Title: Governor
1Governors Office of Homeland Security
Emergency Preparedness
Business
EOC
National Incident Management Systems and Advanced
Technologies (NIMSAT) Institute
May 2010
2Response to Gustav/Ike
- Public-Private Partnerships
- Mobilized products and services from private
sector - Mobile food kitchen (savings, service)
- 23.8 million dollars donations
- Enhanced situational awareness from the private
sector - Wal-Mart shortages of fuel
- Economic Consequence Assessment CIKR
- Reported disruptions to operating capacity of 120
petroleum, natural gas, chemical and electricity
facilities (CITGO Refinery, Entergy, Henry Hub,
LOOP, Ports) - Economic impact to Oil Gas industry 7.6B -
8.3B
3Private Sector
- Disaster Recovery and Resiliency are directly
connected to the private and nonprofit sector - Owns 98 supply chains and distribution networks
- Operates 85 of Critical Infrastructures and Key
Resources (CIKR) - Has the expertise and assets, but unable
- to support without organized direction
4Louisiana Business Emergency Operations Center
A Partnership Of
5Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill
- Team from LED, NIMSAT, and LSU calculating
economic impact of spill. - Industries and areas of interest include tourism,
fishing, wildlife, ecosystem, litigation,
transportation, clean up costs, etc. - Custom LA BEOC web portal to serve as
clearinghouse for unique ideas for oil spill
clean up.
If businesses have a specific type of technology
that our experts think can be incorporated into
the emergency response operationswe are asking
them to be deployed immediately. -Governor
Bobby Jindal
6Louisiana BEOC Mission
- To support disaster management in Louisiana by
- Developing an accurate understanding of economic
impacts to critical infrastructures and major
economic drivers - Coordinating businesses and volunteer
organizations with the public sector - Through the Louisiana BEOC, the State of
Louisiana will - Improve disaster preparedness and response
- Reduce reliance on FEMA and other federal
assistance - Maximize business, industry and economic
stabilization - Return the business environment to normal
operations quickly
7Louisiana BEOC Goals
- Goal 1 Pre-disaster Preparedness and Resiliency
Get a Game Plan - Goal 2 Facilitate bi-directional communication
of critical information between the public sector
and businesses to acquire comprehensive
situational awareness - Goal 3 Estimate economic impacts of the disaster
to major economic drivers across the state, as
well as to Critical Infrastructure and Key
Resources (CIKR) assets, and the resulting
impacts to the state and national economy.
8Louisiana BEOC Goals
- Goal 4 Return business environment to normal
Transition from Response to Recovery Get
businesses back on-line - Goal 5 Maximize the use of Louisiana businesses,
or national private sector resources, to provide
needed emergency unplanned products and services - Goal 6 Assist GOHSEP Unified Logistics Element
(ULE) team in coordinating products and services
with Louisiana, regional, and national businesses
their supply chains - Goal 7 Coordinate voluntary donations from
businesses, VOADs and individuals
9Summer and Winter Fuel
- During Gustav and Ike, Wal-Mart notified the
State of Louisiana that there was a shortage of
summer fuel in Louisiana to support an evacuation
and return. - This information was then communicated through
the EOC command structure, resulting in an
executive declaration from Governor Jindal to
allow winter fuel into the state. - Bi-directional information will be able to flow
between the private sector and government
allowing for improved response.
10MRE vs. Hot Meals
- During Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, the state
engaged the Louisiana Restaurant Association to
provide hot meals to affected communities instead
of distributing MREs through the traditional
PODs. - By utilizing private sector vendors, the state
was able to save approximately 630,000. The
meals were served faster, it saved the state
629,000, and it injected 2.8 million into
Louisiana businesses instead of sending that
money out of state. - Private vendors have the ability to set up
multiple locations that serve hot meals to
replace PODs whenever possible. - Operating PODs is very expensive and can only
support those who are able to travel to the PODs.
11Soft vs. Hard Shutdown
- The private sector has requested they be informed
of an evacuation order a few hours prior to the
public to ensure a soft shutdown. - This means that a grocery store would be able to
put away their produce and frozen foods away
before all of their employees leave the stores to
evacuate the area. - The LA BEOC would be a means in which the
communication between the government and the
private sector could exist. - These stores will be able to reopen faster after
a disaster because of the store will not have to
receive these supplies they were able to store
safely.
