Top Banner
Emergency Response, Early Recovery & Resilience Joe Buffone, Deputy Emergency Services Commissioner
30

Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Mar 27, 2016

Download

Documents

Presentation delivered at the Year of Humanitarian Engineering Workshop in Brisbane, 27 September 2011. Presented by Joe Buffone, Deputy Emergency Services Commissioner
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Emergency Response,

Early Recovery & Resilience

Joe Buffone, Deputy Emergency Services Commissioner

Page 2: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

• Complexity of emergency response • Transition to recovery • Resilience in practice

Overview

Page 3: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 4: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 5: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 6: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 7: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 8: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 9: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 10: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 11: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 12: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 13: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 14: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 15: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

• Climate understanding • Awareness of risk • Changing risk • Changing populations

Environmental challenges

Page 16: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

• Ageing infrastructure • Planning Cascade effects: • Drought to storm, storm to

flood, flood to heatwave, heatwave to bushfire

• Earthquake to tsunami to nuclear disaster

Environmental challenges

Page 17: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience
Page 18: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

• Command & control • Coordination • Processes & common

language • Information vs intelligence • Technology

Organisational challenges

Page 19: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Intelligence Cycle

Page 20: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Two-way information

• From the ground to

the control centre for analysis

• From the community • From the media • Back out to operations • Back out to community • Back out to media

Page 21: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

• Tools to track events,

media, public info, social media in real time

• Quality assurance • Intelligence and

incoming information • VicFloods – 300,000+ • QLDFloods – millions

Real-time monitoring

Earthquake Tweets

Page 22: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

• Recovery starts when

response starts • Change in operational

tempo • Needs analysis & rapid

impact assessment • Partnerships

Transition to recovery

Page 23: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

• Critical infrastructure • Housing and immediate

needs • Lessons learned VBRRA

Transition to recovery

Page 24: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Community resilience

• Built-in preparedness • Built-in, advanced,

integrated planning • The built-environment • Resilience is

Information

Page 25: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Communication/Information

Page 26: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

What EM needs from engineers

Knowledge needs: 1. Climate change

benchmarks 2. All hazards risk

assessment 3. Natural processes 4. Social, economic

vulnerability assessment

Page 27: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Connecting engineers

• Technical expertise • Deployable • The built-environment

Page 28: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Culture Change

• EM culture is changing nationally

• Are you part of the EM

system? How could you be?

• Break down barriers, and

move forward together

Page 29: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

COMMUNITY

Page 30: Emergency Response, Early Recovery and Resilience

Exercise information flows • Exercising with the

community • Exercising information

overload • Exercise and stress test

systems • Exercising strategic

decision making timeframes and impacts