WFTND Blog Information
The name of the blog comes from a conversation with my daughter, where she told me that I was always looking to help people be prepared for the inevitable emergencies in life.
I started this blog as a place to assemble all the information that I was getting every day and to share my thoughts and ideas on emergency management.
I had no idea how much of the blog would wind up being what's in the news. While it does not take a lot to add a blog entry, I just did not realize how much of my day was involved with simply keeping up with what's going on. All of the posts, whether what's in the news or comments or just a piece of information, have a purpose; to get us thinking, to get us talking, and to make things better - in other words, to make a difference.
Hopefully this blog will save you some time and energy, or help you in some other way. If you would like to see something, please let me know.
Posting an article does not imply that I agree with the comments in the article. In fact, in many case, I do not agree, but feel that the comments should be part of the discussion. All opinions are welcome. I only ask that you remain considerate and professional of other opinions.
CLICK ON "MY WEB PAGE" ON THE WFTND BLOG PROFILE PAGE FOR MY LINKEDIN PUBLIC PROFILE
Favorite Quotes for the Emergency Manager
- “In preparing for battle I have always found that plans are useless, but planning is indispensable.” Dwight D. Eisenhower
- “Motivation is the art of getting people to do what you want them to do because they want to do it.” Dwight D. Eisenhower
- “Failing to plan is planning to fail”
- “Expect the best, plan for the worst, and prepare to be surprised.” Denis Waitley
- "Station 51, KMG365."
- “One of the true tests of leadership is the ability to recognize a problem before it becomes an emergency.” Arnold H. Glasgow
- “An ostrich with its head in the sand is just as blind to opportunity as to disaster”
- “The powers in charge keep us in a perpetual state of fear keep us in a continuous stampede of patriotic fervor with the cry of grave national emergency. Always there has been some terrible evil to gobble us up if we did not blindly rally behind it by furnishing the exorbitant sums demanded. Yet, in retrospect, these disasters seem never to have happened, seem never to have been quite real.” Douglas MacArthur
- “My ideas have undergone a process of emergence by emergency. When they are needed badly enough, they are accepted.” Buckminster Fuller
- “Bad planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part”
- "If you can keep your head when all about you Are losing theirs and blaming it on you, ..." Rudyard Kipling
- "Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored." Aldous Huxley
Thursday, April 9, 2009
TIME: Wikipedia for Spies: The CIA Discovers Web 2.0
YAHOO/AP: FBI joins effort in hostage standoff with pirates
NAIROBI, Kenya – FBI hostage negotiators joined U.S. Navy efforts Thursday to free an American ship captain held captive on a lifeboat by Somali pirates. A U.S. destroyer and a spy plane kept close watch in the high-seas standoff near the Horn of Africa.
The pirates took Capt. Richard Phillips hostage Wednesday after they hijacked the U.S.-flagged Maersk Alabama, then fled the cargo ship as the vessel's crew overpowered them. It was the first such attack on American sailors in about 200 years.
Kevin Speers, a spokesman for the Maersk ship company, said the pirates have made no demands yet to the company. He said the safe return of the captain is now its top priority.
The USS Bainbridge arrived near the Maersk Alabama and the lifeboat with the pirates, he said.
YAHOO/AFP: British police chief quits over terror blunder
LONDON (AFP) – Britain's top anti-terror police chief has tendered his resignation following a security blunder, London Mayor Boris Johnson said Thursday.
Johnson told BBC radio he had accepted Assistant Metropolitan Police Commissioner Bob Quick's resignation with "great reluctance and sadness," after the blunder triggered premature anti-terror arrests Wednesday.
"I have this morning with great reluctance and sadness... accepted Bob Quick's resignation as head of counter terrorism," he said, adding that Assistant Commissioner John Yates would take over from him.
Quick was photographed Wednesday as he arrived at Prime Minister Gordon Brown's Downing Street office for talks on police reform with a sensitive document clearly visible.
FIRE RESCUE 1: Mo. firefighter sues agencies, colleagues
Schuenke, 44, suffered severe burns March 29, 2006, while searching for the mother of a fellow firefighter in a burning house in Vinita Terrace. Her suit, filed last week in St. Louis County Circuit Court, alleges that firefighters at the scene, and their commander there, made mistake after mistake. The suit also alleged that two fire chiefs had failed to train their fire personnel to properly handle such situations.
