florida explan 2014 -
TRANSCRIPT
State of F lor ida
Multi-Year Training Exercise Plan
2012 - 2014
&
For Official Use Only
For Official Use Only
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ADMINISTRATIVE HANDLING i FLORIDA INSTRUCTIONS
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
ADMINISTRATIVE HANDLING INSTRUCTIONS 1. The title of this document is State of Florida Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan 2012-
2014. 2. For more information, please refer to the following points of contact (POCs):
State Administrative Agent Point of Contact:
Linda Mcwhorter State Training and Exercise Officer Florida Division of Emergency Management 2555 Shumard Oak Boulevard Tallahassee, FL 32399-2100 Office: (850) 413-9899 Fax: (850) 528-7528 [email protected]
Document Facilitator Point of Contact:
Jeffrey Alexander Director of Emergency Preparedness Northeast Florida Regional Council 6850 Belfort Oaks Place Jacksonville, FL 32216 Office: (904) 279-0880 Fax: (904) 279-0881 [email protected]
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2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
PREFACE The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (USDHS) Preparedness Directorate’s Office of Grants and Training (G&T) requires that every State and Urban Area conduct a Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan Workshop (T&EPW) annually. As a result, Florida conducted its 2012-2014 Multi-Year T&EPW on April 12-13, 2011, in Altamonte Springs, Florida, resulting in a proposed Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan (MYTEP). The State of Florida has pursued a coordinated domestic security strategy that combines enhanced planning, new equipment purchases, innovative training, and realistic exercises to strengthen the State’s emergency preparedness and response capabilities. Training and exercises play a crucial role in this strategy, providing the State with a means of attaining, practicing, validating, and improving these capabilities. Many of the State’s training and exercise programs are promoted and coordinated by the Florida Division of Emergency Management (FDEM), in coordination with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE), Florida Department of Health (FDOH), the Regional Domestic Security Task Forces (RDSTF), Urban Area Security Initiatives (UASI), Local Emergency Planning Councils (LEPC) and numerous county, municipal and local emergency response agencies. Therefore, leveraging the functional relationships embedded within Florida’s governance structure makes sense and is crucial to the collaborative success of this year’s T&EPW. This will remain so into the foreseeable future. These governing entities, designed to encourage and facilitate multi-jurisdictional and multidisciplinary participation at all levels of government, also provides a linkage between the State’s collaborative training and exercise planning efforts and its funding/resourcing processes. This linkage creates added incentive for the Regional Coordinators (supported by Regional Planning Council points of contact) to not only actively participate in the annual T&EPW, but to provide oversight of the regional collection/maintenance of historical exercise and training data critical to the T&EPW execution. This Regional data and its accuracy are needed to justify future funding and allocation of resources. The collection of data supporting this year’s MYTEP was gathered in two phases:
• Phase 1: Consisted of gathering and reviewing training/exercise data from within the specific region. This was accomplished under the oversight of the Regional Coordinators and assistance from the Regional Planning Councils, who collated, formatted and submitted the training/exercise data on the State share point site. This regional baseline data, as it was submitted, remains archived on the State share point site for reference, and is included as part of the TEP as Appendix B.
• Phase 2: Consisted of the collaborative data collected during the conduct of the T&EPW. There, the regional participants were charged with identifying regional training and exercise priorities and windows of opportunity to consolidate their training and
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
exercise needs with other regions when appropriate to save money and resources and potentially enhance the value of the exercise and training experience.
This year’s T&EPW was attended by all the Regional Coordinators and Regional Planning Council point of contacts. Their active participation ensured its success. The resulting MYTEP reflects the regional consolidated, collaborative effort to identify common priorities and windows of time where they could train and exercise together (when appropriate). As mentioned in the process explained above, Florida would save precious money and resources, while potentially increasing the value of these future training/exercise experiences for the participants, by executing this MYTEP. This illustrates the value of the T&EPW process, and a process of more acute value in funding constrained times such as exist today. Without this level of participation and assistance from all of the Regional players, the T&EPW would not be possible. Therefore, a debt of gratitude is owed to all the Regional participants for their contributions to this year’s collective effort.
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
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CONTENTS vi FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
CONTENTS ADMINISTRATIVE HANDLING INSTRUCTIONS ............................................................................... I PREFACE ................................................................................................................................................ III CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................... 1
PURPOSE...............................................................................................................................................................1 OVERVIEW.............................................................................................................................................................1 2012-2014 T&EPW ................................................................................................................................................3
CHAPTER 2: PROGRAM PRIORITIES ................................................................................................. 7 NATIONAL PRIORITIES ......................................................................................................................................7 FLORIDA DOMESTIC SECURITY STRATEGIC GOALS ...............................................................................7
CHAPTER 3: TRAINING AND EXERCISE METHODOLOGY .......................................................... 8 INTRODUCTION....................................................................................................................................................8 CYCLE OF ACTIVITIES........................................................................................................................................8
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE ........................................ 10 STATE PRIORITIES............................................................................................................................................10 REGIONAL PRIORITIES....................................................................................................................................11 MULTI-REGIONAL COLLABORATION CALENDARS ................................................................................21
CHAPTER 5: TYPES OF EXERCISES................................................................................................ 37 DISCUSSION-BASED EXERCISES ................................................................................................................37 OPERATIONS-BASED EXERCISES ...............................................................................................................39
CHAPTER 6: RESPONSIBILITIES ...................................................................................................... 43 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY (DHS) ............................................................................43 STATE OF FLORIDA ..........................................................................................................................................43 LOCAL JURISDICTIONS...................................................................................................................................43
APPENDIX A: TARGET CAPABILITIES LIST..................................................................................... 1 COMMON................................................................................................................................................................1 PREVENT MISSION AREA .................................................................................................................................1 PROTECT MISSION AREA .................................................................................................................................1 RESPOND MISSION AREA ................................................................................................................................1 RECOVER MISSION AREA ................................................................................................................................2
APPENDIX B: COUNTY TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLANS ......................................................... 1 APPENDIX C: ACRONYMS .................................................................................................................... 1
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CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION 1 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
PURPOSE The purpose of the Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan (MYTEP) is to provide a follow-up companion document to Florida’s Domestic Security Strategic Plan. It is a living document that will be updated and refined annually. The MYTEP provides a roadmap for Florida to follow in accomplishing the priorities described in Florida’s Domestic Security Strategic Plan. Each State priority is linked to a corresponding National Priority, and, if applicable, an Improvement Plan (IP) action. The priority is further linked to the associated target capabilities that would facilitate accomplishment of the priority and the training and exercises that will help the jurisdiction obtain those capabilities and achieve that priority. OVERVIEW The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) requires that every State and urban area conduct an annual Training and Exercise Plan Workshop (T&EPW). As a result, Florida conducted its Multi-Year T&EPW in April 2011, and has since produced this Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan. The State of Florida has pursued a coordinated homeland security strategy that combines enhanced planning, new equipment purchases, innovative training, and realistic exercises to strengthen the State’s emergency prevention and response capabilities. Training and exercises play a crucial role in this strategy, providing the State with a means of developing, practicing, validating, and improving capabilities. The MYTEP provides the linkage between this strategy and the supporting training and exercise activities. The State’s training and exercise programs are administered by the Florida Division of Emergency Management, in coordination with its local, State, Federal, and private partners. The training and exercise agenda described in this plan is contingent upon funding for the identified State-level response agencies and collaborating jurisdictional response stakeholders. STAKEHOLDERS Stakeholders included:
• Government/entities with roles and responsibilities in natural and technological hazards • Local Agencies including all departments and special teams • Counties including all county departments and special teams • Municipalities including all municipal departments
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2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
• Critical Infrastructure including hospitals, ports, airports, utilities, school districts, etc. • Collaborative Organizations (RDSTF, UASI, LEPC, Citizen Corps, and others) • State Agencies (including all departments, Divisions and special teams) • Optional Federal Agencies/Military Installations
PROCESS OVERVIEW The Florida Division of Emergency Management Training and Exercise Unit is responsible for the development and submission to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security of the State’s MYTEP. FDEM developed the overall MYTEP worksheets; initiated the data collection process within each region; conducted a State T&EPW; finalized and submitted the MYTEP; and provided support to stakeholders as available throughout the MYTEP implementation. In order to consolidate a MYTEP for the State of Florida, each region (and each stakeholder within each region) was tasked to identify its needs. Each stakeholder then determined which capabilities, from Florida’s Domestic Security Strategic Plan, would be focused on priorities for the plan period. In support of the selected priority capabilities, the stakeholder further identified which training courses and/or exercises they would undertake in order to obtain, maintain, enhance or validate the selected capabilities. They entered the identified training on the training and exercise schedule included in the stakeholder packet. This information was then entered onto the State’s share point site to archive it for future reference and use during and after the T&EPW. The ultimate use of this plan is to promote collaboration whenever possible and justify training and exercise funding from the various funding sources, ensuring effective, strategic allocation of resources. It was understood by all stakeholders that while this plan does not constitute a binding commitment, they should none the less strive to accomplish it. REGIONAL COORDINATORS The FDEM Regional Coordinators were responsible for leading the effort in each region. They forwarded the training and exercise information request via the County Emergency Management Agencies within each Region, who further distributed it to all county departments, municipalities, and critical infrastructure agency within their jurisdiction. The FDEM Regional Coordinators also distributed the information request to the RDSTF, LEPC and UASI (as applicable) requesting they identify any overarching organization-specific and/or multi-jurisdictional specialty team specific training and exercises. Regional boundaries for the collection of this data paralleled the FDEM/RDSTF regions.
