Developing an Incident Management Team in a Small Community

Developing an Incident Management Team in a Small Community

Author: David W. Litton

Publisher:

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 56

ISBN-13:

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The use of one of the model incident command systems has become commonplace in the American fire service. The common thread in all of these systems is that they are modular, with the organizational command staff growing as the incident grows. In large-scale incidents an Incident Management Team (IMT) is used to staff the four major areas of concern for the incident commander: operations, logistics, planning and finance. The problem was that, although the Village of University Park has an extensive emergency operations plan, there is a lack of available trained personnel to fill all of the positions of an Incident Management Team during a large-scale incident. The purpose of this research project was to determine how to staff an Incident Management Team during a large-scale emergency incident that may affect the Village of University Park. The reason that this research was important to University Park was the fact that University Park has the potential to face a large-scale incident due to natural causes (tornadoes), hazardous materials emergencies, and potential acts of terrorism in the future. The lack of an IMT, and the potential consequences, were realized by the researcher at the conclusion of the Executive Analysis of Fire Service Operations in Emergency Management, which the researcher attended at the National Fire Academy in Emmitsburg, Maryland. The research used the evaluative methodology to answer the following questions: 1. How have other fire departments staffed an incident management team during large-scale incidents? 2. Should the Village of University Park work cooperatively with surrounding fire departments, civic organizations, private industries, and volunteer organizations to staff an incident management team? 3. What should the qualifications and training be for the staff positions on the incident management team? A literature review was conducted to evaluate what had been previously published regarding incident management teams. In addition, a feedback instrument was used to gather additional information from other fire departments in the surrounding communities. This feedback instrument was instrumental in formulating several of the recommendations included in this report. The results of the research showed that other fire departments have been successful in implementing the use of IMT's on a local basis. The literature review and the feedback instrument were valuable in ascertaining the qualifications and training for team members. Five recommendations resulted from the research. In summary, they were to conduct additional research of the local fire departments with operational incident management teams, provide a copy of the research to local officials, recruit team members from within University Park and from outside sources, work cooperatively with surounding communities to develop a local area IMT, and approach the Executive Board of the Mutual Aid Box Alarm system (MABAS) about instituting a task force card in the statewide plan for the State of Illinois specifically for Incident Management Teams. [STAR#: 132607].


Filling the Void

Filling the Void

Author: Katherine D. Williams

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 56

ISBN-13:

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Although some might argue that disasters requiring an IMT do not occur on a regular basis in a small community, every community experiences large events where a single Incident Commander can become strained. By combining with other departments within their local area, even small volunteer fire departments can have easy access to support for Incident Commanders.


Developing an Incident Management Team for the City of Schenectady

Developing an Incident Management Team for the City of Schenectady

Author: Scott M. Doherty

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 84

ISBN-13:

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The problem was that the City of Schenectady had no formal Incident Management Team (IMT) plan for large-scale incidents. The purpose of this research was to develop and recommend an Incident Management Team model for use during large-scale incidents in the city of Schenectady.


Incident Management for Operations

Incident Management for Operations

Author: Rob Schnepp

Publisher: "O'Reilly Media, Inc."

Published: 2017-06-20

Total Pages: 136

ISBN-13: 1491917792

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Are you satisfied with the way your company responds to IT incidents? How prepared is your response team to handle critical, time-sensitive events such as service disruptions and security breaches? IT professionals looking for effective response models have successfully adopted the Incident Management System (IMS) used by firefighters throughout the US. This practical book shows you how to apply the same response methodology to your own IT operation. You’ll learn how IMS best practices for leading people and managing time apply directly to IT incidents where the stakes are high and outcomes are uncertain. This book provides use cases of some of the largest (and smallest) IT operations teams in the world. There is a better way to respond. You just found it. Assess your IT incident response with the PROCESS programmatic evaluation tool Get an overview of the IMS all-hazard, all-risk framework Understand the responsibilities of the Incident Commander Form a unified command structure for events that affect multiple business units Systematically evaluate what broke and how the incident team responded


Local-level Incident Management Team Development for the Escalating Incident

Local-level Incident Management Team Development for the Escalating Incident

Author: Mark Cleck

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 50

ISBN-13:

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The City of Hagerstown does not have procedures for implementing a local-level incident management team for the escalating incident. The purpose of this research is to identify ways that the City of Hagerstown can develop an incident management team for an incident which may escalate to a large scale. The descriptive research method will be used to identify ways to develop a local-level incident management team. Through an extensive literature, a review of policies and procedures from other jurisdictions, and internal questionnaire, and an external questionnaire, the researcher will identify ways to develop an effective local-level incident management team. The identification and training of team members, and their participation in joint exercises prior to the actual incident were recommended, along with methods of developing key aspects of the team; joint participation, communication, and trust.


