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Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT)

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Title: Community Emergency Response Teams (CERT)


1
Community Emergency Response Teams(CERT)
  • Training Citizens To Prepare For, Deal With, And
    Recover From Major Emergencies

2
What is a Community Emergency Response Team?
  • A CERT is a group of people that is organized
    and receives special training that enhances
    their ability to recognize, respond to, and
    recover from a major emergency or disaster
    situation.
  • The CERT is organized under the leadership of the
    local jurisdiction.
  • They are trained by emergency responders and
    emergency management personnel in areas that will
    help them take care of themselves and others
    before, during, and after a major emergency.
  • As an organized team, they can provide vital
    services in the absence of emergency responders,
    whose arrival may be delayed due to the scope of
    the event.
  • When a major emergency overwhelms normally
    available resources, response delays of hours or
    even days may occur someone with basic skills
    training should be able to immediately assist
    those in distress.

3
What Substantiates The Need For A CERT ?
  • Various reports of Lessons Learned from
    different disasters including the most recent
    weather disasters Hugo in 1989, Andrew in 1992
    and the Unnamed Storm of 1993.
  • One study of particular impact was released in
    June, 1990 by the Urban Institute of the
    University of North Carolina at Charlotte on the
    Lessons Learned from Hurricane Hugo. Hugo struck
    Charlotte after traveling 200 miles inland while
    maintaining hurricane force winds that did damage
    estimated to be in the hundreds of millions of
    dollars.
  • Excerpts of the Study are quoted
  • Emergency plans must find ways to incorporate
    citizens, a tremendous resource.....find ways to
    increase citizen participation
  • More training in emergency response is needed,
    not only for public employees, but for all
    segments of the community.
  • Identify ways to create neighborhood contacts or
    teams to help in an emergency....
  • Identify priority agencies and businesses to be
    assisted in regaining operation....Grocery stores
    and banks may need greater attention and
    assistance from government than previously
    recognized.
  • Special attention needs to be directed to poorer
    neighborhoods....poor citizens have fewer
    personal financial resources to help recover from
    an emergency...
  • Find ways to incorporate and to legitimize
    citizen involvement in emergency response...
  • Conduct more training for emergencies,
    especially for personnel working in group
    facilities such as schools, jails and senior
    centers.
  • Explore ways to get information to employees
    about the safety of their families in an
    emergency. One of the key factors related to
    keeping any employee on the job...is knowledge
    about the safety of the family.
  • Establish a business emergency response
    committee to plan coordinated assistance from
    business to the community.
  • Devise ways to get services out to needy
    citizens in a more timely manner.
  • Contact neighborhood associations prior to an
    emergency to identify neighborhood volunteers.

4
What Major Emergencies Could Affect Your
Jurisdiction?
  • Weather Emergencies
  • Hurricanes would naturally have the most
    extensive impact on the entire community. Even
    if your jurisdiction is not a coastal community,
    it could become a Host Community to evacuees
    from other parts of the State. This major influx
    of people has State and Local Emergency
    Management officials concerned about not only the
    impact of this new population on local service
    demand, but also the fear of people being caught
    on the roads during the severe weather that can
    accompany even a passing storm.
  • Tornadoes are the most feared weather phenomenon
    due to their lack of advance warning coupled with
    the severe damage and threat to life they can
    cause in such a short time. Their impact on
    local resources is dependent on how many
    tornadoes occur, where they touch down, and what
    path they take.
  • Severe Thunderstorm with High Winds are a regular
    occurrence in many states. Their severity varies
    generally on the time of year they are
    generated, But their damage and drain on
    emergency resources can be Area Wide in scope.
  • Transportation Incidents affecting large
    populations
  • An Aircraft Crash On or Off an Airport would be
    an immediate drain on emergency resources. The
    prospect of a large jetliner going down in a
    populated neighborhood or a downtown area is a
    dread fear of emergency management and response
    personnel.
  • A Train Derailment or Truck Transport Accident
    with Chemical Release and/or Fire is always a
    concern due to the fact that railroads and major
    highways go through the center of the major urban
    areas of many cities. Any major accident could
    create a mass casualty incident or the need to
    move a large number of people out of harms way
    in a very short period of time.
  • A Passenger or School Bus Accident with Multiple
    Injuries is one of the most likely transportation
    accidents that can occur. This type of incident
    could commit a major portion of a jurisdictions
    on duty emergency resources immediately.
  • Major Fire in a High Rise, or other High Life
    Hazard Occupancy
  • Any large area building or high rise such as a
    Hotel, Office Building, Retirement Community or
    Hospital could easily require all on-duty
    resources, the need to recall off-duty personnel,
    and the use of other jurisdictions for response.
  • Other Major Emergencies
  • Other major emergencies can range from wide area
    flooding to a terrorist attack. Each
    jurisdiction must prepare for each of these
    possibilities through their Emergency Management
    efforts. Public education and citizen
    involvement appear to be the most aggressive
    method of disaster mitigation available.