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2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
REGIONAL PLANNING COUNCILS Further, the Regional Planning Councils (RPCs) were contracted to serve as the collection points for the information submitted by the stakeholders. The RPCs assembled the Regional Training and Exercise Plan components and submitted the information onto the State’s share point site. 2012-2014 T&EPW This discussion area may provide some lessons to other states conducting a T&EPW. It contains some perspectives and solutions to issues that may be encountered by other states engaged in a similar effort. This process is evolving and therefore the following comments represent a “plateau” in that evolving effort and not its optimal end state. REGIONAL DATA COLLECTION Each region was allotted over four weeks time to coordinate/collaborate with the appropriate agencies/jurisdictions to identify their training and exercise priorities, and to ensure that the proposed events were properly assessed against lessons learned, improvement plan recommendations from previous training courses and exercise evaluations. Special emphasis was placed on ensuring the data collected was inclusive, supportable, and reflected wide interagency collaboration. INTERAGENCY PARTICIPATION An effort was made early on to enlist the participation of as many appropriate state and federal agencies as possible. This injected a natural and realistic agency-to-jurisdiction interface into the training and exercise planning process. This interface is consistent and anticipated within the National Response Framework, as well as necessary for the accelerated assessment and response to a catastrophic incident. In that regard, early identification and collaboration between those appropriate players in the T&EPW is not only necessary, but critical to its success. STATE SHAREPOINT SITE To facilitate the free exchange of ideas and the gathering and archiving of data, a State SharePoint site was established. On it, regional and interagency baseline data was collected and archived, and ideas and methodologies were cross-fertilized. Access was limited purposely to Regional Planning Councils and Regional Coordinators. This tool facilitated the visibility and compilation of data necessary for the needs of the T&EPW. The collected data serves to further substantiate the reasoning behind the collective multi-regional decisions reflected in the MYTEP.
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2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
Additionally, when it comes time to execute, design, and develop an individual exercise, the RPCs or RCs should first access this SharePoint data to identify the regional target capabilities, and tasks associated with the proposed supportive training/exercise. STAKEHOLDER PACKET FDEM developed a Stakeholder Packet that was comprised of training and exercise data collection worksheets for this year’s effort. This format tool greatly improved and standardized the data collection process for the Counties and Regions. This format was further used to collect and display the consolidated collaboration between Regions that occurred during the T&EPW. FUNDING While not yet fully linked in Florida, the use of the MYTEP process in justifying funding and allocating of resources for training and exercises was reinforced and briefed to the participants. This helped to clarify the importance of the effort and further enhanced the value of this collaborative, annual event. LESSONS
• Conduct T&EPW earlier. This T&EPW was conducted earlier than the previous workshop. This will allow time for State decision makers to consider this data in their funding/resource allocation.
• More interagency participation. Distribution of the Stakeholder package to an expanded group would encourage even wider involvement. The availability and value of the State share point site as a historical archive of the data provides an offset to these normally occurring distracters. Therefore, further effort needs to be made for a wider distribution.
• More visibility of schedules needed. The regional data collection process would benefit from better visibility of interagency schedules and plans within the State. Wider access/use of the National Exercise Schedule System (NEXS) may mitigate some of this requirement.
• Funding constrained T&EPW. The feedback from the T&EPW participants was that the conduct of this T&EPW is only possible using a conference/workshop/seminar style event. Nonetheless, constrained funding is a reality that must be addressed for future T&EPW, because the desire is to further expand the participation base.
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
Figure 1.1 Florida’s Division of Emergency Management Regions
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CHAPTER 2: PROGRAM PRIORITIES 7 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
CHAPTER 2: PROGRAM PRIORITIES As part of the continuous preparedness process, the Florida Division of Emergency Management and other partners drafted the State of Florida State Homeland Security Strategy to define the State’s efforts and areas of focus. Based on the guidance of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) as depicted in the National Preparedness Goal, the strategy commits Florida to the National Priorities defined by DHS and supplements these priorities with initiatives specific to Florida’s threats and capabilities to meet those threats. NATIONAL PRIORITIES
1. Implement National Incident Management System and National Response Framework 2. Expanded Regional Collaboration 3. Implement the National Infrastructure Protection Plan 4. Strengthen Information Sharing and Collaboration Capabilities 5. Strengthen Interoperable Communications Capabilities 6. Strengthen CBRNE Detection, Response and Decontamination Capabilities 7. Strengthen Medical Surge and Mass Prophylaxis Capabilities
FLORIDA DOMESTIC SECURITY STRATEGIC GOALS The 2009-2011 Florida Domestic Security Strategic Plan guides the State’s preparedness, prevention, protection, response, and recovery efforts. It identifies Florida’s vision of preparedness and defines the goals and objectives that will enable a realization of this vision. Goal 1: PREPARE for all hazards, natural or man-made, to include terrorism. Goal 2: PREVENT, preempt, and deter acts of terrorism. Goal 3: PROTECT Florida’s citizens, visitors, and critical infrastructure. Goal 4: RESPOND in an immediate, effective, and coordinated manner, focused on the victims
of the attack. Goal 5: RECOVER quickly and restore our way of life following a terrorist act.
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2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
CHAPTER 3: TRAINING AND EXERCISE METHODOLOGY INTRODUCTION The Florida Multi-Year Training and Exercise Plan (MYTEP) provides overall guidance for conducting and evaluating exercises. In order to meet the goals and objectives outlined in the State Strategy, several opportunities for training and exercise support have been identified. To accomplish these goals, the State’s roles and responsibilities are to prepare and execute the TEP, provide technical assistance and support to communities, coordinate regional training and exercise collaboration, and coordinate training and exercise funding requests. CYCLE OF ACTIVITIES Figure 3.1 One-year Cycle The jurisdictions within the State of Florida take a holistic, cyclical approach to training and exercise development. The intent is to integrate them into an overall preparedness program. Therefore, the program follows the cycle of planning/development, training/preparation, exercises, and corrective action/improvement. An additional consideration in these tough fiscal times is how taccomplish these steps in a fiscally responsible way. Is there an innovative, less expensive way to meet the functional intent? For example: is it possible to leverage a real event where resources are already committed and use it as a training/exercise opportunity? By adding an observer/evaluation team and or a parallel workshop leveraging the preparatory planning being done for the real event; would it not be possible to examine/vet other aspects of plans not exercised during the normal execution of the event?
o
LOCAL TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES Local jurisdictions should consider the following when developing their own training goals and schedules:
• Planning: look for opportunities during the planning process o Regional Strategic Plans: develop, review, update and identify strengths,
weaknesses and opportunities o Emergency Operations Plan: develop, review, update and identify weaknesses o Emergency Operations Plan: conduct a needs assessment and vulnerability
analysis • Equipment purchases: factor in training related to new equipment • Exercises: identify response and recovery needs
CHAPTER 3: TRAINING AND EXERCISE 9 FLORIDA METHODOLOGY
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
• Collaboration: participate and work with Local Emergency Planning Councils and
Regional Domestic Security Task Force Agencies • Evaluation: develop improvement actions and track them to completion • Training Announcements: keep the State informed about staff changes • Frequently check the training and exercise calendars on the internet for opportunities • Think regionally by sharing training and exercise opportunities with neighboring
jurisdictions • Coordinate efforts with all response and recovery agencies
BUILDING BLOCK APPROACH Figure 3.2 Building Block Approach Employing a building block approach for each othe jurisdictions throughout the life of the program remains applicable. The building block approach ensures successful progression in exercise design, complexity, and execution, and allows for the appropriate training and preparation to occur in the community conducting the exercise. By using this methodology, the State can ensure that the levels of exercise sophistication are tailored to each specific region or jurisdiction, while maintaining the same delivery strategy.
f
Planning/Training
Cap
abili
ty
Full-Scale Exercises
Functional Exercises
Drills
Games
Tabletops
Workshops
Seminars
Discussion-Based Operations-Based
Planning/Training
Cap
abili
ty
Full-Scale Exercises
Functional Exercises
Drills
Games
Tabletops
Workshops
Seminars
Discussion-Based Operations-Based
The baseline exercise progression for each jurisdiction is to move from a seminar to a tabletop exercise (TTX) to a functional exercise (FE), and finally, to a full scale exercise (FSE). These particular exercise types allow for a logical progression of regional and jurisdictional preparedness by increasing in size, complexity, and stress factor, while allowing for significant learning opportunities that effectively complement, build upon, and directly lead into one another. This model will remain flexible enough to allow for the addition of, or inclusion of, other desired exercise types that the State of Florida may require. Finally, this exercise model allows for a cyclical approach to statewide exercises, which provides the State with a sustainable program for achieving higher degrees of overall preparedness.
