Top 50 Risk Management Blogs

17 12 2010

The Masters in Risk Management Blog “strives to provide readers with the best information about risk management degrees,” career opportunities, and other risk management information.  On December 10th, the Blog posted its subjective list of the “Top 50 Risk Management Blogs.”  This blog, Jeff Braun’s Emergency Management Blog, was mentioned as being one of the top 50 blogs, especially in the area of disaster risk management.  To see, the entire list:

http://www.mastersinriskmanagement.org/top-50-risk-management-blogs.html#more-28





Missouri City Awarded Grants For High-Tech Emergency Response System

22 11 2010

From a recent Missouri City News Release, November 22, 2010:

Missouri City is taking the first steps toward implementing a high-technology radio system that will provide residents with more efficient and effective responses from both the Police Department and Fire & Rescue Service.   A total of $463,917 in federal grant money awarded to the City will allow the Police Department and Fire & Rescue Service to purchase radio consoles that enhance the implementation and coordination of emergency response communications.

 The funds, received from the Department of Homeland Security’s Urban Area Security Initiative grant program, will help improve first-responder communications. The grant is funded 100 percent by UASI and does not require a local match from the City. The money will be used by the Fire and Police Departments to start the replacement of radio consoles used to dispatch firefighters and police officers to emergency scenes.  At their Nov. 15 meeting, City Council members approved the purchase and installation of the new equipment, which signals the beginning of the City’s transition to a mandated digital radio system for the City’s emergency communications systems.

Fire Chief Russell Sander and Police Chief Joel Fitzgerald noted that the grants “will greatly assist our departments in enhancing the City’s 911 communications center.”

 





Missouri City Tuning In To A New Source of Emergency Information

27 09 2010

Missouri City residents can now tune into a new information station—1690 AM. Staff has completed the installation of the City’s low-power broadcasting station and it is on the air.

“The station will primarily be used to transmit weather bulletins and traffic and road construction updates, featuring directions to City landmarks and events,” said Fire & Rescue Service Chief Russell Sander. “The station will also allow the City’s Emergency Operations Center to provide information and instructions during amber alerts, flash floods, hurricanes, power outages and other emergencies.”

“After seeing a need for this service following Hurricane Ike, when all types of public information outlets were inoperable, including the internet, telephone and cell phones, the City realized that we could still put out emergency information by radio when all other sources were down,” said John Sheffield, Missouri City’s Division of Emergency Preparedness Chief. 

In case of a similar situation in the future, the City’s low-power AM radio station will be accessible to the public via a hand-cranked or battery-powered radio, providing staff with another avenue to share important emergency messages with residents. All City residents should be able to tune in and no special reception equipment is required. Signs will be installed along major roadways alerting residents to the new station.

City Council approved the purchase of the $44,895 radio station at its June 7 meeting. More than 35 low-power AM Radio stations are currently operating in Texas, including one by Fort Bend County. “These stations are a critical part of the emergency notification system in jurisdictions across the country, including in Stafford, Fort Bend County and Harris County,” Sheffield said.

Source of this entry was a Missouri City News Release issued on September 27, 2010.  For further information, contact Stacie Walker, swalker@missouricitytx.gov





Missouri City Launches New Web Site to Assist Its Citizens During Hurricane Season

9 07 2010

With Hurricane Season under way, Missouri City is prepared to provide residents with vital updates on our emergency information website: missouricityready.com.

At the July 6 City Council meeting, Emergency Management Coordinator John Sheffield briefed members on the website, which was launched last year. “We are prepared and ready to respond should a disaster strike,” he said during the presentation.

The site serves as a primary source of public information during any natural or man-made disaster affecting the City, including hurricanes. The website offers tips and strategies for preparing homes, businesses and families for emergencies, links to websites of other emergency management agencies, weather, traffic and other emergency alerts and information on how to take care of special needs or pets during disasters.

Residents can also logon to the site and sign up to receive news releases and notifications via email. A link to missouricityready.com is available on the City’s home page, www.missouricitytx.gov, under the “Quick Links” tab.





