home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- 1
-
- MGTMUAD1 Version 1. 3 3/1/92
-
-
-
- Subject: MUTUAL AID [Category:MGT]
-
- MUTUAL AID DEFINED AND HOW IT APPLIES TO COMMUNICATIONS.
- Question: You talk about mutual aid. We don't have that here.
- What does it mean?
- Answer: Mutual aid comes from planning between municipalities,
- counties or parishes, and states to provide emergency resources
- from other governments if and when required. Mutual aid in this
- context goes beyond automatic response by one fire department to
- support another department near their mutual borders. In
- California, mutual aid is provided for by law and is one of the
- responsibilities of local government emergency management/civil
- defense, law enforcement, and fire fighting agencies to plan for
- and implement mutual aid. Communications, too, is a resource
- necessary to any incident command system.
- Volunteers are -- or can be -- a part of this mutual aid
- resource. The Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service (RACES), or
- by whatever name your government calls their Amateur Radio
- section, is a part of a government's communications resource. The
- mutual aid system, properly planned, can be an excellent and cost
- effective system. The absence of mutual aid can contribute to
- the needless loss of life and property. The volunteers, of
- course, should be covered by the same benefits and protection
- provided paid employees. Stan Harter, KH6GBX, RB201
-
- MUTUAL AID COMMUNICATIONS
- The foundation of California's disaster planning is a statewide
- system of mutual aid in which each local jurisdiction relies on
- its own resources, then calls for assistance from its neighbors
- -- city to city, city to county, county to county, and finally,
- through one of the OES regional offices, to the state. A Master
- Mutual Aid Agreement has been adopted by most cities of
- California and by all its 58 counties. This creates a formal
- structure within which each jurisdiction retains control of its
- own personnel and facilities but can give and receive help
- whenever it is needed. The state is signatory to this agreement
- and provides available resources to assist local jurisdictions in
- emergencies.
- The state is divided into six regions, with six regional offices
- (Los Angeles, Pleasant Hill, Redding, Sacramento, Fresno, and
- Ontario) staffed by the Governor's Office of Emergency Services
- ("State OES") to coordinate these activities. Through this mutual
- aid system the Governor's office receives a constant flow of
- information from every geographic and organizational area of the
- state.
-
- Emergency communications and warning are the keys to response,
- recovery and survival, and are indeed the fabric that ties all
- our efforts together following any emergency or disaster to save
- lives and reduce property damage. Like all jurisdictions, the
- state must maintain emergency communications systems and provide
- plans and procedures for their maintenance and use. Our disaster
- services are based on the concept of mutual aid as described
- above.
- In order to provide for a timely response to disasters,
- statewide, with adequate command and control of the response
- personnel and resources, two major communications categories have
- been identified. One is the WARNING effort which provides for the
- exchange and dissemination of information regarding potential
- emergencies on a continuing basis. Currently, State OES has
- direct hotline telephone contact with 50 states and 46 California
- counties. Alternate warning channels are available to all 58
- counties by the microwave connected California Law Enforcement
- Radio System (CLERS) and the California Law Enforcement Teletype
- Systems (CLETS). The warning objective is to disseminate warning
- information to officials and the public within five to ten
- minutes.
-
- The second category is COMMUNICATION which will provide the
- essential systems and hardware to exercise direction and control
- for emergency response throughout the state. The objectives of
- this element are:
- - to provide communications for direction and control within
- state government and to federal government emergency resources;
- - to provide communication channels for direction and control
- from state to local government;
- - to assist local government in providing direction and control
- within their jurisdictions;
- - to develop procedures for the utilization of nongovernmental
- communication resources;
- - to develop systems and procedures to use the broadcast industry
- for dissemination of warning and emergency public information of
- all levels of government; and
- - to provide for the coordinated use of Amateur Radio operators
- during periods of disasters.
- The latter is accomplished on a day-to-day basis by the state and
- those county and city governments with units established for that
- purpose -- the Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service (RACES). The
- RACES section is usually attached to a local government's
- emergency preparedness office or to that department it so
- delegates -- such as the sheriff, fire chief, communications,
- etc. A disaster does not have to be declared to utilize or train
- the RACES personnel. The RACES is, in effect, the deputy
- communicator Amateur Radio operators of and for that local
- government. They make provisions for the utilization of non-RACES
- staff Amateurs in time of major need. RB045-047
-
- IMPORTANCE OF THE COMM RESOURCES ORDER FORM
- To assure that any volunteer on a mutual aid mission is properly
- covered with insurance and instructions, we use a written form.
- This protects the volunteer portal to portal, not just while he
- or she is at the incident. People can and do get hurt enroute or
- returning home. This is why it is mandatory in California and
- other states that volunteers be preregistered disaster service
- workers. We call it the "Communications Resources and Personnel
- Order" form and encourage its use by any state and local
- government wherein mutual aid is practiced. We cannot reproduce
- the form in its actual size in this bulletin but we show all of
- the line items.