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 10 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
The State Priorities and Regional Priorities of the Multi-Year Training and Exercise calendar were compiled from the conduct of the T&EPW. They illustrate the collaborative efforts of the regions at consolidating their training and exercise efforts when appropriate and feasible. STATE PRIORITIES The T&EPW participants determined that the State of Florida should establish the following priorities as State priorities for the MYTEP. Each priority is tied to a set of items from the Total Capabilities List.
Rank State Priority Applicable TCL(s)
1 Communications All
2
Intel and Information Sharing All
3
ICS Position Specific
1 ‐ Planning 4 ‐ Risk Management 5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination
4 EOC Management All
5 Critical Resource Logistics Distribution
3 ‐ Community Preparedness & Participation 4 ‐ Risk Management 5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination
6 Evacuation Process/Sheltering
3 ‐ Community Preparedness & Participation 4 ‐ Risk Management
7 Community Preparedness
1 ‐ Planning 3 ‐ Community Preparedness & Participation 5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination
8 Support K‐20 All
REGIONAL PRIORITIES Each of Florida’s regions established its regional training and exercise priorities either at the regional level prior to arriving at the State T&EP workshop or during the T&EP workshop. The regional priorities are intended to further the State Strategic Goals; therefore each regional priority identifies the Regional goal it is intended to further. This is important because it serves to clarify the regions intent as they are established by their priorities. Following are the Regional Training and Exercise Priorities and their accompanying State Goals.
Region 1 Training Priorities
Rank Priority Item Classes Applicable TCL(s)
1 Communications FIN, COM‐L, G‐575, EDICS/EDWARDS, G‐250, G‐290 Basic PIO
2 ‐ Communications
2 EOC Management Fusion Center (ILO)Training EOC Management Courses
5 ‐ Intelligence and Information Sharing and Dissemination 15 ‐ Emergency Operations Center Management
3 Incident Management NIMS ICS L‐950 thru L‐975, L449 G‐191
14 ‐ On‐Site Incident Management 15 ‐ Emergency Operations Center Management
4 WMD IRTB 230‐1, PRSBI G‐320, MGT 320, HAZ008, PER 222, PER‐240, AZ‐001 RESP, PER‐226, MGT 320
22 ‐ Explosive Device Response Operations 24 ‐ WMD and Hazardous Materials Response and Decontamination
5 Critical Infrastructure EPLAN, ACAMS, HSEEP 10 ‐ Critical Infrastructure Protection
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 11 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
Region 1 Exercise Priorities
Rank Priority Item Applicable TCL(s)
1 Interoperable communications/FSE 2 ‐ Communications 14 ‐ On‐Site Incident Management
2 Walton County School Shooter/FSE 2 ‐ Communications 5 ‐ Intelligence and Information Sharing and Dissemination 10 ‐ Critical Infrastructure Protection
3 Regional Hospitals Mass casualty and decontamination/FE
2 ‐ Communications 22 ‐ Explosive Device Response Operations 24 ‐ WMD and Hazardous Materials Response and Decontamination
4 LTRT Operation Integration/FE 5 ‐ Intelligence and Information Sharing and Dissemination 15 ‐ Emergency Operations Center Management
5 Hurricane Response/FSE
2 ‐ Communications 5 ‐ Intelligence and Information Sharing and Dissemination 10 ‐ Critical Infrastructure Protection 14 ‐ On‐Site Incident Management 18 ‐ Responder Safety and Health 22 ‐ Explosive Device Response Operations 24 ‐ WMD and Hazardous Materials Response and Decontamination
6 Hazmat/FSE
2 ‐ Communications 5 ‐ Intelligence and Information Sharing and Dissemination 15 ‐ Emergency Operations Center Management 18 ‐ Responder Safety and Health
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 12 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
Region 2 Training and Exercise Priorities
Rank Priority Item Classes Applicable TCL(s)
1 Regional Training and Exercises on the Suspicious Substance Protocol ‐ The protocol has been around since 2009, but most of the region needs a better understanding of it.
Workshops/Tabletops, Position‐specific Training, L‐950‐975
On‐site Incident Management WMD/Hazardous Materials Response Decontamination
2 Review, update and/or create COOPs for counties, organizations and schools in the region ‐ Many COOPs have not been updated since 2004 and many schools do not have one.
G‐781, G‐498, L‐548 Planning
3 Continued regional training and exercises (outside of Tallahassee) to improve coordination of field operations for all hazards ‐ Five new EOCs came online in 2010 and most training is in Tallahassee and not in other parts of the region. Classes often fill up with DEM employees when in Tallahassee.
G‐775, G‐110, G‐203 On‐ site Incident Management EOC Management
4 Continued training and exercises for interoperable communications resources throughout the region ‐ Personnel depth for interoperable communications teams is a major problem. Need to build depth.
FIN and MARC training Communications
5 Provide regional specialty team workshops to counties across the region ‐ Develop a specialty team workshop to give requesting organizations an overview of the capabilities and limitations of each regional specialty team.
National Grid Training Planning
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CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 14 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
Region 3 Training Priorities
Rank Priority Item Classes Applicable TCL(s)
1 Communications G575, COML, COMT, COMC Communications ‐ (2)
2 Intel, Info Sharing, ILO G‐408, AWR ‐ 181 Info Gathering and Recog Indicators/Warnings ‐ (6)
3 ICS Position Specific: Plans, Logistics, Operations, Finance Section training
Position Specific (L‐classes) and 300/400/191, HSEEP
On ‐Site Incident Mgt. (14)
4 EOC Mgt. G775,110,191,247,351,249 EOC Mgt (15)
5 Sheltering G‐108,197,358 Mass Care, Feeding (33)
Region 3 Exercise Priorities
Rank Priority Item Applicable TCL(s)
1 Communicate Freedom EX (Regional) Communications (2)
2 Statewide Hurricane EX EOC Operations (15), Mass Care (33)
3 Dirty Bomb LE (8), On site Incident Mgt (14), Explosive Response (22), WMD (24)
4 Airport, FSE and TTX Communications (2), Intel Info (5), EOC mgt (15), Firefighting (23)
5 Hospital FSE, TTX Medical Surge (30), Medical Mgt and Distribution (31)
Region 4 Training Priorities
Rank Priority Item Classes Applicable TCL(s)
1 Training for and awareness of the Intelligence Liaison Officer (ILO) program and information sharing systems
ILO Training (not yet scheduled), local WebEOC training
5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination 2 – Communications 6 – Information Gathering and Recognition of Indicators and Warnings
2 Continued regional training and exercises to improve coordination of field operations for all‐hazards
G‐110 (Emergency Management Operations), G‐191 (Incident Command System/Emergency Operations Center), G‐300, G‐400, G‐402, G‐775, L‐449
14 ‐ On‐site Incident Management 15 – Emergency Operations Center Management
3 The risk to, vulnerability of, and consequence of attack to critical infrastructure are reduced through the identification and protection of critical infrastructure.
REP‐001 (Advanced Course for Radiological Response (MERRTT))
10‐ Critical Infrastructure Protection
4 To focus not just on communications systems, but actual communication during events between agencies/disciplines
G‐272 (Warning Coordination), G‐575 (Communications Interoperability)
2 – Communications 5 – Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination
5 Awareness of and training for USAR team No trainings currently scheduled. This goal was added during the meeting and the region plans to schedule training and exercises to support it.
27 ‐ Urban Search and Rescue
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Region 4 Exercise Priorities
Rank Priority Item Exercise Applicable TCL(s)
1 Training for and awareness of the Intelligence Liaison Officer (ILO) program and information sharing systems
Interoperable Communications Exercise/DrillEMS/ER Communications Crisis Communication (PIO/JIC)
2 ‐ Communications, 5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing
2 Continued regional training and exercises to improve coordination of field operations for all‐hazards
ICS Exercise EOC Exercise EOC Drill
14 ‐ On‐site Incident Management, 15 ‐ EOC Management
3 The risk to, vulnerability of, and consequence of attack to critical infrastructure are reduced through the identification and protection of critical infrastructure.
