UTAH DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
2017 ANNUAL REPORT
WHAT’S INSIDE
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Director’s Message Staff About Us Financial Report State Emergency Response Team Year in Review Preparedness Bureau Highlights Utah Disaster History Response & Recovery Bureau Highlights Regions Partners
DIRECTOR’S MESSAGE Disasters happen. 2017 showed Utah again what can happen when Mother Nature’s forces combine against our relatively peaceful lives. In February, Box Elder and Cache counties were the focus of flooding’s menace. Sheet flooding caused water to pour into basements and wash out roads. In these moments of distress, we owe our gratitude to first responders, local emergency managers, neighbors and volunteers for their tireless efforts. In April, the President declared a major disaster for the affected counties and we’ll spend the next few years working with county officials and assisting them in the road to recovery. The flooding was devastating to the affected homeowners with basements full of water destroyed furnaces and eventual piles of irreplaceable heirlooms and mementos. We have an opportunity now to encourage Utahns to consider how a specific insurance policy for flooding could fit into their budgets. Flood damage recovery is not included in a traditional homeowners policy. Flood insurance could help with big-ticket items, such as furnaces and water heaters. In 2017, we also watched from afar as three powerful hurricanes -- Harvey, Irma and Maria -- struck the United States. Utah sent responders to all three hurricanes to assist with disaster recovery and we stand ready to help again in the future. California’s wildfires in October and December also gave Utah firefighters a chance to serve through the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC). Fire agencies selflessly responded to the call for help with 22 departments sending personnel in October and 29 in December. Is Utah ready to shoulder a burden like the devastation from a major disaster earthquake? We are taking steps. We are making progress. We see our time now as a time to prepare. We look forward to future conversations with partners in the Legislative and Executive branches on this topic and encourage these same conversations at the local level. Funding is certainly part of the equation, but we also expect to discover ways to use Utah talents and creativity to solve our future disaster problems. Thank you for all that you do, and best wishes in 2018.
Kris J. Hamlet Director, DEM 2
Executive Leadership Governor Gary R. Herbert
Administration
Lieutenant Governor Spencer J. Cox
Finance Section
Kris Hamlet, Director
Department of Public Safety Commissioner Keith D. Squires
Matt Ferguson, Section Manager
Judy Watanabe, Deputy Director
Department of Public Safety Deputy Commissioner Nannette Rolfe
Denise Spillman, Financial Analyst
Jona Whitesides, Preparedness Bureau Chief
Anna Boynton, Financial Analyst
Bob Carey, Response and Recovery Bureau Chief
Tanner Patterson, Financial Analyst
Joe Dougherty, Public Information Officer
Judy Ainsworth, Front Desk Support
Amisha Lester, Special Projects Coordinator
Hillary Goldsmith, Intern
Susan Thomas, Strategic Planner
Utah Public-Private Partnership (UP3) Section
Operations Section
Matt Beaudry, Section Manager
Sheila Curtis, Section Manager John Crofts, Planner Angela Lang, Planner
Logistics Section
Be Ready Utah Section
Dave Popelmayer, Section Manager
Wade Mathews, Section Manager
Rey Thompson, IM/Trainer
Maralin Hoff, Trainer
Lorry Herrera, Planner
Jeff Johnson, Be Ready Schools Coordinator
Patrice Thomas, Planner
James Ray, Citizen Corps Coordinator
Kurt Tracy, WebEOC
Ken Kraudy, Community Outreach
Josh Groeneveld, GIS Planner Cindy Cheng, GIS Intern Bob Craven, Communications Support Juan Villanueva, Communications Support
Jake Unguren, Deputy State Hazard Mitigation/Recovery Officer Eric Martineau, Mitigation Planner Janna Wilkinson-Mayo, Mitigation Planner Kathy Holder, State Floodplain Coordinator Brandon Webb, Intern Jamie Huff, Risk MAP Coordinator
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Tracie Harrison, Intern Tara Tannahill, Intern
Kathy McMullin, Research Analyst Ralph Ley, DHS PSA Braden Norris, Intern
Bryan Stinson, Community Outreach
Mitigation & Recovery Section Brad Bartholomew, Section Manager
Logan Sisam, Be Ready Business Program Manager
Community Support Section Training & Exercise Section Kris Repp, Section Manager Ted Woolley, State Training Officer Tracy Bodily, Exercise Training Officer Don Cobb, Exercise Officer Karen Madsen, Planner Alden Orme, Trainer
Kim Hammer, Section Manager Kimberly Giles, Northern Region 1 Tara Behunin, Wasatch Front Region 2 Jeff Gallacher, Central Utah Region 3 Scott Alvord, Southwest Utah Region 4 Mechelle Miller, Northeast Region 5 Angelia Crowther, Castle Country & Four Corners Regions 6 & 7
UTAH DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY Utah is one of 35 EMAP accredited states. EMAP provides credible standards on which a program can build a strong foundation. Utah became accredited in 2007 and gained re-accreditation in 2012 and 2017.