More about Using Twitter to Communicate During Emergencies

9 01 2010

My last Blog entry explained how the Fort Bend County Office of Emergency Management (OEM) uses Twitter as on method for communicating to our citizens on a daily basis.  I also discussed how we send out information about emergencies using Twitter; with one very large caveat:  the use of Twitter and Social Media is not for reporting emergencies; nor for requesting service from first responders.  Always use 9-1-1 to request help in an emergency. 

Let’s review the use of Twitter by others.  The use of Twitter is being used more and more by municipalities, counties, non-governmental agencies, hospitals for communication.  I recently ran across an article written by Scott Wallask, entitled “Twitter Can Play Key Role in Disaster Management.”  This article describes the use of Twitter by hospitals.  The article was published by HealthLeaders Media on December 30, 2009.  Scott Wallask is senior managing editor for the Hospital Safety Center; he can be reached at swallask@hcpro.com  Here is his article; I think you will find it interesting:

“While it might not qualify yet as a warm embrace, safety and facilities professionals in hospitals in 2009 at least shook hands with Twitter and found new ways to get their messages across using the social media site.

For those of you unfamiliar with Twitter, at its core is the ability for users to post short, 140-character updates—known as “tweets”—about what they’re doing. You can keep track of other’s tweets you’re interested in (i.e., people you’re “following”) and also see who’s reading your tweets (i.e., “followers”). You need to be registered with Twitter to follow someone’s tweets.

Disaster management seems to be a natural extension of Twitter for hospital safety officers and emergency management coordinators. Here are two examples of many seen over the past year:

  • After the mass shootings at Ford Hood, TX, on November 5, Scott & White Hospital in Temple, TX, revved up its existing Twitter presence with useful updates (the hospital received 10 shooting victims). Among the information tweeted: the operating status of the hospital’s ER and wait times for volunteers to give blood.
  • Sts. Mary & Elizabeth Hospital in Louisville, KY, experienced terrible flooding in August, and the facility used Twitter to keep the public and employees up-to-date on evacuated patients and building conditions.

Tweeting has not been lost on The Joint Commission. In its August 2009 Environment of Care News, the accreditor noted that an emergency management standard requires hospitals to prepare for emergency communications with staff members, external authorities, patients, families, media, vendors, and other healthcare facilities. Social media sites are a good strategy for emergency communication, the commission said. Other hospitals use Twitter to promote safety initiatives to their staff members and the public.

The communications department at SSM Health Care in St. Louis created an animated safety champion named Super Carol, who appears in employee-focused print and online media, offering information on hot-button issues, such as handwashing protocols, patient lifting, and needlestick prevention. SSM uses its Twitter account in part to update people about the latest adventures of Super Carol.

“Safety can be numbing to people because we preach it all the time,” said Lorraine Kee, SSM’s corporate Web manager. “I like [Super Carol] because it pushes it out in a newer, fresher way.”

Safety officers can also find tweets from others to be helpful on the job. Earlier in December, U.S. Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis tweeted about her agency’s updated regulatory agenda, which included information about an airborne transmissible disease standard, which is posed to become a big issue for safety officers.”





Fort Bend County Office of Emergency Management Uses Twitter

9 01 2010

The Fort Bend County Office of Emergency Management (OEM) utilizes various methods for communicating with the public.  As noted on our web site, Fort Bend County OEM’s “role of educating the public and disseminating emergency information means we want to be sending information in ways that the public wants to receive, as much as it makes sense.  Increasingly, people are  using Social Media to receive information on a daily basis. ”  Our Office recognizes this trend and we have developed a presence on various Social Media sites where citizens can interact freely with us.

One of the most popular sites is Twitter; an online short messaging service. It works much like text-messages, updates are limited for 140 characters, and can be SMS’d (Text messaged) to and from your mobile phone. It can also be updated via the web, an instant messenger program, and numerous desktop applications.  OEM has a Twitter account here: http://twitter.com/fbcoem, and we use it to post emergency information, updates and alerts to the public, in addition to promoting preparedness and community awareness. Most of our updates are very short (like this H1N1 update).