FAA/TSA Drills Radiological Emergency Preparedness Exercises FAA FE
10‐ Critical Infrastructure Protection
4 To focus not just on communications systems, but actual communication during events between agencies/disciplines
Interoperable Communications Exercise/DrillEMS/ER Communications Crisis Communication (PIO/JIC)
2 ‐ Communications, 5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing
5 Awareness of and training for USAR team HURRICANE (DEBRIS) (SAR) WORKSHOP
27 ‐ Urban Search and Rescue
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CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 17 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
Region 5 Training Priorities
Rank Priority Item Classes Applicable TCL(s)
1 Position Specific Training (ICS) – Planning, Communications, On‐site Incident Management, EOC Management to include COML, COMT Training
COM‐L, COM‐T, COM‐C, L‐950, L‐952, L‐954, L‐956, L‐958, L‐960, L‐962, L‐964, L‐965, L‐967, L‐970, L‐971, L‐973
TCL 2‐Communications, TCL 15‐Emergency Operations Center Management
2 Post Disaster Recovery Training TCL 36‐Restoration of Lifelines, TCL 37‐Economic and Community Recovery
3 Unified Command Training G‐300, G‐400, G‐402, L‐950, L‐952, L‐954, L‐956, L‐958, L‐960, L‐962, L‐964, L‐965, L‐967, L‐970, L‐971, L‐973
TCL 14‐On‐Site Incident Management
4 Special Events Planning/Training 5 Incident Specific Training (i.e. Active Shooter) MGT‐310, PER‐240, 6 JIC/JIS G‐908, G‐575 TCL 2 ‐ Communications 7 ILO Training TCL 5‐Intelligence Sharing and
Information, TCL 6‐Information Gathering and Recognition of Indicators and Warnings, TCL 7 Intelligence Analysis and Production, TCL 10‐Critical Infrastructure Protection
8 HazMat Training for UASI Taskforce teams, Fire Rescue, Law Enforcement Training
AWR‐140, AWR‐141, AWR‐160‐1
TCL 9‐CBRNE Detection, TCL 22‐Explosive Device Response Operations, TCL 24‐WMD and Hazardous Materials Response and Decontamination
9 Hazardous Weather G‐194, G271, G‐272, G360, G‐363
TCL 1‐Planning, TCL 3‐Community Preparedness and Participation
Region 5 Exercise Priorities
Rank Priority Item Applicable TCL(s)
1 Incident Specific 1‐Planning, 14‐On‐Site Incident Management
2 Multi‐jurisdictional/multi‐agency/multi‐discipline 1‐Planning, 2‐Communications
3 Whole Community Exercise 1‐Planning, 3‐Community Preparedness and Participation, 17‐Volunteer Management and Donations, 33‐Mass Care, 37‐Economic and Community Recovery
4 UASI Exercise 1‐Planning, 6‐Information Gathering and Recognition of Indicators and Warning, 9‐CBRNE Detection, 10‐Critical Infrastructure Protection, 14‐On‐Site Incident Management, Critical Resource Logistics and Distribution
5 Communications Exercise 2‐Communications 6 Regional JIC/JIS Exercise 1‐Planning,
2‐Communications, 5‐Intelligence and Information Sharing and Dissemination
7 Regional Higher Education Exercise 1‐Planning, 3‐Community Preparedness and Participation
8 Port Security Exercise 6‐Information Gathering and Recognition of Indicators and Warning, 10‐Critical Infrastructure Protection
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 18 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
Region 6 Training Priorities
Rank Priority Item Classes Applicable TCL(s)
1 ICS Position Specific Training ‐ Safety Officer, General Staff, Command Staff, Specialty Unit Leaders
G‐775, IS‐77, G‐191, G‐110, G‐290, All Hazard Leader Training Courses (Planning Section Chief, Operations Section Chief, Logistics Section Chief, Finance/Admin Section Chief, Safety Officer), HSEEP
14 ‐ On‐Site Incident Management 15 – Emergency Operations Center Management
2 Evacuation & Sheltering (General and Special Needs)
Shelter‐In‐Place Training, G‐626 25‐ Citizen Evacuation and Shelter in Place 33 – Mass Care (Sheltering, Feeding and Related Services)
3 Multi‐Jurisdictional and Multi‐Disciplinary Communications
COM‐L, G‐290 2‐ Communications
4 Information Sharing Among Agencies G‐290 5‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination 7 – Intelligence Analysis and Production
5 K‐20 School Security G‐362, E‐362, Active Shoot Training, G‐351, G‐357
8‐ Law Enforcement Investigation and Operations 11‐Food and Agriculture Safety and Defense 19‐Public Safety and Security Response
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 19 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 20 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
Region 7 Training Priorities
Rank Priority Item Classes Applicable TCL(s)
1 Management of the Emergency Operations Center
G‐110, G‐191, G‐775 15 ‐ Emergency Operations Center Management
2 Logistics and Distribution of Critical Resources FL‐2355:01, FL‐001 16 ‐ Critical Resource Logistics and Distribution
3 Economic and Community Recovery G‐278, G‐549, COOP‐OS1, G270.4
36 ‐ Restoration of Lifelines 37‐Economic and Community Recovery
4 Sharing and Dissemination of Intelligence and Information
G‐191, G‐300, G‐400, G‐908
5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing & Dissemination
5 Emergency Public Information and Warning G‐908, G‐360, G‐272, G‐290
28 ‐ Emergency Public Information and Warning
Region 7 Exercise Priorities
Rank Priority Item Applicable TCL(s)
1 Sharing and Dissemination of Intelligence and Information 5 ‐ Intelligence/Information Sharing and Dissemination
2 Community Preparedness and Participation 3 ‐ Community Preparedness & Participation
3 Management of the Emergency Operations Center 15 ‐ Emergency Operations Center Management
4 Evacuation of Citizens and Sheltering in Place 25 ‐ Citizen Evacuation & Shelter‐in‐Place 33‐Mass Care (Sheltering, Feeding and Related Services)
5 Logistics and Distribution of Critical Resources 16 ‐ Critical Resource Logistics & Distribution 36‐Restoration of Lifelines
C 21 FLORIDA A
HAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING ND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
MULTI-REGIONAL COLLABORATION CALENDARS Once finished setting Regional Priorities, the regions participated in a Regional Collaboration activity. During this process the regions worked together to identify opportunities to coordinate training and collaborate on the implementation of exercises. Many of the regions agreed they did not need to do a lot of coordination, but to take advantage of training and exercise opportunities that will occur in neighboring regions. The following items are the specific multi-regional collaboration opportunities identified.
nce finished setting Regional Priorities, the regions participated in a Regional Collaboration activity. During this process the regions worked together to identify opportunities to coordinate training and collaborate on the implementation of exercises. Many of the regions agreed they did not need to do a lot of coordination, but to take advantage of training and exercise opportunities that will occur in neighboring regions. The following items are the specific multi-regional collaboration opportunities identified.
• Region 1: • Region 1: o Region 2-FSE exercise with the State and development of training and tabletops
for the Suspicious Substance Protocol and Region IED Exercise o Region 2-FSE exercise with the State and development of training and tabletops
for the Suspicious Substance Protocol and Region IED Exercise o Regions 2 and 3-On-Site/Incident Management Training o Regions 2 and 3-On-Site/Incident Management Training
• Region 2: • Region 2: o Region 3-National Grid Training o Region 3-National Grid Training
• Region 5: • Region 5: o Regions 3 and 4-Civil Unrest at an educational institution exercise to take place at
local colleges and universities o Regions 3 and 4-Civil Unrest at an educational institution exercise to take place at
local colleges and universities • Region 6: • Region 6:
o Will collaborate with training opportunities o Will collaborate with training opportunities • Region 7: • Region 7:
o Was unable to identify any specific opportunities to collaborate with the other Regions but all their training and exercises are published in the FDEM calendar
o Was unable to identify any specific opportunities to collaborate with the other Regions but all their training and exercises are published in the FDEM calendar and open to personnel from other Regions that can make their own travel arrangementsand open to personnel from other Regions that can make their own travel arrangements
Region 2 FSE with the State and development of
training and tabletops for the Suspicious
Substance Protocol and Region IED
Exercise
Region 3
National Grid
Region 1
Training
Regions 2 and 3
On-Site/ Incident
Management Training
Region 3 National
Grid Training
Region 2
Region 5
Regions 3 and 4 Civil Unrest at an
educational institution exercise to
take place at local colleges and universities
REGIONAL LOCAL PRIORITIES Prior to attending the T&EPW, the local communities established priorities for the training and exercises in their regions. The following Regional calendars provide an illustration of the training and exercise priorities established within each County.