DIVISION OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Our Vision
To achieve a self-sustaining culture of emergency preparedness for all individuals and communities in Utah.
Our Mission
To unite the emergency management community and to coordinate efforts necessary to mitigate, prepare for, respond to and recover from emergencies, disasters and catastrophic events.
Utah Division of Emergency Management 2017 Theme
ONE TEAM ONE GOAL ONE DEM 4
DEM FINANCIAL
Total Federal Dollars Spent
$427,047.48 $4,083,059.96 $7,251,542.82
How do federal dollars benefit Utah? ~ Ensures Utah taxpayer dollars come back to the state and are spent on Utah needs ~ Augments first responder capabilities at the local level through planning, training, and equipment ~ Increases Utah’s preparedness at the government, community, individual/family, and business level
$3,059,382.03
$1,773,127.29
Emergency Management Performance Grant (EMPG) The purpose of EMPG is to provide Federal funds to states to assist state, local, territorial, and tribal governments in preparing for all hazards. Through the EMPG program we provide approximately $1.7 million in funding to support the Emergency Management programs of 29 Counties, 28 Cities, and 4 Institutions of Higher Education. Examples of functions EMPG helps support include, but are not limited to, conducting risk assessments, assessing capabilities, identifying preparedness needs, and updating emergency plans; building or augmenting core capabilities; designing and conducting exercises that engage the whole community of stakeholders to validate core capabilities; conducting emergency management training; and providing funding support for emergency management personnel.
State Homeland Security Program Grant (SHSP)
Funds to DEM Programs Funds to Local Programs Funds to Other State Agencies
5
$427,047.48
The purpose of SHSP is to support state and local efforts to prevent terrorism and other catastrophic events and to prepare the Nation for threats and hazards that pose the greatest risk to the security of the United States. Through SHSP we provide approximately $3.8 Million to the 7 regions throughout Utah who divide the money among the 29 counties and numerous cities as well as fire districts, Utah Search and Rescue, and Bomb Squads. $2,011,885.54
$679,605.73
Mitigation Grants Funds from the State Disaster Recovery Restricted Account (53-2a-603) reimbursed to State Agencies and Agents of the State
$244,108.54
~Carbon County Flooding Clean Up and Debris Removal – January 2017 ($79,163.50)
~Box Elder and Cache County Winter Flooding – February 2017 ($27,132.41)
~Town of Torrey Water Shortage – June 2017 ($9,330.00)
~Uintah City (Fire Department October Deployment to California) ($30,106.13)
~Salt Lake City (Fire Department October Deployment to California) ($173,841.10)
~Uintah City (Fire Department December Deployment to California) - ($57,214.60)
$2,735,884.79
Mitigation In 2017, Utah was awarded $3,928,346 in FEMA mitigation funding. This funding will go towards four mitigation planning updates and four mitigation projects. Three mitigation plans were updated and approved by FEMA. Four Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) grants were closed, DR-1955, DR-4011, DR-4053, and DR-4088. Recovery The Recovery personnel spent a significant amount 2017 working on the Winter Flooding Disaster (DR-4311) that affected Box Elder and Cache Counties. Significant progress in closing older disasters was made in 2017.
Cooperating Technical Partners Funds The Cooperating Technical Partner (CTP) program provides federal assistance through a cooperative agreement between FEMA and an eligible Cooperating Technical Partners (CTP) to perform various projects and activities that stimulate and support the ability of NFIP State Coordinating Agencies. This allows NFIP participating communities to continue their ongoing regulatory NFIP responsibilities as well as support the ability of States, communities and the public and private sector to mitigate flood risk. CTPs assist in the development and maintenance of flood risk data and Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) and other risk related products, and further advance the goals and objectives of Risk MAP and the NFIP program.
