Title: Firefighters Support Foundation
1Firefighters Support Foundation
- Mass Violence Post-Response Operations
- --------
- Joint-Agency Response Efforts Following Active
Assailant/Active Shooter Incidents - v1.0
2About FSF
- The Firefighters Support Foundation is a 501c3
non-profit organization whose primary mission is
to develop, produce and distribute training
programs to firefighters and first responders.
All of our programs are distributed free of
charge.
3Permission
- Permission is granted to reproduce or distribute
this material so long as the Firefighters Support
Foundation is credited as the source
4Accompanying Video
- This PowerPoint presentation accompanies the
video presentation of the same title.
5Presenter
6Introduction
- We have learned that a rapid, safe and successful
response to active shooter/active assailant
incidents requires planning, training and
preparation - These complex and demanding incidents may be well
beyond the traditional training and experience of
the majority of first responders and public
safety agencies - Continuing mass violence incidents have
demonstrated the need to prepare local, regional,
state, federal and other agencies to plan for and
respond to these critical incidents - These incidents are fast-moving, volatile and
complex
7Introduction
- We have unfortunately witnessed a growing
frequency of mass violence incidents in the past
several years - A rigid, traditional response guideline or
procedures is not and will not be appropriate for
future active shooter/active assailant incidents - Majority of these incidents can mirror military
combat situations so one option is to look to our
military colleagues for ideas on how they respond
to similar events including training, planning,
squad and team tactics, etc.
8Course Goal
- To prepare public safety officials, emergency
managers and first responders with some basic
tools and information needed to develop or assess
a multi-agency mass violence response plan - Do you even have a plan or even a concept?
- This planning process needs to be a joint fire,
EMS, law enforcement and emergency management
effort to ensure success
9Mass Violence
- The active assailant/active shooter threat
continues to be a current and emerging threat - We have dedicated a lot of training for WMD over
the past 20 years BUT both the both threat and
the practice are evolving - Majority of all attacks in the United States
utilize shootings and explosives
10Pre-Incident Planning
- Critical agencies meet
- Law Enforcement Agencies
- Fire Departments
- Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
- Hospitals
- 911/Communication Centers
- Emergency Management
- Schools/Colleges
- Key Partners
- Target Identification
- Critical Infrastructure
- Government (Local, State and Federal)
- High Profile or Controversial Businesses or
Institutions - Large Crowds/Venues
11Pre-Incident Planning (2)
- Law Enforcement, Fire, EMS, Emergency Management
and other officials all share some of the same
priorities during a mass violence incident (life
safety and incident stabilization) - Interagency cooperation for an active
assailant/active shooter incident should be
paramount - These mass violence incidents can and have
occurred in metro, urban, suburban and rural
settings
12Pre-Incident Planning (3)
- Preparation is the key to a mass violence
incidents and that includes a clear idea of your
actions before the incident occurs - The first step in your preparation is a review of
your agencies guidelines and procedures when
responding to a mass violence incident of any
kind or type - As with any multi-hazard assessment and planning
process it is critical to do a multi-agency
exercise (tabletop or functional) to bring all
the key agencies together and rehearse the plan
once it has been completed
13Emergency Operations Plan
- Each community or jurisdiction needs to have a
detailed and comprehensive all-hazard plan or
emergency operations plan (EOP) - These plans provide the community wide framework
in responding to any large scale incident or
disaster - According to FEMA It is unlikely that any
community can anticipate specific AS/MCI (active
shooter/mass casualty incident) scenarios they
may experience, but it is possible to develop a
generic plan that provides a model to apply in
almost every situation that arises
14Emergency Operations Plan
- Prevent, prepare for, respond to, recover from
local disasters, and ensure a coordinated and
organized response to those hazards - Provides general guidance for EM activities, and
set forth the responsibilities of local
governments and support organizations for
emergency operations in emergencies or disasters - Just as terrorism was added to emergency
operation plans mass violence/active shooter
materials can be added as the general framework
for a community
15Incident Command System
- It is critical that the Incident Command System
