Emergency
Response Planning/Training
ADVANCED PROFESSIONAL SERIES:
THE FOLLOWING 5 COURSES ARE REQUIRED:
G275 - Emergency Operations Center (EOC)
Management and Operations (Best with 2 instructors)
This 3-day course provides participants with the
knowledge and skills to effectively manage and operate
an EOC during crisis situations.
The course covers locating and designing an EOC,
how to staff, train, and brief EOC personnel, and
how to operate an EOC during various situations.
It is modular so that it is flexible to meet various
jurisdictions’ needs.
Selection Criteria: State and local individuals
responsible for developing, staffing, managing,
and operating an EOC. Other EOC staff is encouraged
to attend.
Prerequisites: None.
Required: Successful completion of IS -275, The
Emergency Operations Center’s (EOC’s)
Role in Community Preparedness, Response, and Recovery
Operations.
G191 - Incident Command System/Emergency
Operations Center Interface
This 1½-day course works best when delivered
to Incident Command System and Emergency Operations
Center personnel from the same community. The course
provides an opportunity for participants to begin
developing an ICS/EOC interface for their community.
The course reviews ICS and EOC responsibilities
and functions and depends heavily on exercises and
group discussions to formulate the interface. Selection
Criteria: Participants should be teams from a community’s
ICS and EOC personnel.
Prerequisites: None.
Required: None.
G250.7 - WEM: Local Situation (RAPID) Assessment
Communities can use the Resource Guide and Facilitator’s
Guide when developing the plan and procedures for
rapidly and efficiently collecting disaster intelligence
immediately following a disaster. This intelligence
is used to prioritize response activities, allocate
available resources, and specifically request resources
from other sources to save and sustain lives.
Selection Criteria: Any community working to improve
its disaster intelligence collection procedures.
G270.4 - WEM (R&R): Recovery from Disaster:
Local Government Role
This workshop is designed for local government disaster
recovery professionals (elected officials, city/county
administrators, emergency management coordinators,
public works directors, building inspectors, community
planners, and unmet needs committee coordinators).
The WEM is designed for ½-day delivery, depending
on local need, and covers the roles, responsibilities,
and major tasks of each team member during short-
and long-term recovery. Course materials include
checklists, sample forms, brochures, public notices,
sample news releases, sample ordinances, and other
resources (in hard copy and electronic file) to
assist local recovery teams in their jobs.
Selection Criteria: Local government
emergency managers, city and county administrators,
community planners, building inspectors, and public
works directors.
NOTE: All course files are accessible to the State
Training Officer via the FEMA Web site.
G318 - Mitigation Planning
Workshop for Local Governments
This 2-day workshop discusses the Disaster Mitigation
Act of 2000 which amends the Robert T. Stafford Disaster
Relief and Emergency Assistance Act by, among other
things, adding a new section, 322—Mitigation
Planning. Section 322 requires local governments to
prepare and adopt jurisdiction-wide hazard mitigation
plans as a condition of receiving Hazard Mitigation
Grant Program (HMGP) funds to “brick and mortar”
mitigation projects. The Mitigation Planning Workshop
for Local Governments assists representatives of local
communities or multi-jurisdictional planning areas
to develop a mitigation plan that meets community
needs as well as the Section 322 local government
planning requirements as described in 44 CFR Section
201.6. This workshop explains each of the requirements,
demonstrates how FEMA’s new Mitigation Planning
How-to-Guides can be used to address each requirement,
and provides opportunities to begin the planning process
in group activities with representatives of the same
community or planning area.
Selection Criteria: The target audience for this Workshop
includes the following representatives of local government:
elected officials, managers, planners, emergency program
managers, and other staff with
expertise needed for mitigation projects.
The Workshop is also intended for community members
interested in avoiding or minimizing hazard losses,
who may wish to participate in the mitigation planning
process.
ADVANCED PROFESSIONAL SERIES: CHOOSE
ANY 5 REQUIRED AS ELECTIVES OFFERED BY CRITICAL INCIDENT
SOLUTIONS.
G288 - Donations Management
Workshop
This 8-12 hour workshop addresses the planning considerations
and operational requirements for an effective donations
management system at the state and/or local level.
A special emphasis is put between state/local government
and voluntary agencies as the key to success in donations
management.
Selection Criteria: Local government officials or
state and local leaders of key voluntary organizations
(i.e., those affiliated with the state VOAD), who
have responsibility for planning, coordinating, implementing,
and/or operating the donations management function
at the state and local level.
Prerequisites: None.