2012 Regional Training Calendar First Quarter Second Quarter Third Quarter Fourth Quarter Region
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1 G408 G‐202 G‐626 G775 ACAMS G‐385 Machinery/Vehicle
Extrication Ops Tech
HAZ008 L‐967 G‐775
RDSTF SOT G‐351 EOC 101 L‐962 MGT 341 MARC Training
L‐965 L‐970
MAC Protocol
G‐601 PER‐240 AZ‐001 RESP
G‐385 L‐962
G‐197 PER‐222 AZ‐001 RESP
G‐265 KS‐001‐RESP
PER‐226 Year 1 LE ILO
IRTB 230‐1
MGT 321 MO‐005‐RESP
PRSBI Vehicle Machinery Rescue
Bomb‐SWAT/ EOD
Integration
EHRM Class FL‐0021 HAZMAT Annual
Refresher
Explosive breaching
Bomb‐SWAT/EOD Integration
G‐247 G‐265 G‐290 G‐351 G‐575
EOC 101 AWR‐1401 L‐9671 FL‐2355:01 1
G‐108 G‐197 S‐440 S‐330 HAZ008 G‐358 G‐363 L‐950
L9581 L‐9621 G‐108 L‐970 OSHA 10 Hr COML G‐288 G‐290 Basic PIO
G‐300 G‐775 L‐971 L‐956
FL‐001 AWR‐140 G‐626 G‐191 G‐250.7 G‐272 OSHA 10 Hr G247 OK‐005‐RESP
L449 G‐400
G‐402 G‐601 G‐351 G‐775 HSEEP MGT‐310 MGT 320 G‐110 Rad Training
G‐360
HSEEP CA‐041‐RESP Trench Rescue
MO‐005‐RESP
FIN User Training
KS‐001‐RESP
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 22 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 23 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
CA‐041‐RESP High Angle Rescue
Active Shooter Training
Structural Collapse Rescue
SpNS USAR Plan/ Documentation
Confined Space Rescue
ESF‐8 ESF‐8 ESF‐8 FAST EDICS/ED
EH Reg. Strike Team
L‐952 FIRST SpNS B‐FAST Health Risk Comm.
G289 I‐FIRST N95 Fit Testing
N95 Fit Testing
N95 Fit Testing
Epi Reg. Strike Team
Robot Equipment
N95 Fit Testing
L‐956 L958 L‐960 0
IS 100 SWAT/EOD interoperability
L‐954 0 IRTB 230‐1 G291 Bomb‐SWAT/EOD Integration
IS 700 G290 MGT‐321 L‐950 G‐247 G110 EM Academy EOC101 COML FL‐2355 EMD101 FL002 G250.7 250.7 RAP FL002 AWR140 G288 EMD101 G‐108 G270.4 FL2355 FL‐2355:01 G197 G247 G265 G207.4 G300 CEMP G‐549 G‐250.7 G202 G290 G110 G110 G300 G250.7 G300 G318 G318 CEMP G775 G300 G270.4 G300 G270.4 G290 G318 G575 G400 G400 G191 IS703 HSEEP Toolkit
G300 G351 G290 G300 G363 G270.4 L964 L965 L967 G272 L971
L‐950 G400 L954 G300 G317 G775 G318 G400 WS1001 L‐952 G408 L‐962 Housing G601 L960 G386 L‐954 G908 L‐964 L956 L‐975 O‐305 IS703 G626L‐956 H191 L‐965 L‐967 New
Director WS1001 L962 IS703
OS01 L952 L‐970 L449 L‐958 L‐971 L970
2
L‐960 G 110 EOC 101 EOC 101 G 300/400 L 950 G 110 G 191 G 358 G 288 G 300/
400 G 310 G 191
G 300/400 G 191 G 270.4 G 320 L 960 G 191 G 202 G 964 G 319 G 967 G 317 G 318
3
HSEEP G 402 G 290 G 340 Web EOC training
G 962 G 300/400 L 952 G 601 L 973 G 958 L 449
CHAPTER 4: MULTI-YEAR TRAINING 24 FLORIDA AND EXERCISE SCHEDULE
Web EOC training
ILO G 962 G 967 L 962 G 973 G 965 L 973 Web EOC training
L960:DIV/GR SUPERVISOR
MGT 313 IM/UC for CBRNE and Terrorism
L958:OSC REP‐001 CRISIS COMMO (PIO/JIC)
G‐908 Joint Information System
ICS300 L962:PSC
CBRNE DETECTION
EMS/ER COMMO
ICS400 S‐440
L‐965
4
Local WebEOC Training G‐400 G271 G247 L950 G294 G249 L958 G360 G351 L962 G402 L967 AWR140 G641 AWR141 ACERT101 Special Events
Training G908 G317
5
Port Security ILO Training
G‐250.7 G‐270.4 G‐247 HSEEP G‐775 G‐351G‐288 G‐110 G‐318 G‐191 G‐362 G‐272 G‐249 COOP/OSI G‐108 G‐197 G‐202 G‐358 G‐361
6
G‐408 G‐386 G‐290 G‐908 Joint Information System L‐340 Radiological Emergency Preparedness Training G‐626 Hurricane Evacuation and Shelter Evaluation G‐575 Communications Interoperability
7
IRTB ‐ Incident Response to Terrorist Bombing
2012 Regional Exercise Calendar First Quarter Second Quarter Third Quarter Fourth Quarter Region
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
G‐250.12 Senior Officials Workshop
FE ‐ PPHR Certified County Health Depts.
School Shooter TTX
TTX ‐ RDSTF MAC Hurricane Exercise
G 408 Homeland Security Planning
School Shooter FSE
G‐250.12 Senior Official
Workshop
FSE Bomb/EOD Response
JIC Func. Ex. Hazmat Competency
Ex
Hurricane Deployment Drill
Operation Integration V Haz Mat
SWAT/EOD Hazmat Ex
LTRT Competency
Ex
FSE ‐ I/O Communication
Operation Integration IV
TTX ‐ Republican National
Convention
Regional Strike Teams Exercise
FSE ‐ Hospital
TTX ‐ RDSTF IMT Operation Integration IV
JIC Func. Ex. County level ESF 8 Ex
TTX Response to a Suicide Bombing
Mass Fatalities
WS‐1001 Logistical Staging Area Workshop
COOP exercise
1
Hospital Exercise
SERT TTX LEPC MCI TTX SHE EOC TTX HM FUNX Tactical Shooter
HM TTX
2 Tornado TTX MCI FUNX Shooter
FUNX
3
Black‐out TTX
Airport Incident, Tornado Drill, Bio
ESF Workshop, WebEOC,
Transportatio
Hospital TTX SJC Multi Hazard TTX, WebEOC TTX, State HurrEx,
EOC TTX, Mobilization
EX
POD Drill POD, SWAT Bomb CBRNE,
Airport Ex, Combined Regional
USAR, Mass
25
Watch, Operational
Ready
n HazMat FSE,
Triage/Prehospital, SAR, CG Prep FSE
EOC TTX, EOC FSE, Regional FSE, CG FunX
Hospital Ex
proph/POD, Port Evac
HURRICANE (DEBRIS) (SAR) WORKSHOP
EOC FE EOC TTX SEVERE WEATHER TTX (ICS)
4
EOC Exercise FAA TTX
5 UASI Functional Exercise
Public Information Exercise
Port Security FSE Nuclear Power Plant Exercise
Hospital MMH Drill (Manatee Cty)
EOC TTX Annual FSE (Manatee Cty)
USAR Task Force Leader EX (1 on the coast and 1 inland)
COOP Functional EX (Manatee Cty)
Hospital BMC Drill (Manatee Cty)
Health MRC (Manatee Cty)
NIMS Boot Camp Health Drill (Manatee Cty)
Active Shooter TTX & FSE
6
Airport TTX (Manatee Cty)
Nuclear Plant Emergency FUNX Hurricane FUNX Nuclear Plant RAD FSE COOP FUNX TTX for each ESF Radio Protocol (TBD) Interoperable Comm TTX General/Special Shelters
(TBD) Ft Laud Int/Executive (TBD) Citizen Corps/CERT TTX Mass/Public Transit (TBD) Individual Agency COOP TTX TTX for each ESF Recovery TTX
Mass Migration (TBD) Alternate Care Sites TTX Mitigation TTX Port Everglades WMD TTX Countywide Hospital FSE EOA FUNX
EOA FUNX Palm Beach International TTX REP FUNX
7
EOA FUNX
26
2013 Regional Training Calendar First Quarter Second Quarter Third Quarter Fourth Quarter Region
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Basic Post Blast
Large Vehicle Counter Measure
s
Confined Space Entry
HAZMAT Annual
Refresher
HDS recert Nuclear Agent Handlers
G‐270.4 G‐272 G‐278 G‐358 G‐362 G‐908
EOC 101 HSEEP
G‐108 L‐952
G‐135 L‐956
G‐137 L‐964
G‐197 MGT‐320
G‐249 G‐360 G‐381 G‐400 G‐408 G‐635 L‐449
AWR‐141 PER‐222
G‐110 G‐197 G‐270.4 G‐300 G‐‐351 L958 G‐270.4 L950 FL‐001 L‐971 Reg Fam‐HAZMAT
MAC Protocol G‐358 COOP‐OS1 G‐601 ACAMS (3) G‐386 MARC COML Type III
Strike Team/Task Force Leader
Rad Training
G‐197 RDSTF SOT
G429 HSEEP G‐362 G351 L‐962 Machinery/Vehicle
Extrication Ops Tech‐REFRESHER
Rad Training OK‐005‐RESP
IRTB 230‐1 Incident
Response to Terrorism Bombings
G‐270.4 Florida CEMP ‐
Terrorism Annex
AZ‐001 RESP
HAZMAT Response Technician
PER‐226 Advanced
Chemical and Biological Integrated Response
L‐449 L‐965 L‐967 L‐970
AZ‐001 AZ‐001‐RESP
PER‐240 WMD
Rad/Nuc Respond
er Operatio
ns
G‐278 HDS‐001 RESP:
Vehicle Machinery Rescue
KS‐001‐RESP
1
Confined Space Rescue
AZ‐001 RESP
PRSBI MO‐005‐RESP
FIN USAR Plan/ Documentation
27
EH Reg. Strike Team
Epi Reg. Strike
Team
CA‐041‐RESP
DHS‐022‐RESP:
Structural Collapse Rescue
SpNSFAST