(ICS) should be the command and control system
implemented for all mass violence incidents - The impact of well-deployed and practiced use of
the ICS among providers who are likely to respond
together cannot be overstated - Unified Command (UC) must be understood and
practiced by all responders for successful
command and control
16Unified Command
- Each mass violence incident is a primary LE event
but requires immediate coordination between the
LE on-scene commanders and the fire/rescue/EMS
on-scene commanders - UC provides the proper vehicle for command and
control of mass violence incidents so responders
should establish Unified Command and a Command
Post (CP) as soon as possible - A well established incident command system (ICS)
deployed during the first few minutes of a
chaotic mass violence incident will help you
successfully manage the incident for the next few
hours, days and even weeks
17Unified Command (2)
- Be realistic about ICS, not building a 20 page
Incident Action Plan or 30 box organizational
chart in the first 30 minutes - But over the next few hours and days it will be
essential to assign roles and responsibilities - A shared understanding of priorities and
restrictions - A single set of incident objectives
- Collaborative strategies
- Improved internal and external information flow
- Less duplication of efforts
- Better resources utilization
- Media, Media, Media
18Unified Command (3)
- A single integrated incident organization
- Co-located (shared) facilities (CP, Staging,
etc.) - One set of incident objectives, single planning
process, and Incident Action Plan (IAP) once that
develops - Coordinated process for resource ordering
- May be the one way to successfully manage these
type of fast moving incidents with multiple
incidents - Can be a struggle to establish unified command
initially
19Unified Command (4)
- Expensive mobile command posts are a nice tool to
have and may be on scene for days BUT - Past active shooter incidents have shown that
having multiple mobile command buses on scene is
not an effective tool and causes additional
confusion and miscommunications - If using buses, assign a bus for unified command
and assign roles to each subsequent bus - Insufficient representation of key agencies in
command post and people leaving has also been
identified as a major issue
20Command Post Operations
- According to the Hartford Consensus Optimal
outcomes depend on communication between public
safety responders. The response to an active
shooter event is a continuum that requires
coordination between law enforcement and the
medical/evacuation providers - The only way this can happen is rapidly
establishing a face-to-face unified command (UC)
in these fast moving and chaotic situations
21Command Post Operations (2)
- Initial units may establish a forward command
post (CP) as the initial location (may not be
suitable for ongoing or larger command post
operations) - The unified incident command team may set up the
command post in a more advantageous location for
overall command and control of the incident as it
grows in size, scope and scale - Some agencies may refer to this as a tactical
operations center (TOC) for initial units or
internal/hot-zone operations. This is separate
from the larger scene command post (CP) - These Incident Command System tools utilized will
depend on the incident, resources and location
22Victim Accounting
- Must account for victims on the scene, injuries,
deaths, those who may be lock-downed, relocated
to safer or reunion areas, and those transported
to medical or other facilities - During a school shooting it is essential that
every child in the school is accounted for and
this can take some time - This takes resources, and can take hours to
identify and locate every child or adult who has
evacuated, is locked-down or who is relocated to
a safer area
23Secured/Cleared
- The location where the mass violence incident
occurred will need to be secured - While clearing will take less than one minute
per room with a quick sweep - Securing is a lengthy slow, methodical process
that can take hours or even days and lots of
resources - You are checking for additional victims,
explosives, hazmat, using K9, pole cams, etc.
24Multiple Scenes
- During an active shooter/mass violence incident
you may end up with multiple, complex scenes to
manage - This will require the Incident Command System
(ICS) to manage and coordinate - These scenes could include the scene of the
attack, shooters residence, shooters vehicle,
hospitals, family assistance center,
reunification centers for schools, etc.
25Complex Attacks
- Incident complexity continues to grow
- Shooters are enhancing their attacks with
Asymmetric Warfare tactics and weapons which
can make the attack similar to a terrorist attack
or military operation - These can include body armor, automatic weapons,
homemade explosives, deploying smoke and gas,
barricades, etc.