- Since we adopted this form in 1987, all of our RACES personnel
- responding to incident assignments report total acceptance by
- road block law enforcement personnel. Several public safety
- agencies are impressed and wish that all responders had such
- paperwork. Such things as badges, identification cards, jackets,
- caps, or other paraphernalia with logos or alphabet soup seldom
- carry much weight at roadblocks on large scale incidents. RB146
-
- COMMUNICATIONS RESOURCES AND PERSONNEL ORDER FORM
- [NAME OF GOVERNMENT]
- 1. Date/Time
- 2A. Other's Order number [This may be from forestry or some other
- agency]
- 2B. OES number [This is your agency's mission number]
- 3. REQUESTER (AGENCY AND NAME)
- 4. WHAT (type of equipment and/or operator required):
- 5A. WHEN?
- 5B. UNTIL approximately what date or time.
- 6. WHERE?
- 7. ROUTING INSTRUCTIONS: [i.e., how to get there.]
- 8. EN ROUTE FREQUENCIES
- 9. UPON ARRIVING, REPORT TO: [name and/or Incident Command title.
- 10. ESTABLISH/MAINTAIN WHAT POINTS OF COMMUNICATIONS?
- FREQUENCY? CALLSIGNS?:
- 11A. WHO SENT? 11B. CALLSIGN(S) 11C. ADDRESS 11D.RES.PHONE
- 11E. IN WHAT AGENCY DSW REGISTERED? (Use reverse side to enter
- the same information for any additional personnel responding on
- this Order) _____Check here if applicable.
- 12. BRIEFING: [each one of the following items must be checked
- off by the government official giving the briefing] Briefed on
- safety and hazards? Reminded to take adequate equipment,
- supplies, appropriate day and night clothing, money and
- medications. Sleeping bag/blankets. Drive safely, defensively,
- headlights on.
- 13. ORDER PREPARED BY (PRINT)
- TITLE DIVISION REGION/OFFICE SIGNATURE
- 14. DATE/TIME ORDER ACCOMPLISHED OR PERSONNEL ENROUTE:
- 15. HOME OES AGENCY NOTIFIED:
- RB 147
-
- LATER COMMENTS_COMM RESOURCES ORDER FORM:
- Reference Bulletins 146 and 147 on this subject, the use of this
- form perhaps needs clarification after reading the following in
- an Amateur Radio club monthly publication: "Ye editor begs to
- differ in one respect. In the fire, my ARES jacket and hat and
- Sheriff's ID card passed me through all roadblocks. There wasn't
- time for the nicety of getting such a form nor handing it to a
- roadblock official to read! Bulletin 147 lists 25 items of The
- Form, most of which it seems would become outdated at the first
- shift of resources and far better covered by training, experience
- and Net Control! Oh well."
- We agree with what that newsletter editor had to say because he
- is correct when viewed from a strictly local perspective. Note
- that he mentioned the use of a Sheriff's ID card and not a
- non-government ID card. Good! The purpose of the communications
- resources order form is when resources are brought in under the
- mutual aid system where fire suppression, law enforcement,
- communications and other resources may be traveling hundreds of
- miles. It is not intended, of course, for local incidents. We
- regret any confusion that this form may have created.] RB168
-
- ESSENTIAL MUTUAL AID RECORDS and INFORMATION
- RACES personnel helping out on incidents outside of their
- jurisdiction is a common occurrence. This is part of MUTUAL AID
- operations and procedures. It is not necessary to be registered
- as a Disaster Service Worker in more than one jurisdiction. This
- practice is, in fact, improper. A Volunteer should have only one
- ID card and should surrender an old card when transferring to a
- new jurisdiction.
- As a part of the Communications classification of Disaster
- Service Workers, all RACES personnel are a part of the CALIFORNIA
- MASTER MUTUAL AID SYSTEM.
- To access additional Amateur Radio resources through this system,
- a jurisdiction contacts the next level up of government. For
- example, a City Radio Officer would contact the County Radio
- Officer with the request. The County Radio Officer will
- coordinate with other city RACES organizations and his own
- organization to fill the needs. If the County Operational Area
- organization cannot fill the need, the County Radio Officer
- contacts their State OES Region RACES Coordinator, who will work
- with the other counties in the OES Mutual Aid Region to obtain
- the needed resources. This system does not prohibit the
- establishment of AUTOMATIC AID AGREEMENTS between the Emergency
- Management Organizations of two (or more) adjacent jurisdictions;
- the Regional RACES Coordinator, however, should be advised when
- an Automatic Aid situation is in progress, so that OES Region
- staff is aware that resources in those jurisdictions are not
- available.
- Accurate records are a prerequisite for Radio Officers at all
- levels --- city, county and OES Region. Every new Radio Officer
- needs to develop and maintain a roster of names and telephone
- numbers for their counterparts in neighboring jurisdictions. If
- yours is not complete and current, we urge all emergency
- management agencies and Radio Officers give this top priority.
