Army Emergency Management Program - Federation of American ...
Army Emergency Management Program - Federation of American ...
Army Emergency Management Program - Federation of American ...
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Table F–1<br />
Hazard identification list—Continued<br />
Environmental pollution/contamination Environmental pollution or contamination resulting from intentional or unintentional spill or release<br />
<strong>of</strong> hazardous materials identified within reference 49 CFR and subject to remediation or<br />
management based upon NEPA, CERCLA, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, EPCRA,<br />
and Safe Drinking Water Act.<br />
Refugee and migrant operations Refugee or migration <strong>of</strong> U.S. or non-U.S. citizens across State or National borders requiring<br />
DOD support to transport or provide mass care for by direction <strong>of</strong> the U.S. Government (DHS or<br />
DOS).<br />
Nuclear reactor or radiological accidents<br />
Nuclear reactor accidents or radiological accidents on DOD installations or impacting DOD installations<br />
by environmental dispersion (see DODD 3150.08).<br />
Nuclear weapon accidents Nuclear weapon accidents where the weapon is under DOD or Allied control at the time <strong>of</strong> the<br />
accident (see DODD 3150.05 and DOD 3150.8–M).<br />
Terrorism, intentional acts, and criminal incidents<br />
Terrorism incidents Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> conventional force, to<br />
include incidents involving physical access, denial <strong>of</strong> physical access, firearms, or kidnapping,<br />
but excluding incidents involving CBRNE agents or materials where such incidents are targeted<br />
against personnel or facilities.<br />
Chemical terrorism Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> CWAs or toxic industrial<br />
chemicals against personnel or facilities.<br />
Biological terrorism Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> CWAs or toxic industrial<br />
biological organisms/toxins against personnel or facilities.<br />
Radiological terrorism Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> explosive-based or<br />
nonexplosive-based radiological dispersion devices against personnel or facilities.<br />
Nuclear terrorism Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> manufactured nuclear<br />
weapons or improvised nuclear devices against personnel or facilities.<br />
Explosive or incendiary terrorism Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> explosives or incendiaries,<br />
to include buried/emplaced, mail-, human-, vehicle-, water-, aviation-borne, or other improvised<br />
explosive devices, against personnel or facilities<br />
Electromagnetic or cyber terrorism Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> electromagnetic weapons<br />
or interference, including jamming, or cyber terrorism, to include denial <strong>of</strong> service, hacking,<br />
and malicious s<strong>of</strong>tware and/or code, as part <strong>of</strong> a terrorist operation .<br />
Agricultural terrorism Terrorism incidents involving the use, threatened use, or potential use <strong>of</strong> conventional force,<br />
chemical, biological, radiological, explosive, or incendiary agents or weapons against U.S.<br />
crops, livestock, or agricultural infrastructure.<br />
Criminal incidents Criminal incidents resulting in an emergency on an installation, such as arson, active shooters,<br />
workplace, school violence, and cyber-crime (this hazard may overlap with other hazard areas).<br />
Civil disturbance Riots, strikes, protests, marches, mass panic/hysteria, vandalism, public unrest, or other event<br />
involving significant numbers <strong>of</strong> civilian personnel and causing or having the potential to cause<br />
disruption <strong>of</strong> services or utilities, denial <strong>of</strong> physical access, and/or media interest.<br />
Appendix G<br />
Installation <strong>Emergency</strong> <strong>Management</strong> Planning Guide<br />
G–1. Installation emergency management plan<br />
a. Planning process. Per NIMS, CPG 101, NRF, AR 525–27, FM 3–11.34, and DODI 6055.17, emergency planning<br />
is the process <strong>of</strong>: (1) establishing the missions, requirements, and operational concepts for all phases <strong>of</strong> EM within a<br />
specific jurisdiction, (2) directing the development <strong>of</strong> identified EM capabilities within the jurisdiction, (3) synchronizing<br />
the actions <strong>of</strong> assigned functional areas with the established operational concept, and (4) determining the jurisdiction’s<br />
actions specific to each identified hazard. Effective planning conveys the goals and objectives <strong>of</strong> the EM<br />
program and the actions required to achieve these goals and objectives. The focus <strong>of</strong> chapter 6 and this appendix is to<br />
ensure that the correct planning process is executed and does not mandate a specific planning format.<br />
b. Developing capabilities. It is important to note that installation EM plans require the development <strong>of</strong> specific<br />
capabilities which may or may not currently exist on the Installation or in the local community. Though these<br />
capabilities are not new requirements due to the <strong>Army</strong> EM <strong>Program</strong>, these capabilities may never have been developed<br />
to support the multitude <strong>of</strong> existing requirements due to the lack <strong>of</strong> a comprehensive, integrated EM program necessary<br />
240 DA PAM 525–27 20 September 2012