new developments in red cross emergency services

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New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

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Page 1: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Page 2: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

•Granite Chapter- 2 Maitland Street, Concord *Regional Coordinating Chapter•Great Bay- 273 Corporate Drive, Portsmouth•Manchester- 1800 Elm Street, Manchester•NH West- 83 Court Street, Keene•NH Gateway- 28 Concord Street, Nashua

Page 3: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Reasons for Restructuring:

Provide better service to external partners and clients Provide better guidance and development to volunteers Foster Unity of service while keeping local connectionsIncrease volunteer opportunitiesAlign with State Restructuring Utilize chapter strengthsEconomic constraints

Page 4: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

The New StructureReadiness Phase

Your Red Cross Team!

Page 5: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Regional Emergency Service DirectorIan Dyar- [email protected]

PRINCIPAL RESPONSIBILITIES:

•Manage Emergency Service Programs for New Hampshire•Liaison to State Government and EOC

•Collaborates with DHHS on ESF 6 activities•Coordinate with Tri-state and National Red Cross initiatives•Coordinate Red Cross State Disaster Consortium

Page 6: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Planning and Exercise ManagerAshley Pushkarewicz- [email protected]

PRINCIPAL RESPONSIBILITIES:

•Development of disaster response plans, processes and procedures throughout the state.•Design and implement local & state-wide staged disaster exercise programs.•Provide technical support to internal departments, government, businesses, community groups and non-profits with respect to disaster planning, preparedness and continuity of operations planning.• Ensure a system of disaster operations evaluations, and develop and implement performance improvement plans.•Participate on state and area committees and related task forces related to disaster planning• Coordinate International Services outreach

Page 7: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Response ManagerDoug Hewitt- [email protected]

PRINCIPAL RESPONSIBILITIES:

• Manage personnel and material resources to ensure immediate and effective emergency response•Establish and maintain active and engaged local Disaster Action Teams. •Identify gaps and develop strategies to meet staffing needs•Provide development opportunities to department staff and volunteers to build depth and create a foundation for succession planning.• Assist in recruiting, recognizing and engaging volunteers• Coordinate Service to Armed Forces outreach

Page 8: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Readiness Manager Zack Sullivan- [email protected]

PRINCIPAL RESPONSIBILITIES:

•Develop and maintain an inventory of Emergency Services assets statewide•Ensuring volunteer readiness by coordinating availabilities in alignment with response needs for the region•Responsible for establishment of supporting agency partnerships•Responsible for establishing and maintaining a statewide online training schedule, ensuring that the schedule is made available to volunteers/ partners on a timely basis•Ensures that all equipment and systems are in place prior to activation, and takes the lead role to ensure that all equipment and systems remain functional during activation•Manage volunteer deployments to support operations outside of the region

Page 9: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Red Cross Structure- Response Phase

Small Local Responses- (house fires)•Nothing has changed•Disaster Responses coordinated by local Disaster Action Team Volunteers•Contact local chapter 24/7 365 days a year!

Large scale or events that effect multiple chapters• The structure has not changed- we are just doing it better!•Initiated by local disaster action teams•Quickly transitions into Disaster Relief Operation•Disaster Relief Operation allows the Red Cross to provide the appropriately trained leadership, staffing, and material resources needed to meet client needs effectively and efficiently• For large operations relief and recovery services are provided from Disaster Relief Operation not chapters

Page 10: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Slow and Steady Wins The Race, Next Steps…

• Outreach to external partners• Maintain response capabilities•Assess gaps and improve state and local capacity

Get’ r done…but also have fun….

Page 11: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

New and Exciting Partnership Opportunities- We Need You!

• Building Local Volunteer Capacity•Ready When The Time Comes Program

•Planning and Exercising together•Help us be “your local Red Cross”- we will talk with and train anyone•Building and strengthening local COADS•Cross Training•Expanded Youth Programs•Updating town shelter agreements and developing regional sheltering

plans•FNSS

Page 12: New Developments in Red Cross Emergency Services

Failure is not an option…..