- Another bad fire season is predicted. A major earthquake could
- happen at any time. Your jurisdiction could receive a request
- through channels to provide RACES operators for an incident
- hundreds of miles away or even in an adjacent state. This
- happened in the 1987 fire season and, because RACES was still in
- the formative or non-extant stage in many jurisdictions, RACES
- mutual aid response was slow, disorganized and inefficient.
- Region Radio Officers need to know how to contact every
- participating county in their Region and, in some cases, cities.
- Every county Radio Officer should know the names and telephone
- numbers of their Region, cities, and adjoining county Radio
- Officers.
- It is a common practice for jurisdictions to equip their Radio
- Officers with a radio pager. We recommend this practice. RB015
-
- Any level calling for mutual aid assistance usually requests a
- specific number of personnel, the personal skills required, and
- the type and quantity of communication equipment required. A
- Radio Officer or agency should not put out a call for "all
- available Amateurs report to --- ."
- Whenever possible we will try to pre-alert jurisdictions to the
- possibility of a mutual aid callup so that you will be better
- prepared with an answer if and when you are called. In major
- incidents that are common knowledge, you should survey your
- resource availability before you are called for mutual aid. Then,
- if possible or appropriate, report to the next higher echelon
- Radio Officer what you have willing and able to respond; i.e.,
- city to county, county to State OES Region, Region to OES
- Headquarters. Many mutual aid requests may come direct to State
- OES Headquarters (from CDF, USFS, etc.); it helps us a lot when
- we have heard from those Regions that have RACES resources
- available to respond. Those Regions with hams ready to go will
- usually get the nod.
- There are increasing requests for ATV (Amateur TV). Radio
- Officers should develop who and where they are on their data
- base. We also request that all ATV teams be reported now to your
- State OES Region Office so that we may build an ATV data base.
- What is required are the principal contact names and
- telephone/pager numbers.
- All Radio Officers (at all levels) should include all ARRL EC's
- (Emergency Coordinators) in their resource data base. There are
- many hams whose services are available only in a crisis or on an
- infrequent basis and choose not to be a member of a RACES unit.
- This is why we urge all hams to register as Disaster Service
- Workers so that they can serve without any administrative delays.
- By the same token, we expect ARRL EC's to keep RACES officials
- posted with any information necessary to achieve and maintain
- close coordination.RB016
-
- MACS - Multi-Agency Coordination System
- We share the following with you for evaluation for possible use
- in your jurisdiction. Submitted by Derald Smith, Assistant
- Director, City of Stockton, California, Office of Emergency
- Services.
- The Multi-Agency Coordination System (MACS), an extension of the
- Incident Command System, streamlines procedures for coordinating
- mutual aid and allocating resources during emergencies when more
- than one agency or jurisdiction is involved in the response. The
- system has been adopted by the San Joaquin County Fire Chiefs and
- is under review by other probable users. RACES operators should
- note and remember the following new terminology already in use to
- denote response operating modes; in other words, the intensity of
- response.
- MODE 1: A non-critical county-wide situation not requiring
- extended use of multi-agency resources. Emergency Operating
- Centers not on 24-hour operations. Normal communications
- sufficient.
- MODE 2: A period of heightened preparation, such as seasonal
- anticipation of fog, fires, peak high tides. In this mode, OES
- and its RACES will review procedures and equipment status. The
- RACES possibly on standby.
- MODE 3: Alert to an emergency or more serious potential
- requiring multi-agency response. EOC's partially activated and
- staffed; RACES alerted and selectively employed.
- MODE 4: Signifies the existence of an all-out county effort
- requiring concerted multi-agency coordination. EOC's and the
- RACES fully activated. RB191
-
- RESPONDING TO A MUTUAL AID MISSION
- RACES personnel do not and should not self-dispatch themselves to
- mutual aid incidents. Every Amateur authorized to respond should
- be provided:
- 1. Destination & mission; i.e., where, what to do & resource
- request order number.
- 2. The name and/or title of the official and agency to which
- he/she is to report.
- 3. A clear definition and understanding of what to take, what to
- wear, how long the volunteer may remain on the mission, route of
- travel, a safety and hazards briefing, and any other information
- pertinent to the successful accomplishment of the mission.
- 4. Specific instructions on what communications is to be
- provided.
- 5. Exact name, title and organization authorizing the response.
- 6. Enroute frequencies for subsequent instructions, reports,
- redirection or recall.
- Note: State OES has a form for this purpose for use by any
- jurisdiction. RB002
-
- FOOTNOTE TO BULLETINS-BY-TOPIC
- This material is the result of the interest of people from many
- areas around the country. Their ideas, questions and suggestions
- were then put into these bulletin formats by Stanly Harter,
- KH6GBX, State Races Coordinator, Office of Emergency Services,
- 2800 Meadowview Road, Sacramento, California 95832 between l985
- and l992. Input and comments are welcomed by mail or packet radio
- to W6HIR @ WA6NWE.#NOCAL.CA [Telephone 916-427-4281.]
-
-
-
-