In addition to posting information, we use an application called TweetDeck to monitor what’s going on in the community. During the Pecan Grove Gas Well Blowout we tweeted updates, and replied to community members who mentioned us in their Tweets. We did the same thing during the recent winter weather events.

So, how can you use Twitter to communicate with us?  Lach Mullen is the OEM staff person who leads our efforts to effectively use Social Media and he explains that 1) For starters, follow us on Twitter, 2) After that, let us know you’re here by sending us a message. If you’d like, you can turn on Device Updates on your mobile phone and our updates will come to you as text messages; 3) After that, please feel free to reply to our tweets to ask us a question, and re-tweet our messages to your followers. If you find something you think we should know about, send us an @reply and we’ll see it; and 4) take a look at the folks we follow. We get a lot of good information from FEMA and other local response partners through Twitter, so there may be some interesting people and agencies there for you too.

Never use Twitter, or any other social media service, to report emergencies.  In an emergency situation, always dial 9-1-1 for help!

If you ever have any questions about the use of Social Media by the Fort Bend County Office of Emergency Management, please feel free to contact us at 281-342-6185 and ask for Lach Mullen.  Or, of course, send us a message on Twitter!





Missouri City Launches New Emergency Information Web Site

27 07 2009

From City of Missouri City Media Release (Released July 27, 2009):

With hurricane season underway, the City of Missouri City is continuing its emergency preparation efforts by launching a new emergency information Web site: missouricityready.com.

The new site will serve as a primary source of public information during any natural or man-made disaster affecting the City. A link to missouricityready.com is available on the City’s home page, www.missouricitytx.gov. In the event that the City’s main Web site is not functional during an emergency, missouricityready.com will operate as a secure source of information about the City’s response and recovery efforts.

As emergencies occur, missouricityready.com will be updated with specific information on those situations.

Missouri City is one of 30 government entities in the Houston metropolitan region that were each awarded grant funds to host their own emergency information sites – which are PIER, or Public Information Emergency Response, Web sites.

A Houston Urban Area Security Initiative grant has funded the City’s PIER site. The grant funds are coordinated through the Fort Bend County Office of Emergency Management. The cost to the City to support missouricityready.com is $100 per month for hosting and technical services.

Residents and businesses can now utilize missouricityready.com to prepare for emergency situations. The site offers: tips and strategies for preparing homes, businesses and families for emergencies, including hurricanes; links to Web sites of other emergency management agencies; weather, traffic and other emergency alerts; information on handling special care needs or pets during disasters; and more.

The new Web site also allows visitors to sign up to receive via e-mail news releases and notifications of emergency situations affecting Missouri City. The City is working to offer subscribers an option to receive emergency notifications as text messages.

Check out the new site by going directly to missourcityready.com or visiting www.missouricitytx.gov and clicking on “Missouri City Ready” under “Quick Links” on the right-hand side of the home page. For more information, call 281-403-8500.





Risk Communications for Swine Flu

28 05 2009

Emergency Management Forum held a “Live Chat” session on May 13th entitled Risk Communications for Swine Flu and Other Health Care Emergencies.   The guest for this session was Suzanne Frew.  Ms. Frew is an international consultant, speaker, facilitator and instructor in emergency management throughout the United States, the Pacific Islands and Southeast Asia.   She has 20 years of public and private experience spearheading, designing and evaluating pre- and post-disaster risk and strategic communications, emergency management plans and partnership initiatives.

Through The Frew Group, her consulting practice based out of the San Francisco Bay Area, Ms. Frew has worked collaboratively with government agencies, business, community and faith-based organizations to develop solutions that meet the unique needs and circumstances of stakeholders at the national, regional and local community level.  She specializes in the communication and strategic/tactical planning needs of multi-cultural, high-risk populations, addressing cultural, socio-economic and faith-based concerns of “communities within the community” to develop sustainable approaches that engage priority audiences.