Funding from the Legislature benefits Utah’s preparedness, response, and recovery efforts by: ~ $1.3 Million to fund salaries, daily operations, and matching obligations of federal dollars
$99,963.66
$730,645.20
Capabilities and resources enhanced this year through preparedness grants: ~ Sustainment of the Utah Bomb Squad Task Force, which allows seven FBI-approved teams to plan, train, and maintain uniformity across the state ~ Sustainment of the State Urban Search and Rescue committee to coordinate uniform training, response, and recovery within the state
Funds to DEM Programs Funds to Local Programs Funds to Other State Agencies
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ACTIVATIONS Northern Utah Flooding Torrey Water Emergency Salt Lake City Severe Storm Brian Head Fire Uintah Fire Algae Blooms Hurricane Harvey Hurricane Irma
2017 CORE COMPETENCIES
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• • • •
Mastering DEM’s Incident Management System Missions and Tasks Resource Allocation & Purchasing Information Sharing
245
EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE COMPACT (EMAC) DEPLOYMENTS Florida Texas California
ACTIVE PARTICIPANTS
The SERT met monthly to sharpen its skills and build partnerships. In 2017, the SERT worked through disaster scenarios and participated in various mission activities, including coordinating the emergency support functions within the EOC with over 30 hours of training.
Salt Lake City Severe Storm July 26, 2017 - Conducted a Preliminary Damage Assessment with Salt Lake County after localized flooding in July. The majority of the damage was covered by insurance and the remaining balance did not meet the State or County thresholds.
2017 DISASTERS
DR-4311 - Severe Winter Storms & Flooding Incident Period Feb 7 to Feb 27, 2017 - Declared April 21, 2017 - FEMA/State/Local Joint Field Office Open May-August - Over $5 Million in FEMA Eligible damage
- Conducted a Small Business Administration (SBA) damage assessment on homes and businesses affected by the flooding in Salt Lake County. This flooding incident didn’t meet the SBA threshold. - Participated with Salt Lake County and the Salt Lake City (Multi Agency Resource Center (MARC) for the flooding.
Uintah Fire - FMAG September 2, 2017 Brian Head - FMAG June 17 to July 15, 2017 - Fire Management Assistance Grant
- Fire Management Assistance Grant - $666,357.66 - 619 Acres
- $28,810,292.72 - 71,673 Acres
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PREPAREDNESS BUREAU HIGHLIGHTS Training & Exercise Section - FEMA Basic Academy Instruction held in Utah with Foundations of Emergency Management being offered twice in 2017 - State of Idaho conducted multi-state earthquake exercise involving DEM and Public Health cross-border support from Utah. - Pre-exercise workshops related to homelessness, access and functional needs transitional sheltering and bulk distribution opened new collaborative partnerships, and cooperation among mass care partners. - Hosted and conducted National Mass Care Exercise with 11 states and 7 FEMA regions over 3 days. - Began development of protocols through training and exercise for new partnership with 2-1-1 as EOC call center. - Conducted Improvement Planning Workshops for 7 regions and two TEPWs. - Introduced new EOC and SERT Training and Exercise Program.