5
What Part Do The Team Members Play?
  • Properly Trained, They Would
  • Be Better Prepared to deal with events that might
    otherwise seem overwhelming.
  • Recognize The Potential Hazards associated with a
    particular type of event and take appropriate
    action.
  • Take Steps To Get To Safety and/or help others to
    do so in a more organized fashion.
  • Assume A Leadership Role with those who are not
    trained to deal with the event.
  • Administer First Aid and/or Triage techniques.
  • Identify, Organize, and Utilize Available
    Resources.
  • Perform Needs Assessment, document and
    communicate to local authorities.
  • Assist Others With The Emotional Distress
    associated with major emergencies and disaster
    conditions.
  • Allow Better Allocation Of Emergency Resources by
    being more capable of sizing-up a situation and
    properly advising emergency responders.

6
Where Do We Find Team Members?
  • Neighborhoods/Homeowners Associations
  • Graduates of the Citizens Fire and Police
    Academies
  • Employees of the jurisdiction
  • High Rise Apartments and Offices
  • The Hotel/Motel Industry
  • Businesses/Civic Groups
  • Schools/Churches/Hospitals/Homes For The Elderly
  • Anywhere People Live, Work or Interact

7
Is It Practical To Train People Just For
Disasters?
  • Disaster is typically considered an event that
    causes injury, loss of life , and widespread
    damage. It almost always causes local resources
    to be overwhelmed by the magnitude of the crisis.
  • In our daily lives, citizens unable to help
    others represents a resource that is
    overwhelmed and basically becomes a Disaster
    on a personal level.
  • Not knowing how to help on the scene of an auto
    accident, or pedestrian hit by a vehicle
  • Inability to recognize and initially treat severe
    bleeding, broken bones or bad burns
  • Unaware of the steps (or the precautions) to take
    when faced with a victim that has an airway
    problem.
  • Citizens trained in the manner proposed should be
    able to Deal More Effectively With Daily
    Emergencies so they wont create that Personal
    Disaster situation and they can advise
    responders of the pre-emptive steps that have
    been taken by those on the scene.

8
How Are Members of The Team Trained?
  • Students attend seven (7) weekly classes given by
    local emergency response and emergency management
    instructors, (a detailed description of each
    module follows this summary). The American Red
    Cross course Introduction to Disaster Services
    should also be scheduled as an optional part of
    the CERT curriculum.
  • Students are grouped into teams (preferably 5 or
    6 in each team) in the first class and complete
    the course as a unit.
  • Each class lasts for two and one half (2 1/2)
    hours each week and reading assignments are given
    at the end of each class.
  • Lecture is supported by video, slides, and
    overhead projected materials. Lecture time gives
    way to practical, tabletop, and team building
    exercises wherever possible.
  • A disaster simulation is staged to allow students
    to apply their newly acquired skills in a
    realistic environment with multiple casualties.
  • Private study can be accomplished by using the
    FEMA Home Study courses provided by most state
    emergency management offices.
  • Advanced Study is available to those graduates
    interested in getting better trained in a
    specific area. These areas of study would be
    taught by personnel from the various departments
    and associated agencies that normally respond to
    disastrous events.

9
How Do Graduates Keep Their Interest?
  • It is important to each jurisdiction that
    graduates realize they are an integral part of
    the Local Emergency Management System. The CERT
    Program Coordinator should schedule graduates for
    a variety of activities that are intended to show
    the jurisdictions commitment to the Program.
  • Graduates might be allowed to ride with
    in-service emergency units in order to see some
    of the techniques they have learned used in the
    field.
  • Monthly meetings might be scheduled for graduates
    and interested individuals to attend. Attendees
    can be brought up to date on any news or changes
    that may affect them, or the emergency management
    system and they can be given up to an hour class
    on a topic that enhances training they have
    received.
  • Graduates should be asked to periodically attend
    neighborhood activities or other public
    gatherings to man exhibits, hand out literature,
    and help others learn about the CERT Program.
  • Graduates available during daytime hours may be
    asked to volunteer to help administer the
    program and answer telephone inquiries.
  • Some jurisdictions around the country use CERT
    graduates as a volunteer resource for community
    service projects.