B‐FAST N95 Fit Testing
EDICS/EDWARDS
IS100 IS 700
High Angle Rescue
Trench Rescue
ESF‐8 SpNS N95 Fit Testing
L958 Health Risk Comm. TrainingN95 Fit Testing
L‐950 ESF‐8 Active Shooter Training
L‐956 IRTB 230‐1 L‐960
L‐952 ESF‐8 FIRST I‐FIRST N95 Fit Testing
MGT‐321
L‐954 CBRNE
G288 FL2335:01
911 CLOSE OUT FL‐2355 DART? G202 G249 EOC101 G265 G300 G290
G601 G108 G108 COML FL2355:01 G137 G203 G358 G278 G358 G361 G549 G628 G202 G197 G130 G135 G250.7 L962 L694 L965 G408 L970 L971 HSEEP G270.4 G202 G‐191 G203 G358 MGT343 HSEEP MGT343
L950 G358 G‐290 G249 G270.4 L960 L958L952 G300 G361 G‐775 G386 L975 L967L‐954 G400 L913 G781 G958 O‐305
L‐956 L952 L954 HSEEP L‐973
L973 L‐958 L‐962 L956 L‐975
L975 L‐960 L‐964 L‐967 NEEDS ASSES. TG628T L‐965 L‐970
2
WS1001 L‐971 EOC 101 G 137 G 363 G 191 G 202 G 250.7 G 191 G 191 G 361 AWR 147 G 270.4 L 962 3 G 290 G 191 G 400 G 300/400 G 381 G 315 G
300/400 G 300/400 L 962 G 250.7 G 386 L 973
28
G 300/400 IMT G 335 G 775 G 954 G 952 G 775 G 386 G 967 Web EOC Training
G 318 L 950 G 962 G 908 L 958 G 970 G 950 EM Ops Plans for Rural Cities
HSEEP Web EOC Training
L 958
L 967 L‐967 L‐954 MGT‐314
Enhanced IM/UC
E947: EOC/IMT INTERFACE
L‐970 L‐973 L‐958 G‐300 L‐950
L‐950 L‐960 L‐967 G‐575 L‐340 G‐400 G‐400 S‐440 G‐300 Local Public Safety ICS Seminar G‐402
Local Public Safety ICS Seminar G‐575 Communications Interoperability
4
G‐290 Basic PIO L973 G137 L962 S440 HSEEP G908 HSEEP TTT PER222 5 ILO
Training Post‐Disaster
Recovery Training
G‐250.7 G‐360 G‐318 G‐363 G‐775 G‐362G‐270.4 G‐360 G‐191 G‐108 G‐288 G‐197 G‐202 G‐358 G‐110 G‐408 G‐386 G‐290 G‐361
6
G‐272 HSEEPG‐278 Cost‐Benefit Analysis FL‐2355:01 County Logistics
G‐549 Continuity of Operations Program Manager G‐628 Human Services Training
7
Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program
29
2013 Regional Exercise Calendar First Quarter Second Quarter Third Quarter Fourth Quarter Region
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
G‐250.12 Senior Officials Workshop
FE ‐ PPHR Certified County Health Depts.
Bomb/Swat Integration Exercise
TTX ‐ RDSTF IMT
LTRT Competency Ex
Operation Integration
V
G‐250.12 Senior Official
Workshop
FE Response to CBRNE Incident
JIC Func. Ex.
JIC Func. Ex. County level ESF 8
Ex
Hurricane Deployment Drill
HazMat
Regional Strike Teams Exercise
FSE ‐ Hospital
FSE ‐ RDSTF MAC
TTX Response to Terrorist Incident
Hazmat Competency
Ex
Hurricane Exercise
COOP exercise
1
Hospital Exercise
Operation Integration V Haz
Mat
Wildfire TTX
HM TTX SHE EOC TTX Shooter FUNX
Shooter TTX
HM TTX
2 Hazmat FUNX Tactical
FUNX
CodeRed TTX
Militia Menace FSE
ESF Workshop
State HurrEx July 4 Terror SWAT/Bomb
CBRNE
Transportation
Accident TTX
Drill
Mobilization
SWAT CBRNE WMD FSE EOC TTX, WMD Regional USAR
3
TTX/Drill
4 Comms Drill EOC Exercise
HURRICANE FE (DAMAGE
EOC TTX FAA TTX
30
ASSESSMENT) (COMMO)
FAA/TSA Security Drill
ICS Exercise
EOC TTX
5
District VI LEPC Exercise
Region 5 RDSTF (Regional Exercise)
Communications/IO Exercise
Regional Higher Education Exercise
Hospital MMH Drill (Manatee Cty)
NIMS Boot Camp
Annual FSE (Manatee Cty)
USAR Task Force Leader EX (1 on the coast and 1 inland)
EPA Oil Spill Response Trng EX (Port Manatee and Lake Okeechobee)
Multi‐Regional FSE
Active Shooter Exercise (TTX & FSE)
6
Health MRC (Manatee Cty)
Airport FSE (Manatee Cty)
Health Drill (Manatee Cty)
COOP Functional EX (Manatee Cty)
Hospital BMC Drill (Manatee Cty)
Nuclear Plant Emergency FUNX Hurricane FUNX Nuclear Plant RAD FSE COOP FUNX TTX for each ESF Radio Protocol (TBD) Interoperable Comm TTX General/Special Shelters (TBD)
Ft Laud Int/Executive (TBD) Citizen Corps/CERT TTX Mass/Public Transit (TBD) Individual Agency COOP TTX TTX for each ESF Recovery TTX Port Everglades WMD TTX Alternate Care Sites TTX Mitigation TTX
EOA FUNX Citizen Corps/CERT FSE EOA FUNX Countywide Hospital FSE REP FUNX Palm Beach Int TTX EOA FUNX
Terrorist Response (TBD)
7
Marathon Airport FUNX
31
2014 Regional Training Calendar First Quarter Second Quarter Third Quarter Fourth Quarter Region
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Basic Post Blast
Large Vehicle Post Blast Class
G‐197 L‐967
HAZMAT Annual
Refresher
COBRA Live Nerve Agent
G‐363 MGT‐343
G‐400 COML Type
III
G‐402 S‐440
G‐601 HAZ008
G‐626 L‐954 L‐956
AWR‐140 L958
FL‐002 L‐962
G‐249 G‐775
G‐202 L‐970
G‐360 MGT‐310
G‐300 OSHA 10 Hr
G‐320 PER‐240
G‐361 G‐362 G‐385 G‐386 G‐400
AWR‐160‐1 G‐402
G‐191 G‐601
Florida CEMP ‐
Terrorism Annex
G‐271 HSEEP
G‐288 IRTB 230‐1
HAZ008 PER‐226 Machinery/Vehicle
Extrication Ops Tech‐REFRESHER
MGT343 G‐575 L‐971
Regional Fam‐
SWAT/EOD MAC
Protocol L954 L‐967 L958 G‐363 AZ‐001 RESP MARC L‐965 Rad
Training OK‐005‐RESP
G‐197 G‐197 PRSBI G‐363 ACAMS KS‐001‐RESP L‐962 L‐967 L‐970 Confined Space Rescue G‐318
FL‐002 MGT 320 USAR Plan/
Documentation
Year 3 LE ILO
RDSTF
SOT L‐970 IRTB 230‐1 EDICS/EDWARDS
EH Reg. Strike Team
Epi Reg. Strike Team
G‐202
Trench Rescue
PER‐240 AZ‐001 RESP
Health Risk Comm. TrainingN95 Fit Testing
IS100 IS700
CA‐041‐RESP
Active Shooter
PER‐240 Vehicle Machinery Rescue
L‐960
1
L‐950
High Angle Rescue
ESF‐8 FIRST I‐FIRST
MO‐005‐RESP
FIN
32
N95 Fit Testing
G‐247 ESF‐8 L‐954 Structural Collapse Rescue
SpNS FAST B‐FAST N95 Fit Testing
L‐952 G290
ESF‐8 SpNS N95 Fit Testing
G289 IRTB 230‐
1 L‐956 L958
FL101 EOC101 G272 COML L‐973 EOC101 G300 G362 G381 EMD101 G191 G408 G‐601 G108 G290 FL101 EOC101 G288 G781 L264 L965 G137 G400 L449 G641 G191 G317 G100 FL‐2355 G358 L962 L956 G385 L960 L971 G908 G202 G386 G108 FL‐2355:01 L960 L963 IC703 L970L‐950 G290 G400 G‐110 G200 L962 L967L‐952 G300 L950 G290 G250.12 L‐954 G400 L953 L950 L958 L‐956 G400 L954 L956 L‐975
H191 L‐962 L958 L952 L‐964 L‐967 L‐958 L‐965 L‐970 L‐960 OS1 L‐971
2
L975 G
300/400 G 270.4 G 400 G 300 G 360 G 358 G 781 G 300 G 956 L 958 G 400 L 960
G 402 G 300/400
L 952 L 971 G 601 G 950 L 973 G 967 Web EOC Training
G 449 L 962
G 362 L 967 Web EOC Training
IMT G 975 L 958 G 973 L 970
L 952 L 954
3
L 964 L 965 L‐952 L‐449 S‐440 L‐958 G‐908 L‐962 S‐440 L‐965 L‐967
4 G‐402 L‐964
33
G271 G247 L950 G294 G249 L958 G360 G351 L962 G402 L967 AWR140 G641 AWR141 ACERT101 G908 G317
5 Port Security
Special Events Training
ILO Training
G‐250.7 G‐318 G‐202 G‐362G‐288 IRTB G‐386 G‐908 G‐272 PRSBI L‐952 G‐108 G‐110 G‐197 G‐191 G‐358 G‐361 G‐775 G‐290 G‐408
6
G‐270.4 HSEEP FL‐2355:01 County Logistics
FL‐001 Logistical Staging Area and Distribution System G‐549 Continuity of Operations Program Manager
G‐360 Hurricane Planning
7
COOP‐OS1 Operations Orientation Seminar
34
2014 Regional Exercise Calendar First Quarter Second Quarter Third Quarter Fourth Quarter Region
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
G‐250.12 Senior Officials Workshop
Hospital Exercise
TTX ‐ RDSTF IMT
Hurricane Exercise
COOP exercise
Operation Integration
VI
G‐318 Mitigation Planning Workshop for Local Govt
FE Refresher interoperability between SWAT/EOD Haz‐Mat
Inter‐op Comms FSE
JIC FE JIC FE Hurricane Exercise
Operation Integration
IV
FE ‐ PPHR Certified County Health Depts.