Utah’s Largest Shakeout with
1,012,117 Registered
DEM Conferences: - Public Safety Summit - 555 participants - PIO Conference - 108 participants - ARES/RACES Conf. - 113 participants - USEMCs - 126 participants - UFSMA - 142 participants -LEPC - 110 participants
DEM Trainings:
97 Courses 1705 Participants
Community Support Section Traveled
88,890 miles from each end of the state to attend meetings, trainings, exercises,
746 related Emergency Management Meetings, trainings, and exercises statewide Attended 134 LEPC Meetings
Attended
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and incidents
Liaisons responded and assisted on the following incidents: - Brian Head - Torrey Water Shortage - DR4311 - Cache and Box Elder Counties
Utah Public-Private Partnerships (UP3) Section Infrastructure accomplishments - The Infrastructure Resilience Program (IRP) has engaged five of our 29 counties in the work of scoring and prioritizing thousands of critical nodes of infrastructure in dozens of communities so far. This assists emergency managers and first responders to prioritize where to go first for damage assessments, road clearance & debris management, mitigation planning, capabilities planning, etc. - The Community Awareness Program (CAP) aka “8 Signs of Terrorism� was presented to over 600 Utahns this year - 25 Private Sector Preparedness Councils was attended by 552 persons Be Ready Business accomplishments - 50% increase of Private Sector Preparedness Council groups (PSPC) - 44% Increase in the annual overall PSPC forum participation - Be Ready Business presented business continuity planning training to 3,162 persons representing 81 businesses
Be Ready Utah Section Be Ready Utah
Utah Prepare Conference and Expo - nearly 2000 participants
BRU Presentations at 72 events with 4,919 people
Assisted with Department of Public Safety's Safety Fair for 900 people
BRU Booths at 71 events with 17,785 people
Conducted Emergency Fair for Capitol Hill Employees with 300 people
BRU Materials provided at 64 events with 14,165 people
Participated in America's PrepareAthon and National Preparedness Month
Total BRU events: 207 with 36,869 people
Be Ready Schools
Citizen Corps
BRS Outreach at 8 events with 3,700 people
CC Presentations at 5 events with 83 people
BRS Assemblies with American Red Cross: 36 with 1,373 students
CC Booths at 7 events with 487 people
Total BRS events: 44 with 5,073 people
CC Materials provided at 2 events with 300 people Conducted 2 Capitol Hill Community Emergency Response Team courses with 30 people; 70 state employees now trained 10
11/89
Creation of the Chemical Emergency Preparedness Program (CSEPP)
01/31/89
Quail Creek Dike Failure, Washington County Flash 03/13/86 Flooding Northern Utah Heavy Rains, Snowmelt, Flooding
08/17/84
1980
1919
04/30/83
01/15/87
1991
Creation of the State EOC at the State Office Building on Capitol Hill
Skywest Airline Midair Collision Response
1995
State-wide Severe Storms, Thistle Landslide, Flooding
1985
1975
1919
Major Disaster Declarations
Creation of the Utah Council of Defense
Creation of the Division of Comprehensive Emergency Management (CEM)
Northern Utah Severe Storms, Mudslides, Landslides, Flooding
Declaration Date - not incident date
Division of Emergency Management History Emergency Declarations
01/20/77
Statewide Drought
01/29/77
Statewide Drought
Utah Disaster History and DEM throughout the Years 11
A Timeline
1995
1985
1975
1919
Fire Management Assistance Grant (FMAG) Declarations
2012
2007
2005
2002
CEM name changed to Utah Division of Emergency Services and Homeland Security (UDESHS)
01/01/2000
Y2K Event
2000
Creation of the State Hazard Mitigation Team
First Pre-Disaster Mitigation Project in Utah
02/01/05
Southern Utah Severe Storm, Flooding
08/01/05
Landslide, Flooding State-wide
02/08/2002 XIX Olympic Winter Games
Crandall Canyon Mine Disaster Response
2007
2011
UDHS name changed to Utah Division of Emergency Management (DEM) 02/11/11 Utah 2007 SevereSouthern Winter Storm, EMAP Flooding Accredited
2012
2012
2017
Saddle Fire
Hurricane Katrina Evacuation
08/13/13
Rockport Fire
06/22/12 06/30/07
Neola North Fire
07/07/07
Milford Flats Fire
07/21/07
Salt Creek Fire
EMAP Re-accredited
1984
Flooding in Salt Lake City
1999
Tornado in Salt Lake City
2005
Flooding in Southern Utah
2017
Brain Head Fire in Dixie NF
04/21/2017 Northern Utah Flooding
2015
Blue Springs Fire
Hildale and Zion Flashflood Response
06/13/16
Causey Fire
06/27/05
09/16/15
EMAP Re-accredited
08/08/11
07/15/03
Brookside Fire
Washington County Severe Storm, Flooding
2012
Severe Storm, Flooding State-wide
Creation of the Disaster Recovery Restricted Account
Mustang Fire
06/16/04
11/03/12
First Utah Shakeout
2005
Mollie Fire
07/01/02
Davis County Severe Storm
New EOC at State Capitol
09/05/05
08/19/01
02/01/12
2012
CSEPP close out
2015
9/11 Terrorist Attacks
Salt Lake County Tornado, Severe Thunderstorm, Hail
09/11/2003
2005
08/16/99
09/11/2001
UDESHS name changed to Utah Division of Homeland Security (UDHS)
Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP) Directive issued by Governor Herbert
08/30/09
Mill Flat Fire
09/19/10
Machine Gun Fire
Dump Fire
06/24/12
Wood Hollow Fire
06/27/12
06/18/17 Brain Head Fire
09/05/17 Uintah Fire
08/13/14
Anaconda Fire
Clay Springs Fire
06/29/12
Rosecrest Fire
07/02/12 Shingle Fire
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RESPONSE & RECOVERY BUREAU HIGHLIGHTS Operations Section EOC - Coordinated State efforts for Northern Utah Severe Winter Storms & Flooding, Salt Lake City Severe Storm, Brain Head & Uintah Fires - Visitors from North Davis Fire, U of U Geography class, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Japanese Consulate, Serbia, and Morocco - 32 Weekly Briefings and 76 Situation Reports were distributed throughout the year
GIS - 402 maps created for incidents, exercises, special projects and web-based maps - Participated in Maps on the Hill during the legislative session in January 2017
Logistics Section
Mobile Command Vehicle - The Mobile Command Vehicle was dispatched to support DPS and local law enforcement in Operation Rio Grande for four months and to Sand Mountain to assist DPS and Juab County during Spring Break.