10
Do They Really Work As A Team?
  • The Team, in its most general sense, would
    refer to the group of citizens that seek training
    and share a common interest in becoming more
    aware of the problems and solutions that may
    affect them, their families, and their
    neighborhood.
  • Students attend the class in teams in order to
    experience the camaraderie that is associated
    with a group of people that organize to
    accomplish goals together.
  • The graduate of this course is encouraged to go
    back to their neighborhood and garner the
    interest necessary to form neighborhood teams
    that can prepare for and respond to each others
    needs in the event of an impending or actual
    emergency situation.
  • Neighborhood Watch is a Team based concept that
    has neighbors watching out for neighbors.
  • The CERT Program adds a new dimension to this
    concept and gives participants the skills and
    learning bank that allows them to deal with many
    of the problems that can affect a community.
  • Teams are people working toward a common goal
    or cause.

11
How Are Teams Formed?
  • The graduate of the CERT Program is made aware of
    the problems that they could face during a major
    emergency. They share this information with
    friends in their neighborhood.
  • As these friends learn of the availability of
    information that could enhance their familys
    safety, interest in certain areas of personal
    experience, personal preference or potential
    expertise emerge.
  • People will seek new knowledge in areas that they
    find of interest or that they are capable of
    performing. Some people are good at hands-on
    tasks others feel comfortable with leadership,
    support or documentation duties.
  • The American public enjoys a challenge,
    especially a challenge that makes them feel
    philanthropic, or gives them a feeling of a
    sense of belonging to the community where they
    live.
  • As the interest in this new challenge grows, so
    do the number of people that want to belong to
    this New Team that is emerging in their
    neighborhood. Leaders are appointed, tasks are
    assigned, and training is scheduled so that
    everybody feels better about their ability to be
    prepared and be a part of the TEAM.

12
How Does This Fit Into A City Organization?
13
A City as an Example
  • In many cities that have CERT programs, they are
    often administered by the fire department. This
    may be for a couple of reasons .
  • First, the fire department normally employs the
    emergency response and medical personnel that can
    teach the response portions of the course.
  • Secondly, most fire departments have active
    public education programs, and CERT can be fairly
    easily incorporated into those processes.
  • In many cases the fire department is also
    responsible for emergency management, so the
    program can fit very appropriately into the
    public education goals of the jurisdiction.
  • Other City, or County as it may be, departments
    such as public works, public utilities, police,
    etc., should also be included as part of the
    teaching cadre. Each department has a specific
    role during a disaster, and those roles can be
    taught to the public through CERT. Having an
    understanding of governments limitations after a
    disaster is a major benefit to the citizen and
    the local jurisdiction.
  • When the fire department operates the course, it
    is usually also established as the primary
    contact after a disaster.

14
How Does the Neighborhood Structure Look?
15
How Comprehensive Can the Team Get?
16
Overhead Team Structure/Operation
  • Mayor and/or City/County Manager
  • Gather Information from EOC and CERT Liaison
    personnel, report on community status.
  • Consider policy requests from EOC.
  • Authorize Emergency Policy implementation through
    Executive/Policy Group decisions.
  • CERT Liaison Personnel
  • CERT instructors and/or HAM radio personnel
    located in the EOC of the jurisdiction.
  • Act as information conduit between On-Site/Area
    Team Leaders and EOC for needs and status.
  • Emergency Operations Personnel at the EOC
  • Coordinate emergency operations.
  • Recommend policy decisions based on situation.
  • Implement policy decisions approved by Executive
    Committee.
  • Gather information, allocate resources, and act
    on reports from emergency response units and
    Neighborhood Team Leaders.
  • Reports actions/status to Executive/Policy Group.

17
On-Site Team Structure
18
On-Site Team Functions
  • On-Site/Area Team Leader gathers information and
    requests for need and reports to the CERT Liaison
    personnel or appropriate agency contact.
  • Communications Coordinator plans for, maintains,
    and operates the available means of
    communications needed.
  • Information Planning Coordinator documents Team
    activities and reports from Damage/Needs
    Assessment Teams.
  • Damage/Needs Assessment Sector identifies,
    documents and reports damage to private property,
    and needs of citizens in that locale.
  • Public Works Sector performs the same function
    with respect to public property and
    infrastructure. Reports status of streets
    regarding blockage or flooding, utilities, and
    infrastructure damage affecting the neighborhood.
  • Resource Coordinator directs volunteers and
    other resources to areas of need.
  • Voluntary Goods Services Sector reports to
    Resource on the availability of manpower and
    supplies.
  • Food Water Sector monitors and reports to
    Resource on the status of available food and
    water.
  • Fire/Rescue/HazMat Coordinator evaluates and
    directs emergency actions within the capabilities
    of volunteers. Reports conditions that warrant
    professional response.
  • Law Enforcement and Security Coordinator
    evaluates and reports conditions that require
    Police action. Directs volunteers to help secure
    private property when appropriate.
  • Mass Care Coordinator documents and reports on
    the condition and needs of people on site.
    Evaluates and arranges for shelter for those in
    need.
  • Transportation Sector identifies available
    transportation or need for same.
  • Health Medical Sector establishes location for
    injured persons to be treated and staged for
    possible transport. Directs medical volunteers.
    Reports on need for emergency medical assistance.
  • People With Special Needs Sector identifies and
    evaluates status of those that are handicapped,
    non-ambulatory, needing prescription drugs or
    have medical conditions that could warrant
    medical attention within a short time.

