home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Bid:$RACESBUL.336
- Subject : RB 336 EMA /Volunteer Partnership
-
-
- RACESBUL.336 OPS - EMA /Volunteer Partnership
- RELEASE DATE: July 25, 1994
-
- It takes an unusual volunteer to provide dedicated and competent
- service to emergency management agencies, EMA. Such volunteers
- must be ready to appear on short notice, stay at their assigned
- post and duties until relieved, be willing and able to travel
- where needed. They may even provide the necessary equipment at
- their own expense. They cannot be "amateurs" in the sense of
- pursuing a hobby. Instead they must devote a great deal of time
- and energy to become as proficient as paid staff. The agency they
- work with must be able to depend upon their availability when
- needed, their skill at assigned tasks, and their ability to mesh
- into the overall disaster response exactly as is expected of paid
- staff. Fortunately there are people, ready, willing and able to
- serve in such capacity.
-
- Such a pool of qualified volunteers is a resource, the value of
- which often becomes overwhelmingly evident when a major emergency
- threatens to exceed the capabilities of paid staff and equipment.
- Like any other resource, volunteers must receive adequate
- training, needed facilities, and the attention and general upkeep
- that is accorded any other resource. Recognition of the
- contribution to the tasks at hand should be as professional as
- anything else in the relationship. As with any staff, they respond
- to honest reassurance that their work is recognized and respected;
- however, their service will be quickly lost if they are merely
- tolerated, or seen as a nuisance.
-
- If the EMA makes a positive effort to integrate this nominally
- "free" resource, allocate time, energy, and people to use it to
- best advantage, provide its necessary resources, and develop it as
- they do with any other resource, it develops a relations hip with
- an open ended potential. It also extends agency capabilities in
- many directions while providing satisfaction to the volunteers
- for their time and efforts.
- Bill Musladin, N6BTJ, retired Chief State Radio Officer.
-
-
-
-