Required: Participants must have some responsibility
to oversee, coordinate, and/or assist with the state
and local donations function during large-scale disasters.
Recommended: IS-288, The Role of Voluntary Agencies
in Emergency Management.
G137 - Exercise Program Manager/Management
Course
This 2½-day course provides knowledge, skills,
and job aids to assist local, state, and federal personnel
in implementing their roles and responsibilities as
exercise program managers. Work products developed
during the course will be useful for the participant
to develop or upgrade his or her comprehensive exercise
program.
Selection Criteria: State, FEMA regional, other federal
agency staff, and local emergency management/emergency
services staff who have the responsibility to initiate
and/or maintain their respective organization’s/jurisdiction’s
overall exercise program.
Prerequisites: None.
Required: The participant must have
substantial knowledge of emergency management operations
and exercises within his/her organization and the
assigned responsibility to initiate and/or upgrade
the overall comprehensive exercise program.
Recommended: EMI recommends that participants complete
IS-120, An Orientation to Community Disaster Exercises,
G139, Exercise Design course, and G130.
G408 - Homeland Security
Planning Course
This course teaches participants to evaluate, revise,
or develop a homeland security appendix to their jurisdiction’s
existing Emergency Operations Plan (EOP). The course
addresses such key issues as vulnerability analysis
and command and control for homeland security events.
In keeping with recommendations of the Gilmore Commission,
this course builds on existing emergency response
systems
as articulated by the local EOP.
Participants must bring a current copy of their EOP
and a map of their jurisdiction to the training. This
course supplements EMI’s Emergency Planning
Workshop.
Selection Criteria: Ideally, Local Emergency Planning
Teams that include one person from emergency management;
public works; law enforcement; fire service; public
health/medical
service.
G358 - Evacuation Planning
Course
This 12-hour course is designed to provide participants
with knowledge and skills needed to design and implement
an evacuation and re-entry plan for their jurisdictions.
It uses a community’s vulnerability analysis
and evacuation plan. It also addresses evacuation
behavior and recommends methods to make evacuation
and re-entry more efficient.
This course does not address the decision to evacuate
or re-enter.
Selection Criteria: The persons responsible for planning,
implementing, and carrying out evacuations within
a jurisdiction must attend this course as a team.
This includes, but is not limited to, local and state
government emergency program managers, emergency planners,
and response personnel.
G400 - Incident Command System,
ICS, Advanced, I-400
This course expands upon the material covered in I-100
through I-300. I-400 focuses on large single-agency
and complex multi-agency/multi-jurisdictional incident
response. The course addresses area command and staff
issues, as well as the planning, logistical, and fiscal
considerations associated with complex incident management
and interagency coordination.
Course Topics:
• Command and General Staff
• Deputies and assistants
• Unified Command
• Organizational relationships between Area
Command, Unified Command, Multi-entity Coordination
Systems, and Emergency Operations Centers (EOCs)
Selection Criteria: Persons expected
to perform in a management capacity in an area command/complex
incident environment.
Prequisites: None.
Required: I-100, I-200, and I-300.
Recommended: None.
G290 - Basic Public Information
Officers Course
This 2½-day course is intended for the new
or less experienced PIO. Its emphasis is on the basic
skills and knowledge needed for emergency management
public information activities. Topics include the
role of the PIO in emergency management, conducting
awareness campaigns, news release writing, and television
interviews.
Selection Criteria: Emergency management personnel,
including fire and law enforcement who have either
full- or part-time responsibilities for public information
in their communities or departments. Individuals with
considerable experience in public information may
want to consider applying for a waiver to attend the
Advanced Public Information Officers (E388) course
at EMI.
G110 - Emergency Management
Operations Course (EMOC) (Best with two Instructors)
The EMOC is designed for local communities or tribal
governments that may not be able to participate in
FEMA’s resident Integrated Emergency Management
Courses. The EMOC is an exercise-based program with
planning sessions that begin weeks prior to the actual
course, and it includes classroom sessions and exercises.
The flexible format of the EMOC allows it to be conducted
in a 2½-day or 3-day format. The purpose of
the EMOC is to improve operational capabilities as
they relate to managing emergencies in the local community.
The course places emphasis on the Emergency Operations
Center (EOC) as a focal point for managing a simulated
emergency.
Selection Criteria: Elected and appointed city and
county officials. These include mayor, city manager,
city council, county commissioner, county manager,
and other key positions, such as emergency management
director and public information officer. Eligible
participants are upper management and mid-management
personnel