26Complex Attacks (2)
- The term active assailant is replacing active
shooter as some of these attackers use weapons
besides a firearms - These weapons of choice can be knives,
arson/incendiary attack, chemicals, homemade
explosives (HME), vehicle attacks or combination
of these or others - Several recent active shooter/active assailant
incidents have included the shooter going mobile
on foot or in a vehicle and attacking different
27Complex Attacks (3)
- It is important for potential Incident Commanders
to recognize that these incidents can require
hundreds of responders and last for days - Most active shooter/active assailant attacks are
over in 4 to 10 minutes but the response can take
multiple operational periods - This requires utilizing the Incident Command
System (ICS) using extensive command and control
efforts via multiple shifts - You will be integrating multiple local, regional,
state and federal agencies
28Major/Complex Incidents
- FEMA has a definition of a major/complex incident
- Involves multiple jurisdictions and/or agencies
- May involve multiple victims with injuries or
fatalities - Involves complex management and communication
issues - Requires experienced, highly qualified
supervisory personnel - Require numerous tactical and support resources
- Results in psychological threat/trauma
- Spans multiple operational periods (days, weeks,
months) - Requires extensive post-incident recovery
efforts - Draws national media interest
29Hospitals
- Comms centers should alert area hospitals as soon
as a possible that a mass violence incident has
been identified to give these facilities time to
prepare, muster resources and activate their
internal disaster mode - Minor injured patients may directly
self-transport to nearby local hospitals, thus
arriving and creating emergency department
crowding before the transportation of the more
severely injured - Dumping all patients at one or two hospitals
could be moving the disaster from the scene to
the hospitals - Command Post (CP) may ask for activation of the
communities Multiple Casualty Incident (MCI) Plan
to manage the injured depending on numbers
30Staging Area
- Assign a Staging Officer as soon as possible --
do not wait until there are 100 officers or
firefighters on scene as it will be difficult to
play catch up - Having a staging area and staging officer will
greatly assist the command post with assigning
and ordering resources - Staging area needs to be out of the danger area,
and at a location that has enough room and easy
access - Once established a secure staging area can be
used for the duration of the incident
31Staging Area (2)
- It is important to have only one staging area if
possible - There is no operational need for separate staging
areas for law enforcement and Fire/EMS - In past active shooter/mass violence incidents,
multiple staging areas , if established, has led
to confusion and communication issues
32Emergency Operations Center
- Community EOC should be activated as soon as
possible for long term response, recovery,
management, investigative and support efforts - EOC activated for some of the following reasons
- Resources required beyond local capabilities
- The emergency is of long duration
- Multiple agency/jurisdictional involvement
- Unique or emerging problem(s) may require policy
decisions - A local State of Emergency is declared
33Prepare for
- Elected Officials
- Appointed Officials
- Fire Services
- Law Enforcement
- Emergency Medical Services
- Public Works
- Public Information
- Inspections
- Social Services
- Animal Control
- Hospitals
- Finance
- American Red Cross
- Salvation Army
- Transit Authority
- Specialized Resources
- Business/Industry
34Joint Information Center
- A JIC should be established involving all key
agencies and players to manage the local and
national media efforts - Each active shooter/mass violence incident is
conducted real time under intense news and social
media scrutiny and public interest - These large scale or extended events may
necessitate the use of a joint information system - This should include all key response agencies and
target location representative such as school
system rep, college rep or business spokesperson
35Joint Information Center (2)
- Media may appear quickly and may aggressively
attempt to enter the incident area, command post
(CP)or other places to obtain direct surveillance
and communications with survivors, family members
and/or responders - If you have not established a PIO very quickly
distraught family members or neighbors may become
your incident spokespersons
36Joint Information Center (3)
- PIO must have plans for media announcements
regarding a staging area for parents and
relatives of victims, especially in educational
settings - In these incidents, the scene can be quickly
inundated with parents, friends and bystanders - Considerations should be given to assigning
