Homeland Security and Emergency Management – Instructor Guide Frances Winslow, OES, City of San Jose, CA William C. Nicholson, Widener College of Law William.

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Presentation transcript:

Homeland Security and Emergency Management – Instructor Guide Frances Winslow, OES, City of San Jose, CA William C. Nicholson, Widener College of Law William L. Waugh, Georgia State University

Session 1: Introduction A. Definition of Homeland Security, Terrorism, and Weapons of Mass Destruction B. Brief History of International and Domestic Terrorism C. The Nature of the Terrorism Hazard D. The Intergovernmental Context of Homeland Security in brief

Session 2: Policy & Organizational Context A. Brief History of Counter-Terrorism Policy and Program prior to 11 September 2001 B. Major Counter-Terrorism Legislation since 11 September 2001 C. Major Executive Actions since 11 September 2001 – PDD 39 to HSPD 5 D. Major National Strategies since 11 September 2001

Session 2: Policy & Organizational Context E. The Counter-Terrorism Paradigm Shift since 11 September Organizing the Department of Homeland Security 2. NRP and NIMS F. State and Local Government Mandates G. State and Local Government Counter- Terrorism Initiatives 1. LEPC connections 2. State and Local Homeland Security organizations

Session 3: Mitigation & Prevention A. Role of Public Information and Education B. Litigation Mitigation C Financial Mitigation D. Expanded police powers – US Patriot Act – e.g, “sneak a peek”

Session 3: Mitigation and Prevention E. Mitigation/Prevention Cases 1. Aviation Security 2. Maritime Security 3. Nuclear Security (International) 4. Bioterrorism initiatives 5. Personal/Community Measures

Session 4: Planning/ Preparedness/Readiness A. Terrorism Planning – Risk Assessment/Threat Assessment (with reference to Greg Shaw course) B. Planning for Mass Casualties/Mass Fatalities C. Risk Communication and Communicating Risk, e.g., Homeland Security Advisory System, warning systems, messaging D. Preparedness Standard Setting – for training and trainers, equipment, state and local capacities (e.g., EMAP)

Session 4: Planning/ Preparedness/Readiness E. Continuity of Government F. Continuity of Operations

Session 5: Response A. Lead and Support Roles in Homeland Security – Who’s in charge of what and when? B. Federal, state, and local (lead) roles in responding to terrorist incidences C. Responder perspectives: 1. Law enforcement 2. Fire services 3. Emergency medical services, e.g., surge capacity and trauma capacity

Session 5: Response. Mitigation/Prevention Cases 1. Aviation Security 2. Maritime Security 3. Nuclear Security (International) 4. Bioterrorism initiatives 5. Personal/Community Measures

Session 6: Recovery A. Primary, secondary and tertiary impacts B. Economic/Business recovery C. Social recovery, e.g., repairing communities D. Victim Compensation – from payments to memorials E. Nongovernmental Resources, e.g., insurance F. Psychological Recovery, e.g., respite centers, counseling

Session 6: Recovery G. Legal liability H. Maintaining local services I. Transitioning from emergency operations to normal operations J. Dealing with “dirty sites” – contamination and “how clean is clean”

Session 7: Conclusions A. Brief summary – final exam B. Examination questions C. Bibliography D. List of Selected URLs E. List of acronyms F. PowerPoint presentations