19
Other CERT Applications
  • If you consider your jurisdictions demographics,
    you will be able to identify several specific
    audiences that deserve attention. While the
    basic program would require some modification to
    fit these different audiences, development would
    be relatively easy to accomplish once you have
    trained instructors. Programs that might need
    consideration are
  • Where the Staff would be trained in CERT and
    assisted in the development of a Disaster Plan
    where needed.
  • Elder Care Facilities
  • Business Owners
  • Hotel/Motel Industry
  • High-Rise Retirement Communities where the Staff
    and Residents could be trained.
  • Scout Troops could be trained, through a modified
    CERT program, to respond and assist the elderly
    in the event of an approaching Hurricane. Their
    primary goal would be to obtain food, supplies or
    medicines for the elderly that would otherwise
    have difficulty getting these items.
  • Schools, where teachers and staff are CERT
    trained and students are offered an Urban
    Survival form of training, similar to the Phoenix
    Plan.
  • Employees and their Families could be CERT
    trained and educated on the part they may play in
    the jurisdictions Disaster Plan. Critical
    employees would understand the options open to
    them for the safety of their families when they
    must report to work due to a disaster.

20
Get The Community Involvedto Help Support the
Cost of the Program!
  • This is the type of program where every level of
    your local community can be a player.
  • Civic groups look for opportunities to
    participate in community projects.
  • Businesses want to be seen as involved corporate
    citizens of the area they do business.
  • Open a Tax Deductible Account for businesses to
    contribute to and give them the documentation
    they need to have the IRS recognize it as a tax
    free donation, while they are helping their
    community.
  • Consider charging 50.00 per student to pay for
    printing, postage, materials and instructors.
    This cost can be paid by tax dollars, but if the
    student gets it for free, they may not take their
    personal commitment as seriously as you will have
    to take your financial commitment.
  • A Team member appreciates having the proper
    equipment to work with in an emergency situation.
    Make an equipment bag, reflective vest, and hard
    hat available at an additional cost, or let local
    businesses sponsor the purchase of that
    equipment. The student should fill the bag with
    equipment and keep it in their personal vehicle
    for emergencies.
  • Since you are promoting this program on a
    community involvement basis, print Tee-shirts,
    patches, window stickers and other identifying
    items. Allow the student to purchase these items
    to show both his/her involvement, as well as
    their commitment to support the program cost.

21
Will CERT Training Make a Difference in Your
Jurisdiction?
  • While your jurisdiction may be fortunate enough
    to have been spared from the hardships and
    challenges that other communities around the
    nation have faced it is probably just a matter
    of time before you are tested by a major event.
  • A Potential Scenario
  • Hopefully you will never have to issue a report
    on how your citizens faired after a disaster but
    if you did, you should expect that having CERT
    trained people would reflect some of the
    following responses.
  • Upon being notified by authorities of the
    impending danger of the approaching hurricane
    CERT members began taking inventory of their
    neighborhoods who is home, who isnt, what
    residents have special needs or have to make
    special preparations, who has equipment that will
    be useful after the fact.
  • After the storm CERT team leaders were able to
    organize volunteers to help assess the status of
    neighbors in a very short period of time and
    authorities were able to determine the need for
    emergency resources much quicker than normal.
  • Those neighbors with Special Needs were quickly
    assessed after the storm.
  • Trained citizens were able to locate injured
    residents, render first aid and where necessary
    move them to a safe area for further treatment.
  • Tornadic winds caused heavy damage in some areas
    where CERT members were required to extricate
    neighbors entrapped in collapsed structures.
  • CERT members identified and isolated areas of
    potential danger around downed power lines,
    broken water mains, and flooded storm drains.
    All damaged homes using natural or LP gas were
    located and valves were turned off to prevent
    fire hazards.
  • Team leaders were able to advise emergency
    operations personnel of the level of damage in
    their areas which allowed the Mayor to justify
    the need for a rapid response of State and
    Federal assistance.
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