Incident Management System - Implemented the new Resource Inventory/Tracker - Recorded training videos and added training materials to our incident management training library - Implemented fusion between the State of Utah and Salt Lake Valley installations of the DEM incident management system for situational awareness
EMAC - Hosted FEMA Region VIII EMAC A-Team training in March 2017 - Deployed resources from the State of Utah to assist with California wildfires and to hurricane responses in Texas and Florida - Coordinated the deployment of resources for the water shortage in Torrey and the flood response in Box Elder and Cache counties
Planning - The Counter Terrorism Plan was produced using a multiple agency working group including Federal, State, and local agencies - DEM helped approximately 100 state agencies exercise and update their COOP plans 13
Public Information
79 Interviews 23 Outlets 9 Staff members quoted
Mitigation & Recovery Section Risk MAP
Risk MAP (Mapping, Assessment, and Planning) develops flood hazard data and maps for communities that have never had identified risks as well as building on effective flood hazard data and flood insurance rate maps. In Utah, only 7.8% of flood risk is mapped on a Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM).
Project stats - Risk MAP funded 1,606.9 square miles of LiDAR (topography data) acquisition in Cache and Washington Counties - Risk MAP was awarded $2,129,441.00 in CTP project grant in 2017. Also assisted in the award of FEMA HQ funded LiDAR acquisition for 4341.9 square miles of LiDAR for Wasatch, Duchesne, and Uintah Counties totaling approximately $1.1 million - Alluvial Fan Inventory completed for Wasatch Range from Idaho Border to Nephi; West Oquirrh’s Point of the Mountain to southeast of Rush Valley - Morgan County new FIRMs became effective December 2017
NFIP
Utah Floodplain Program has continued to work hard to train our communities, Floodplain Administrators’ and Emergency Managers about the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). We have used the Community Assisted Visits (CAV’s), which are floodplain regulatory audits, Community Assisted Contacts (CAC’s), which vary in nature to help communities regulate there floodplain ordinance, and General Technical Assistance (GTA’s), which give advice on floodplain and NFIP matters to individuals to help advise on NFIP matters.
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Total CAV’s
34
Total CAC’s
651 Total GTA’s
16
4
Newsletters
NFIP Trainings
Mitigation
$3,928,346
In 2017 Utah was awarded in FEMA mitigation funding. This funding will go towards four mitigation planning updates and four mitigation projects. Three Mitigation plans were updated and approved by FEMA. Four Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) grants were closed, DR-1955, DR-4011, DR-4053, and DR-4088.
Recovery
The Recovery Section spent a significant amount of 2017 working on the Winter Flooding Disaster (DR-4311) that affected Box Elder and Cache Counties. Significant progress in closing older disasters was made in 2017.
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$ 376,000.00
6
EMPG pass-through awarded
187,099 Participants PDM Projects Awarded: Brigham City Generator Project $1,101.100 West Haven Generator Project $82,252 Weber Basin Water Conservancy District Mitigation Plan $192,990
Communities participate in the National Flood Insurance Program Community Rating System
107 REGION 1 Northern Utah
National Flood Insurance Program General Technical Assistance Visits
S.O.S.