Regional Strike Teams Exercise
FSE ‐ Hospital
County level ESF 8 Ex
Hazmat Competency
Ex
LTRT Competency
Ex
1
TTX ‐ RDSTF MAC
2 Pandemic
TTX Hostage FUNX
SHEE Shooter FUNX
Wildfire FUNX
Tactical FUNX HM TTX
Comms Ex
EOC TTX ESF Workshop
FSE State HurrEx
Airport Incident
Drill
3 TTX/Drill EOC TTX TTX FSE Bldg
Collapse
Search and Rescue
EOC Exercise EOC FE EOC TTX EOC Drill SEVERE WEATHER TTX (ICS)
4
FAA/TSA FAA FSE FAA TTX5 UASI Exercise
6 Hospital MMH Drill
Airport TTX (Manatee Cty)
Active iShooter Exercise
EOC TTX COOP Functional Exercise
Hospital BMC Drill (Manatee
35
(Manatee Cty)
(TTX & FSE) (Manatee Cty)
Cty)
Health MRC (Manatee Cty)
Annual FSE (Manatee Cty)
Health Drill (Manatee Cty)
Nuclear Plant Emergency FUNX Hurricane FUNX Nuclear Plant RAD FSE COOP FSE ESF‐8 FUNX CERT FSE Port Evacuation FSE BioWatch FUNX Airport FSE Radio Protocol (TBD) Interoperable Comm TTX General/Special Shelter (TBD)
TTX for each ESF TTX for each ESF Mass/Public Transit (TBD) Ft Laud Int/Executive (TBD) Alternate Care Sites TTX Recovery TTX Individual Agency COOP TTX Countywide Hospital FSE Mitigation TTX
Mass Migration (TBD) Palm Beach Int FSE EOA FUNX Port Everglades WMD TTX EOA FUNX REP FUNX
EOA FUNX
7
Key West Airport Disaster FUNX
36
CHAPTER 5: TYPES OF EXERCISES 37 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
CHAPTER 5: TYPES OF EXERCISES DISCUSSION-BASED EXERCISES Discussion-based exercises are normally used as a starting point in the building block approach to the cycle, mix, and range of exercises. Discussion-based exercises include seminars, workshops, and tabletop exercises (TTXs). These typically highlight existing plans, policies, mutual aid agreements (MAAs), and procedures. Therefore, they are exceptional tools for familiarizing agencies and personnel with current or expected jurisdictional capabilities. Discussion-based exercises typically focus on strategic, policy-oriented issues; operations-based exercises tend to focus more on tactical, response-related issues. Facilitators and/or presenters usually lead the discussion, keeping participants on track while meeting the objectives of the exercise. SEMINARS Seminars are generally used to orient participants to, or provide an overview of, authorities, strategies, plans, policies, procedures, protocols, response resources, or concepts and ideas. Seminars provide a good starting point for jurisdictions that are developing or making major changes to their plans and procedures. They offer the following attributes:
• Low-stress environment employing a number of instruction techniques such as lectures, multimedia presentations, panel discussions, case study discussions, expert testimony, and decision support tools
• Informal discussions led by a seminar leader • Lack of time constraints caused by real-time portrayal of events • Proven effectiveness with both small and large groups
WORKSHOPS Workshops represent the second tier of exercises in the Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP) building block approach. Although similar to seminars, workshops differ in two important aspects: participant interaction is increased, and the focus is on achieving or building a product (such as a plan or a policy). Workshops provide an ideal forum for the following:
• Collecting or sharing information • Obtaining new or different perspectives • Testing new ideas, processes, or procedures • Training groups in coordinated activities • Problem-solving complex issues • Obtaining consensus • Building teams
CHAPTER 5: TYPES OF EXERCISES 38 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
In conjunction with exercise development, workshops are most useful in achieving specific aspects of exercise design such as:
• Determining program or exercise objectives • Developing exercise scenario and key events listings • Determining evaluation elements and standards of performance
A workshop may be used to produce new standard operating procedures (SOPs) or emergency operations plans (EOPs), mutual aid agreements (MAAs), multi-year training and exercise plans (TEPs), and improvement plans (IPs). To be effective, workshops must be highly focused on a specific issue, and the desired outcome or goal must be clearly defined. Potential relevant topics and goals are numerous, but all workshops share the following common attributes:
• Low-stress environment • No-fault forum • Information conveyed employing different instructional techniques • Facilitated, working breakout sessions • Plenary discussions led by a workshop leader • Goals oriented toward an identifiable product • Lack of time constraint from real-time portrayal of events • Effective with both small and large groups
TABLETOP EXERCISES TTXs involve senior staff, elected or appointed officials, or other key personnel in an informal setting, discussing simulated situations. This type of exercise is intended to stimulate discussion of various issues regarding a hypothetical situation. It can be used to assess plans, policies, and procedures or to assess types of systems needed to guide the prevention of, response to, and recovery from a defined incident or emergency. TTXs are typically aimed at facilitating understanding of concepts, identifying strengths and shortfalls, and/or achieving a change in attitude. Participants are encouraged to discuss issues in depth and develop decisions through slow-paced problem solving rather than the rapid, spontaneous decision making that occurs under actual or simulated emergency conditions. In contrast to the scale and cost of operations-based exercises and games, TTXs can be a cost-effective tool when used in conjunction with more complex exercises. The effectiveness of a TTX is derived from the energetic involvement of participants and their assessment of recommended revisions to current policies, procedures, and plans.
