutual Aid
Introduction to EMAC EMAC: The Cornerstone of Mutual Aid Instructor Notes: In a major emergency or disaster situation, an affected state often has the immediate or near-immediate need for many resources that it may not be able to access in-state because of the disaster situation, or resources that it cannot provide at the level required. Under these conditions a state often looks to other states for assistance in dealing with the needs of its people and infrastructure. In a disaster situation, swift, sure action is critical. If procedures for securing assistance are not in place before a disaster occurs, vital response time is lost, which could lead to greater, more disastrous outcomes, greater loss of life, more damage to the infrastructure, longer recovery times, and ultimately, greater cost to the public. The time to plan and create agreed-upon procedures is before the need arises. 1 1

13 What is EMAC EMAC is an interstate mutual aid agreement
that provides resources across states lines in the event of an emergency or disaster. Instructor Notes: EMAC is a national interstate mutual aid agreement that enables states and territories to share resources during times of disaster. Instructor Notes: Since being ratified by Congress in 1996, EMAC has grown to become the nation’s system for providing mutual aid through the use of standardized operational procedures and protocols that have been validated during disasters where assistance was provided through the Compact. 3 1

14 Resource Request Process
Response occurs using all available resources and automatic aid. Once responders exhausts local availability, requests roll up to the county. EMAC Advance Teams (A-Team) An A-Team is an EMAC coordinating team deployed to a Requesting State. The purpose of the A-Team is to assist the Requesting State by coordinating the provision of assistance from one Member State to another under EMAC. Instructor Notes: A-Teams consist of one or more persons from a Member State who are knowledgeable about and prepared to implement EMAC procedures in their own state or any other Member State. Serve as a broker for the Requesting State. Instructor Notes: At the request of a Member State, an A-Team is deployed to the Requesting State’s EOC to facilitate requests and offers of assistance through EMAC. The A-Team assists the Requesting State in preparing and transmitting Requests for Assistance REQ-A and documents and tracks the assistance requested by and provided by Member States. Transition: Move to developing internal plans and procedures. 6

15 SEOC Resource Request Once a county exhausts its available resources
they may request assistance from the SEOC. EMAC Advance Teams (A-Team) An A-Team is an EMAC coordinating team deployed to a Requesting State. The purpose of the A-Team is to assist the Requesting State by coordinating the provision of assistance from one Member State to another under EMAC. Instructor Notes: A-Teams consist of one or more persons from a Member State who are knowledgeable about and prepared to implement EMAC procedures in their own state or any other Member State. Serve as a broker for the Requesting State. Instructor Notes: At the request of a Member State, an A-Team is deployed to the Requesting State’s EOC to facilitate requests and offers of assistance through EMAC. The A-Team assists the Requesting State in preparing and transmitting Requests for Assistance REQ-A and documents and tracks the assistance requested by and provided by Member States. Transition: Move to developing internal plans and procedures. 6

16 SEOC Resource Request AZMAC FEMA EMAC Procurement Agency Tasking
After a request is received by the ADEM OPS Order Desk, the request is routed for resolution. EMAC Advance Teams (A-Team) An A-Team is an EMAC coordinating team deployed to a Requesting State. The purpose of the A-Team is to assist the Requesting State by coordinating the provision of assistance from one Member State to another under EMAC. Instructor Notes: A-Teams consist of one or more persons from a Member State who are knowledgeable about and prepared to implement EMAC procedures in their own state or any other Member State. Serve as a broker for the Requesting State. Instructor Notes: At the request of a Member State, an A-Team is deployed to the Requesting State’s EOC to facilitate requests and offers of assistance through EMAC. The A-Team assists the Requesting State in preparing and transmitting Requests for Assistance REQ-A and documents and tracks the assistance requested by and provided by Member States. Transition: Move to developing internal plans and procedures. 6

17 Do we have emergencies?

18 Do we have emergencies?


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