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National
Response Plan - Department of Homeland Security
Fact
Sheet - What it does for America
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National
Response Plan - Department
of Homeland Security
Fact Sheet - What it does for America
January 6, 2005
The National
Response Plan establishes a comprehensive all-hazards
approach to enhance the ability of the United States to manage
domestic incidents. The Plan incorporates best practices and procedures
from incident management disciplines-homeland security, emergency
management, law enforcement, firefighting, public works, public
health, responder and recovery worker health and safety, emergency
medical services, and the private sector-and integrates them into
a unified structure. It forms the basis of how federal departments
and agencies will work together and how the federal government
will coordinate with state, local, and tribal governments and
the private sector during incidents. It establishes protocols
to help protect the nation from terrorist attacks and other natural
and manmade hazards; save lives; protect public health, safety,
property, and the environment; and reduces adverse psychological
consequences and disruptions to the American way of life.
Plan Organization
Base Plan: Concept of Operations, Coordinating Structures,
Roles and Responsibilities, Definitions, etc.
Appendixes: Glossary, Acronyms, Authorities, and Compendium
of National Interagency Plans
Emergency Support Function Annexes: Groups capabilities
& resources into functions that are most likely needed during
an incident (e.g., Transportation, Firefighting, Mass Care, etc.)
Support Annexes: Describes common processes and specific
administrative requirements (e.g., Public Affairs, Financial Management,
Worker Safety & Health, etc.)
Incident Annexes: Outlines core procedures, roles and responsibilities
for specific contingencies (e.g., Bio, Radiological, Cyber, HAZMAT
Spills)
National Response Plan Incident Management Priorities
Save lives and protect the health and safety of the public,
responders, and recovery workers.
Ensure
security of the homeland.
Prevent
an imminent incident, including acts of terrorism, from occurring.
Protect
and restore critical infrastructure and key resources.
Conduct
law enforcement investigations to resolve the incident, apprehend
the perpetrators, and collect and preserve evidence for prosecution
and/or attribution.
Protect
property and mitigate damages and impacts to individuals,
communities, and the environment.
Facilitate
recovery of individuals, families, businesses, governments,
and the environment. |
Emphasis
on Local Response
The Plan identifies police, fire, public health and medical,
emergency management, and other personnel as responsible for
incident management at the local level.
The
Plan enables incident response to be handled at the lowest
possible organizational and jurisdictional level.
The
Plan ensures the seamless integration of the federal government
when an incident exceeds local or state capabilities.
Timely
Federal Response to Catastrophic Incidents
The
Plan identifies catastrophic incidents as high-impact, low-probability
incidents, including natural disasters and terrorist attacks
that result in extraordinary levels of mass casualties, damage,
or disruption severely affecting the population, infrastructure,
environment, economy, national morale, and/or government functions.
The
Plan provides the means to swiftly deliver federal support
in response to catastrophic incidents. |
Multi-agency
Coordination Structure
The Plan identifies police, fire, public health and medical,
emergency management, and other personnel as responsible for
incident management at the local level.
The
Plan enables incident response to be handled at the lowest
possible organizational and jurisdictional level.
The
Plan ensures the seamless integration of the federal government
when an incident exceeds local or state capabilities. |
New Coordinating
Features in the National Response Plan
Homeland Security Operations Center (HSOC): The
HSOC serves as the primary national level multi-agency hub for
domestic situational awareness and operational coordination. The
HSOC also includes DHS components, such as the National Infrastructure
Coordinating Center (NICC), which has primary responsibility for
coordinating communications with the Nation's critical infrastructure
during an incident.
National Response Coordination Center (NRCC): The NRCC,
a functional component of the HSOC, is a multi-agency center that
provides overall federal response coordination.
Regional Response Coordination Center (RRCC): At the regional
level, the RRCC coordinates regional response efforts and implements
local federal program support until a Joint Field Office is established.
Interagency Incident Management Group (IIMG): A tailored
group of senior federal interagency experts who provide strategic
advice to the Secretary of Homeland Security during an actual
or potential Incident of National Significance.
Joint Field Office (JFO): A temporary federal facility
established locally to provide a central point to coordinate resources
in support of state, local, and tribal authorities.
Principal Federal Official (PFO): A PFO may be designated
by the Secretary of Homeland Security during a potential or actual
Incident of National Significance. While individual federal officials
retain their authorities pertaining to specific aspects of incident
management, the PFO works in conjunction with these officials
to coordinate overall federal incident management efforts.
Maintaining the National Response Plan
The Department of Homeland Security/Emergency Preparedness
and Response (EP&R)/Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA), in close coordination with the DHS Office of the Secretary,
will maintain the National Response Plan.
The
Plan will be updated to incorporate new Presidential directives,
legislative changes, and procedural changes based on lessons
learned from exercises and actual events. |
Download
PDF Version of Fact Sheet (PDF, 3 pages 240K)
Download
PDF of Base Plan (PDF, 114 pages, 2MB)
Download
PFD of Full Plan (PDF, 426 pages, 4MB) including all annexes,
"Emergency Support Function Annexes", "Support Annexes", and "Incident
Annexes."
For additional information or to obtain a hard copy of the National
Response Plan, please call 800-368-6498.
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Dept of Homeland
Security
http://www.dhs.gov/
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