liaison officers to support families of
casualties in handling media requests
37Response of a Lifetime
- Your response of a lifetime could be the
report of a lifetime for the media - There will be requests for dozens of interviews
coming very quickly - Press statements and information should come from
the unified command via the PIO/JIC
38Response of a Lifetime (2)
- Initial reports from the media will be incorrect
and even farfetched - PIO is non-stop, 24/7 effort on a critical
incident - Will need to provide more than 1 or 2 briefs a
day - Unified Command or EOC needs to consider a social
media team to put the message out
39Family Assistance Centers
- A FAC may need to be established near the site if
possible to communicate with family members of
victims, injured and fatalities - Could be another school system facility, college
facility or hotel location - Family assistance center plans includes custodial
care, reunification, guardianship,
accountability, mortuary service planning, and
victim tracking - Eyes of the world on your response from
notification until funerals and beyond (take care
of vicitms)
40Family Assistance Center (2)
- Mass violence incidents may require facilities
where outside persons such as investigators,
detectives, clergy or counselors will interact
with the surviving victim population - This may also be the location where death
notifications are provided to victims family
members if time permits - Try to avoid death notifications in front of
public and media
41Family Assistance Center (3)
- FAC should be readily identifiable, large enough
to hold and administratively process surviving
victim population as they are released to
families, make referrals to post-incident
counseling services, and have adequate traffic
flow (buses may be used in large incidents) and
parking - These locations are not open to the general
public or media and will require law enforcement
security
42Post-Incident/Demobilization
- While stand down is an appropriate time to relax
it also is the best time to capture staff
recollections of specific events that may not
have been well documented - Obtain responder reports, missions and tasks
performed - This is also the time to account for equipment,
personnel, pack gear, complete records, and
release staff back to duty or home - A demobilization plan will include responder
information regarding debriefs, stress management
briefings, and family support information
43CISM/CISD Efforts
- CISM/CISD efforts should be considered for all
victims and responders - Only use trained personnel for these activities
and never combine responder and victims CISM/CISD
efforts - Mental and physical health for responders remains
a tactical consideration throughout the incident - It is possible that some of the responders know
the aggressors and/or victims and this could lead
to serious issues and complications
44Medical Examiner Operations
- Human Remains Recovery (Multi-Agency)
- Morgue Services (Multi-Agency)
- Family Assistance Centers (Multi-Agency)
- Victim Assistance Teams (Multi-Agency)
- Media/Joint Information Center (Multi-Agency)
- Vital Records
- Funeral Home Activities
- Volunteers (Multi-Agency)
- CISM/CISD (Multi-Agency)
45ICS Resources
- Use available NO COST resources
- Continue with FEMA ICS 100 200 classes for ALL
responders, classes are more effective than
on-line sessions - Street supervisors of all ranks should take the
ICS 300 400 classes to give them a better idea
on how to manage and plan for large, more complex
incidents and events - Work with your local and state regional ICS
instructors to develop your own workshops on mass
violence/active assailant incidents
46Crisis Planning 101
- Contact your County Emergency Management Office
or Emergency Services Office if not engaged in
active shooter/mass violence efforts - Be familiar with your jurisdictions all-hazards
plan/emergency operations plan - ICS, ICS, ICS, ICS
- Participate in active shooter/active assailant
drills and exercises including tabletops,
functional and full scale - Mass violence/active shooter incident specific
training exercises - Trained and experienced team works better than
the best written plans
47References
- USFA Fire/Emergency Medical Services Department
Operational Considerations and Guide for Active
Shooter and Mass Casualty Incidents - IAFF Position Statement Active Shooter Events
- C-TECC Evolution and Application of TCCC
Guidelines to Civilian High Threat Medicine - Improving Survival from Active Shooter Events
The Hartford Consensus
48Firefighter Support Foundation
- Additional mass violence/active shooters
resources available from the Firefighters Support
Foundation - Active Shooters Rapid Treatment Model
- Terrorism Response Preparedness and Operations
for Mid- and Small-Size Public Safety Agencies
49BE SAFE!