The transcript of the May 13 session on Risk Communications for Swine Flu and Other Healthcare Emergencies is available at:

http://www.emforum.org/vforum/lc090513.htm





Government Emergency Telecommunications Service

15 05 2009

GETS cardNatural and man-made disasters can cause considerable disruption to telephone service by generating extraordinary levels of call volume.  Although backup systems are in place, degradation of service can still occur because of increased vulnerability to network congestion and system failures.  This possibility can be seriously problematic for Emergency Services Sector (ESS) departments and agencies that must complete their calls to perform mission essential tasks.

The Government Emergency Telecommunications Service (GETS) satisfies the need for government leaders and ESS personnel to have priority status on congested landline telephone systems when disaster strikes.  GETS is a White House-directed emergency phone service provided by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) National Communications System (NCS).  GETS supports federal, state, local, tribal, industry, and non-government organization personnel in performing their national security and emergency preparedness missions by offering service priority call routing during incidents when telecommunications networks are jammed.  

Using enhancements based on existing commercial technology, GETS allows the emergency management and responder community to communicate over Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) paths with a high likelihood of call completion during the most severe conditions of high-traffic congestion and disruption.  The result is a cost-effective, easy-to-use emergency telephone service that is accessed through a simple dialing plan and Personal Identification Number (PIN) card verification methodology.  GETS is maintained in a constant state of readiness as a means to overcome network outages through enhanced routing and priority treatment.

To learn more about this service, contact GETS at gets@dhs.gov or see their web site at http://gets.ncs.gov

For information about the wireless companion to GETS, the Wireless Priority Service (WPS),  access the WPS link at http://wps.ncs.gov





Fort Bend County 1670 AM

7 03 2009

am-alert-sign-009Just over one year ago, Fort Bend County Office of Emergency Management solicited other jurisdictions and agencies to assist with a petition that would provide more flexibility to those who operated low-power AM radio stations, like Fort Bend County 1670 AM. This station is operated by Fort Bend County OEM. Similar stations are operated by other jurisdictions in our region, including the City of Stafford. Over 35 installations are currently operating in Texas. These stations are operated by cities, counties, private companies, universities, state agencies, and federal agencies. The purpose of these stations is to provide emergency information to travelers and citizens about such things as road closures; chemical releases; weather information; et cetera. These stations are a critical part of the emergency notification system in jurisdictions across the country. Much has happened since the petition was sent to the FCC. The primary purpose of the petition was to help ensure that FCC regulations and procedures would be worded in a manner to protect emergency advisory radio stations such as the one used by Fort Bend.

The American Association of Information Radio Operators (AAIRO) was founded in 2008, after a coalition of public safety, transportation, university and outdoor recreation officials informally petitioned the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for the clarification of Travelers Information Station (TIS) Part 90 Rules. A link to AAIRO can be found in the Blogroll In the era of post-September 11, America’s public safety officials sought to utilize Information Radio Station technology to further public safety in ways not previously envisioned by the original rule-writers in the mid-1970s. The FCC just issued a notice inviting public comment on the petition that the American Association of Information Radio Operators (AAIRO) submitted last year. Whether or not you are an AAIRO member, I urge jurisdictions and agencies to register your support before the FCC makes a ruling on the petition. Why? Because the petition asks the FCC to make clear that licensed information radio station operators (such as Fort Bend County and the City of Stafford) may broadcast any public safety message at any time that is deemed to further the protection of life and property. It also requests that rules be clarified so the operator of the station has the authority to make this decision. (Go to this link if you would like to read the exact wording of AAIRO’S petition: www.aairo.org/fcc-petition.htm)

It’s easy to register your comments in one of two ways. Pleaser either write a brief note and email it to info@AAIRO.org. AAIRO will gather comments and submit them to the FCC by the March 16 deadline. Or, you may submit your remarks directly at the FCC website http://http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/prod/ecfs/upload_v2.cgi. Be sure to include the docket number 09-19 (in the “Proceeding” field) and be sure to mention the AAIRO petition in your comments. The deadline is March 16, 2009. We live in an unpredictable world with many people on the road at any given time. There should be no question that operators of Travelers Information Radio Stations should have the right to transmit critical information to travelers as needed, and at any time.








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