59
Search and Rescue Missions
*Based on Search and Rescue Financial Assistance Program Reports
86
Citizen Corps Programs (CERT, MRC, Fire Corps, VIPS, Neighborhood Watch)
15
$ 555,700.00
2
EMPG pass-through awarded
707,615 Participants PDM Projects Awarded: Salt Lake City Fix The Bricks $707,024 Granite School District Mitigation Plan $75,000
Communities participate in the National Flood Insurance Program Community Rating System
313 REGION 2 Wasatch Front
National Flood Insurance Program General Technical Assistance Visits
211 S.O.S.
Search and Rescue Missions
*Based on Search and Rescue Financial Assistance Program Reports
99
Citizen Corps Programs (CERT, MRC, Fire Corps, VIPS, Neighborhood Watch) 16
$ 243,600.00
39
EMPG pass-through awarded
49,397 Participants
National Flood Insurance Program General Technical Assistance Visits
REGION 3 Central Utah
S.O.S.
31
Search and Rescue Missions
*Based on Search and Rescue Financial Assistance Program Reports
18
Citizen Corps Programs (CERT, MRC, Fire Corps, VIPS, Neighborhood Watch) 17
$ 239,800.00
2
EMPG pass-through awarded
58,290 Participants PDM Projects Awarded: Washington City Virgin River Stream Restoration Project $1,447,980
Communities participate in the National Flood Insurance Program Community Rating System
92 REGION 4 Southwest Utah
National Flood Insurance Program General Technical Assistance Visits
115 S.O.S.
Search and Rescue Missions
*Based on Search and Rescue Financial Assistance Program Reports
64
Citizen Corps Programs (CERT, MRC, Fire Corps, VIPS, Neighborhood Watch) 18
$ 116,500.00
34
EMPG pass-through awarded
5,335 Participants PDM Projects Awarded: Uintah Basin Mitigation Plan $72,000
National Flood Insurance Program General Technical Assistance Visits
REGION 5 Northeastern
3
S.O.S.
Search and Rescue Missions
*Based on Search and Rescue Financial Assistance Program Reports
9
Citizen Corps Programs (CERT, MRC, Fire Corps, VIPS, Neighborhood Watch) 19
$ 83,400.00
44
EMPG pass-through awarded
2,377 Participants
National Flood Insurance Program General Technical Assistance Visits
REGION 6 Castle Country
143 S.O.S.
Search and Rescue Missions
*Based on Search and Rescue Financial Assistance Program Reports
9
Citizen Corps Programs (CERT, MRC, Fire Corps, VIPS, Neighborhood Watch) 20
$ 67,100.00 EMPG pass-through awarded
1,984 Participants
REGION 7 Four Corners
S.O.S.
19
Search and Rescue Missions
*Based on Search and Rescue Financial Assistance Program Reports
4
Citizen Corps Programs (CERT, MRC, Fire Corps, VIPS, Neighborhood Watch) 21
State, local, tribal emergency management
Utah
Search and Rescue Advisory Board
It takes the whole community to prepare for disaster.
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Acronyms Legend:
ARES/RACES - Ameteur Radio Emergency Service/Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service BRS - Be Ready Schools BRU - Be Ready Utah CAP - Community Awareness Program C.E.R.T - Community Emergency Response Team CC - Citizen Corps COOP - Continuity of Operations Plan CTP - Cooperating Technical Partners Program DEM - Division of Emergency Management DPS - Department of Public Safety EMAC - Emergency Management Assistance Compact EMAP - Emergency Management Accreditation Program EMPG - Emergency Management Performance Grant EOC - Emergency Operations Center EOP - Emergency Operations Plan FEMA - Federal Emergency Management Agency
FIRM - Flood Insurance Rate Map GIS - Geographic Information Systems HMGP - Hazard Mitigation Grant Program LEPC - Local Emergency Planning Committee LiDAR - Light Detection and Ranging (Examining the Earth’s Surface) NFIP - National Flood Insurance Program PDM - Pre-Disaster Mitigation PIO - Public Information Officer PSPC - Private Sector Preparedness Council Risk MAP - Risk Mapping, Assessment and Planning SERT- State Emergency Response Team SHSP - State Homeland Security Program TEPW - Training and Exercise Workshop UFSMA - Utah Floodplain and Stormwater Management Association UP3 - Utah Public Private Partnerships USEMC - Utah’s State Emergency Management Conference
Utah Department of Public Safety Division of Emergency Management 1110 State Office Building Salt Lake City, UT 84114 801-538-3400 dem.utah.gov
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