12Re-entry Ahead of General Public
- During Hurricane Gustav and Ike many local
jurisdictions requested that large scale,
critical private sector partners be allow to
return to affected communities to open prior to
the turn of the general public. - Houma which was affected by Hurricane Gustav
requested that Wal-Mart be allowed to return
prior to the return of the general public. The
State EOC was able to facilitate re-entry
credentials and Wal-Mart re-established their
stores operation. - Employees could return to work, communities could
purchase needed supplies to return to their
homes, and monies was injected into the local
economy. - This approach allowed the parish to avoid
significant outside assistance and begin the
recovery in a timelier manner.
13Pre-Incident Identification of Partners
- Many parishes are identifying key, critical local
private sector partners that are essential to
support the return of communities following a
disaster by working with local economic
development organizations, chambers of commerce
and trade organizations. - Each business is listed as priority re-entry
entities by parish officials and are allowed into
the affected area to assess and open operations
well before the general public returns. - Each parish is different and will deem varying
industries as critical. - Some examples include utilities, hospitals,
telecommunications, media, and large economic
drivers are critical to the re-establishment of
services that are necessary to sustain life and
commerce following a critical incident.
14Private Sector Benefits
- The LA BEOC represents an opportunity for the
state to easily identify vendors that provide
needed commodities and/or services before they
are needed. - Contracts will be secured for Louisiana
businesses when they will need business the most.
- Businesses will have the opportunity to register
on the LA BEOC website at any time. Registration
is beneficial to the companies because they will
have access to emergency contracts, priority
information from the state, and an avenue to
communicate their problems to the state during an
emergency.
15What the Louisiana BEOC is
- Voice for the private sector
- Force Multiplier for State Resiliency through
business preparedness, response, and recovery - Your Ideas??
What the Louisiana BEOC is NOT
- Not a platform for solicitation
- Not just for businesses that they represent
- Not about preferential treatment or acquiring
business intelligence for a limited few
16LA BEOC Technologies
- Development of technologies that enhance
emergency management professionals to manage
emergencies. - Emergency Mangers to define what technologies are
needed. - Technology must provide value to emergency
managers
17Louisiana Energy Reliability Supply Chain
- Energy CIKR consequence modeling
- Analyze platform-to-pump fuel supply chain
- Develop model to predict gasoline demand by
evacuating traffic - Monitor fuel use, measure traffic volume
18CIKR Economic Impact
19Analysis La Retailers Association PODS
20Gulf of Mexico New England Natural Gas
Dependency
21Intelligent Levees (iLevee)
- Louisianas critical infrastructure
- 350 miles of flood protection
- Metropolitan New Orleans
- State of the art CI protection system
- Monitoring Sensors
- Data Communication networks
- First responders
- HPC system for real-time monitoring
- Impacts to CI on Human, Economic, Governance,
and Psychological Capabilities - Partners
- GeoComp, PB Americas, Inc., Shannon Wilson,
- James Lee Witt Associates, SMARTEC, TIE
Technologies
22LA BEOC Designed for Collaboration
- Flexible (EOC, Classroom and Collaboratorium)
- Secure (Physical, Access and Encryption)
- Easy to use (Customized to task and Supported)
- Robust (Layers of Redundancy)
- Effective (Functionality and Cost)
- Physical and virtual (Interface and OS
independent) - Platform Agnostic (Any device and any standard)
23LA BEOC Physical Structure
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25LABEOC Overarching Benefits
- Increase bi-directional information flow between
the private sector and government in times of
emergencies - Communicate to the private sector that business
matters, and the LABEOC will support them - Businesses are critical to the State and are key
stakeholders during emergencies - Fiscally responsible approach for taking care of
citizens faster, cheaper, better
26LABEOC Next Steps
- Development of operational plan for interface
between all public, private, non-profit
stakeholders for this hurricane season - Identify and support the management of AidMatrix
and WebEOC (LAVOAD, GOHSEP, Private Sector,
Charities/Philanthropic Community, CAN, etc) - Identify mechanism for sharing information
between all stakeholders vis a vis urgent needs
at the State level - Develop Economic Impact and CIKR information
interfaces - Community outreach to all stakeholders
27Business
EOC