CHAPTER 5: TYPES OF EXERCISES 39 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
TTX methods are divided into two categories: basic and advanced. In a basic TTX, the scene set by the scenario materials remains constant. It describes an event or emergency incident and brings discussion participants up to the simulated present time. Players apply their knowledge and skills to a list of problems presented by the leader/moderator; problems are discussed as a group; and resolution is generally agreed on and summarized by the leader. The exercise controller (also known as the moderator) usually introduces problems one at a time in the form of a written message, simulated telephone call, videotape, or other means. Participants discuss the issues raised by the problem, using appropriate plans and procedures. TTX attributes may include the following:
• Practicing group problem-solving • Familiarizing senior officials with a situation • Familiarizing staff to a new plan or procedure • Conducting a specific case study • Examining personnel contingencies • Testing group message interpretation • Participating in information sharing • Assessing interagency coordination • Achieving limited or specific objectives
OPERATIONS-BASED EXERCISES Operations-based exercises represent the next iteration of the exercise cycle; they are used to validate the plans, policies, agreements, and procedures solidified in discussion-based exercises. Operations-based exercises include drills, functional exercises (FEs), and full-scale exercises (FSEs). They can clarify roles and responsibilities, identify gaps in resources needed to implement plans and procedures, and improve individual and team performance. Operations-based exercises are characterized by actual response, mobilization of apparatus and resources, and commitment of personnel, usually over an extended period of time. DRILLS A drill is a coordinated, supervised activity usually used to test a single specific operation or function in a single agency. Drills are commonly used to provide training on new equipment, develop or test new policies or procedures, or practice and maintain current skills. Typical attributes are as follows:
• A narrow focus, measured against established standards • Instant feedback • Realistic environment • Performance in isolation
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FUNCTIONAL EXERCISES The FE is designed to test and evaluate individual capabilities, multiple functions or activities within a function, or interdependent groups of functions. FEs generally focus on exercising the plans, policies, procedures, and staffs of the direction and control nodes of Incident Command and Unified Command. Generally, events are projected through an exercise scenario with event updates that drive activity at the management level. Movement of personnel and equipment is simulated. The objective of the FE is to execute specific plans and procedures and apply established policies, plans, and procedures under crisis conditions, within or by particular function teams. An FE simulates the reality of operations in a functional area by presenting complex, realistic problems that require rapid and effective responses by trained personnel in a highly stressful environment. Attributes of an FE are as follows:
• Evaluating functions • Evaluating Emergency Operations Centers (EOCs), headquarters, and staff • Reinforcing established policies and procedures • Measuring resource adequacy • Examining inter-agency and inter-jurisdictional relationships
FULL-SCALE EXERCISES The FSE is the most complex step in the exercise cycle. FSEs are multi-agency, multi-jurisdictional exercises that test many facets of emergency response and recovery. They include many first responders operating under the Incident Command System (ICS) and Unified Command structure to effectively and efficiently respond to, and recover from, an incident. An FSE focuses on implementing and analyzing the plans, policies, and procedures developed in discussion-based exercises and honed in previous, smaller, operations-based exercises. The events are projected through a scripted exercise scenario with built-in flexibility to allow updates to drive activity. An FSE is conducted in a real-time, stressful environment that closely mirrors a real incident. First responders and resources are mobilized and deployed to the scene where they conduct their actions as if a real incident had occurred (with minor exceptions). The FSE simulates the reality of operations in multiple functional areas by presenting complex and realistic problems requiring critical thinking, rapid problem solving, and effective responses by trained personnel in a highly stressful environment. Other entities that are not involved in the exercise, but who would be involved in an actual incident response, are represented by a Simulation Cell (SimCell).
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An FSE provides an opportunity to execute plans, procedures, and MAAs in response to a simulated incident. Typical FSE attributes are as follows:
• Assessing organizational and functional performance • Demonstrating interagency cooperation • Allocating resources and personnel • Assessing equipment capabilities • Assessing plans and procedures in a simulated incident • Activating personnel and equipment • Assessing inter-jurisdictional cooperation • Exercising public information systems • Testing communications systems and procedures • Analyzing memoranda of understanding (MOUs), SOPs, plans, policies, and procedures
The level of support needed to conduct an FSE is greater than needed during other types of exercises. The exercise site is usually extensive with complex site logistics. Food and water must be supplied to participants and volunteers. Safety issues, including those surrounding the use of props and special effects, must be monitored. FSE controllers ensure that participants’ behavior remains within predefined boundaries. SimCell controllers inject scenario elements to simulate real events and represent non-playing organizations that would be responding in a real-world incident. Evaluators observe behaviors and compare them against established plans, policies, procedures, and standard practices (if applicable). Safety controllers ensure all activity is executed within a safe environment.
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CHAPTER 6: RESPONSIBILITIES 43 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
CHAPTER 6: RESPONSIBILITIES Resources and responsibilities must be allocated in order to meet the State of Florida’s needs. No program can meet with success without stakeholder involvement. Involvement is demonstrated when stakeholders at the Federal, State, and local levels provide resources to achieve a common purpose. This chapter defines the roles and responsibilities at the Federal, State, and local levels. U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY (DHS)
• Provides grant money to the State of Florida through the State Administrative Agent (SAA)
• Provides training, technical assistance, equipment, and exercise support in accordance with the Florida State Assistance Plan and at the request of the State
STATE OF FLORIDA
• Designates a State exercise coordinator and a State training coordinator • Prepares a State Training and Exercise Plan (TEP) • Plans, conducts, and evaluates a Governor’s Tabletop Exercise and a Statewide Hurricane
Exercise and reports results to DHS • Coordinates requests for funding and support for training and exercises from Federal
agencies, including Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) • Provides technical assistance and funding to the jurisdictions for exercise planning,
conduct, and evaluation • Coordinates jurisdictional requests for resources and training
LOCAL JURISDICTIONS
• Request, through the State, funding and assistance for training and exercises to support the State’s Emergency Response Plan
• Participate in the annual Statewide Training and Exercise Plan Workshop • Establish an exercise and evaluation team within the jurisdiction, represented by
members of each organization normally expected to respond to disasters and emergencies • Plan, conduct, and evaluate exercises as determined necessary • Provide all planning, scenario, evaluation, and corrective action documents to the Florida
Division of Emergency Management for each State-supported exercise
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APPENDIX A: TARGET CAPABILITIES LIST A-1 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
APPENDIX A: TARGET CAPABILITIES LIST COMMON
• Planning • Communications • Risk Management • Community Preparedness and Participation • Intelligence / Information Sharing and Dissemination
PREVENT MISSION AREA
• Information Gathering and Recognition of Indicators and Warnings • Intelligence Analysis and Production • Counter-Terror Investigation and Law Enforcement • Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and High-Yield Explosives (CBRNE)
Detection PROTECT MISSION AREA
• Critical Infrastructure Protection • Food and Agriculture Safety and Defense • Epidemiological Surveillance and Investigation • Laboratory Testing
RESPOND MISSION AREA
• Onsite Incident Management • Emergency Operations Center Management • Critical Resource Logistics and Distribution • Volunteer Management and Donations • Responder Safety and Health • Emergency Public Safety and Security Response • Animal Disease Emergency Support • Environmental Health • Explosive Device Response Operations • Fire Incident Response Support
APPENDIX A: TARGET CAPABILITIES LIST A-2 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
• Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) / Hazardous Materials (HazMat) Response and Decontamination
• Citizen Evacuation and Shelter-In-Place • Isolation and Quarantine • Search and Rescue (Land-Based) • Emergency Public Information and Warning • Emergency Triage and Pre-Hospital Treatment • Medical Surge • Medical Supplies Management and Distribution • Mass Prophylaxis • Mass Care (Sheltering, Feeding, and Related Services) • Fatality Management
RECOVER MISSION AREA
• Structural Damage Assessment • Restoration of Lifeline • Economic and Community Recovery
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
APPENDIX B: COUNTY TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLANS
Attached as a separate document
APPENDIX D: ACROYNMS D-1 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
APPENDIX C: ACRONYMS AAR After Action Report ACAMS Automated Critical Assets Management System C&O Concept and Objectives Meeting C/E Controller/Evaluator CBRNE Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and/or High-Yield Explosive(s) CEMP Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan CERT Community Emergency Response Team CI/KR Critical Infrastructure/Key Resource DEM Division of Emergency Management DHS U.S. Department of Homeland Security EMS Emergency medical services EOC Emergency Operations Center EOD Explosives Ordinance Disposal EOP Emergency Operations Plan ExPlan Exercise Plan FE Functional Exercise FEMA Federal Emergency Management Agency FOIA Freedom of Information Act FPC Final Planning Conference FSE Full-Scale Exercise HazMat Hazardous materials HSEEP Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program ICS Incident command system ILO Information Liaison Officer IP Improvement Plan IPC Initial Planning Conference LEPC Local Emergency Planning Committee
APPENDIX D: ACROYNMS D-2 FLORIDA
2012-2014 MULTI-YEAR TRAINING AND EXERCISE PLAN for the State of Florida
LLIS Lessons Learned Information Sharing MAA Mutual aid agreement MIPT Memorial Institute for the Prevention of Terrorism MOU Memorandum of Understanding MPC Mid-Term Planning Conference MSEL Master Scenario Events List NIMS National Incident Management System NIMSCAST National Incident Management System Compliance Assistance Support Tool NRF National Response Framework OSC On-Scene Coordinator OUA Orlando Urban Area PIO Public information officer POC Point of Contact RDSTF Regional Domestic Security Task Force RPC Regional Program Coordinator SAA State Administrative Agent SitMan Situation Manual SOP Standard Operating Procedure T&EPW Training and Exercise Plan Workshop TCL Target Capability List TEP Training and Exercise Plan TTX Tabletop Exercise UASI Urban Area Security Initiative WMD Weapon(s) of Mass Destruction