Developing a Linn County/Cedar Rapids Metropolitan Area Incident Management Team

Developing a Linn County/Cedar Rapids Metropolitan Area Incident Management Team

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 71

ISBN-13:

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The USDHS (2007) established regional collaboration as one of the major priorities within the National Preparedness Guidelines, and development of regional all-hazards incident management teams across the nation assist in serving this priority. The problem is the Linn County/Cedar Rapids metropolitan area does not have a regional incident management team to manage large-scale incidents in all affected communities. The purpose of this project is to research, develop, and recommend an IMT model to which all Linn County/Cedar Rapids metropolitan communities can participate and utilize. Action research was used to answer the following research questions: (a) What features of a regional incident management team are appropriate for the Linn County/Cedar Rapids metropolitan area? (b) What cities and internal city departments would contribute to the team? (c) What qualifications would be required for incident management team members? Research procedures used included a literature review, a survey questionnaire distributed to 100 persons across the country who were either known to be associated with a regional IMT or were associated with the fire service in a capacity to be familiar with or a member of an IMT, and a written interview questionnaire distributed to persons familiar with the incident management concept from public and not-for-profit agencies in the Linn County/Cedar Rapids metropolitan area. Research question one results show a Type 4 team, with capabilities in all command and general staff functions, would be an appropriate IMT for the County. Question two results indicate a wide variety of political jurisdictions and disciplines from the County participate in the team. Question three results show NIMS 700, 800, 100, 200, 300, and 400 and position specific and Command and General Staff Functions training should be required qualifications for team membership. Recommendations include forming a steering committee to establish and maintain a Linn County/Cedar Rapids Metropolitan IMT.


Emergency Incident Management Systems

Emergency Incident Management Systems

Author: Mark S. Warnick

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2020-01-22

Total Pages: 566

ISBN-13: 1119267110

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The second edition was to be written in order to keep both reader and student current in incident management. This was grounded in the fact that incident management systems are continually developing. These updates are needed to ensure the most recent and relevant information is provided to the reader. While the overall theme of the book will remain the same of the first edition, research and research-based case studies will be used to support the need for utilizing emergency incident management systems. Contemporary research in the use (and non-use) of an incident management system provides clear and convincing evidence of successes and failures in managing emergencies. This research provides areas where first responders have misunderstood the scope and use of an emergency incident management system and what the outcomes were. Contemporary and historical (research-based) case studies in the United States and around the globe have shown the consequences of not using emergency incident management systems, including some that led to increased suffering and death rates. Research-based case studies from major incidents will be used to show the detrimental effects of not using or misunderstanding these principles. One of the more interesting chapters in the new edition is what incident management is used around the world.


Local Incident Management Team Development for the City of Hampton

Local Incident Management Team Development for the City of Hampton

Author: Jason H. Monk

Publisher:

Published: 2012

Total Pages: 96

ISBN-13:

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The results of the research confirmed discontinuity between national standard models and the city's IMT concept and use. Although the city's pseudo-IMT has provided benefits during incident planning and mitigation, specific recommendations were made to enhance the incident preparatory phases, IMT development, and the use of the IMT to mitigate all-hazard emergencies in a structured manner.


Large-scale Incident Management

Large-scale Incident Management

Author: Mark Haraway

Publisher: Cengage Learning

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781428359932

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Taking the approach that experience is the best teacher, Large Scale Incident Management is the first book of its kind to use a major, real-life, contemporary event to teach key incident management concepts. The book places readers in the Incident Commander seat for the EQ chemical fires that occurred in Apex, North Carolina, in October 2006: an event that lasted three days, shut down an entire city, and displaced 17,000 citizens. Using this large-scale incident as a running example of how critical components of successful incident management are actually applied in real life, it provides detailed insight into important topics in the field. Coverage begins with pre-planning and preparation, emergency plan development, and conducting community hazard assessments, and then progresses to implementation of the National Incident Management System (NIMS) as a part of daily operations, incident action plans, and complex NIMS for large catastrophic events. With this unique, real-life approach, the book is both engaging and instructional, leaving readers with a solid understanding, not only of large scale incident management concepts, but also how to apply them.