The suit also names Grace Industries Inc., the maker of a personal alert safety system (PASS) device that Schuenke wore into the fire. The suit says the device failed to sound, therefore failing to alert rescuers to her predicament and location.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Depiction
Product Highlights:
- When you create a depiction with an internet connection, Depiction automatically downloads free public data about your community.
- Import your information from spreadsheets (CSV format), GIS shape files, elevation data from DEM files, and digital images such as JPG and BMP.
- Avoid the clutter of information layers with Depiction's Revealers: intelligent data windows that let you see what you want to see where you want to see it.
- Make your map elements interact: for example, place a road barrier to reroute an evacuation, or hold back water by making a levee with a water barrier.
- Receive live reports from anyone in the world via email and have them appear immediately in your depiction.
- Depiction works on virtually any Microsoft Windows XP and Windows Vista machine: laptop or desktop.
EXAMINER: Windsor SWAT team nabs man who evaded border units
The Windsor Star says a U.S. border guard fired at the car when it refused an order to stop. Windsor police Staff Sgt. Stefan Kowal tells the Detroit Free Press his department's SWAT team and other officers arrested the man at 4:40 p.m., soon after they learned of the border breach.
YAHOO/AP: Santa Barbara County reverses oil drilling stand
LOS ANGELES, Calif. – Months after making national headlines for supporting offshore oil drilling, the county famous for spawning the modern environmental movement reversed course Tuesday and voted to oppose the drilling.
The Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors, citing a need to preserve its coastline, voted 3-2 for a resolution to oppose oil exploration and extraction in the county.
The resolution, which will be sent to President Barack Obama and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, is largely symbolic because the board lacks authority to allow or prevent drilling. However, drilling critics said the vote was timely because the Department of Interior is scheduled to discuss oil and gas leasing next week.
YAHOO TECH: FCC gets going on national broadband plan
The FCC was ordered to create such a plan as part of the economic stimulus package passed this year.
CNN: NY gunman fired 98 shots in about a minute, police chief says
YAHOO/REUTERS: U.S. electrical grid penetrated by spies: report
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Cyberspies have penetrated the U.S. electrical grid and left behind software programs that could be used to disrupt the system, the Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.
The spies came from China, Russia and other countries, and were believed to be on a mission to navigate the U.S. electrical system and its controls, the newspaper said, citing current and former U.S. national security officials.
YAHOO/AP: Helicopter pilot in sex act denied license
GARDENA, Calif. – A judge says a commercial helicopter pilot videotaped in a sex act while flying over San Diego committed gross negligence and cannot have his license back.
National Transportation Safety Board administrative law Judge William R. Mullins upheld a Federal Aviation Administration order revoking the license of David Martz after a hearing Tuesday.
Martz had no comment after the ruling.
A passenger was videotaping when Martz let an adult film actress perform a sex act on him during the 2005 flight, and an edited version eventually became public.
YAHOO/AP: Death toll in Italy quake reaches 260
L'AQUILA, Italy – Aftershocks from the earthquake that has killed at least 260 people in central Italy sent new fears through the tent camps that shelter thousands of survivors, and Pope Benedict XVI said Wednesday that he would visit the shocked and injured people of the area as soon as possible.
As rescue teams pressed ahead with their searches in the crumbled buildings, some of the almost 28,000 left homeless emerged from tents after spending a second night in chilly mountain temperatures.
"I slept so badly because I kept feeling the aftershocks," said Daniela Nunut at one of the tent camps set up across the city of L'Aquila. The 46-year Romanian-born woman said she and her companion plan to stay in the tent for now. "What can you do? You can't go into the building."
The magnitude-6.3 quake hit L'Aquila and several towns in central Italy early Monday, leveling buildings and reducing entire blocks to piles of rubble and dust.
YAHOO/AP: Binghamton officials defend response to massacre
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. – Even if police officers had immediately entered the immigrant center where a gunman had just shot down 13 people, the victims' injuries were so severe that none would have survived, a county prosecutor said Sunday.
The shooting at the American Civic Association stopped shortly after the first 911 calls came in at 10:30 a.m. Friday, but police didn't enter the building until nearly 45 minutes later.
YAHOO/AP: Fight over urinating dog got police to Pa. ambush
PITTSBURGH – A 911 call that brought two police officers to a home where they were ambushed, and where a third was also later killed during a four-hour siege, was precipitated by a fight between the gunman and his mother over a dog urinating in the house.
The Saturday argument between Margaret and Richard Poplawski escalated to the point that she threatened to kick him out and she called police to do it, according to a 12-page criminal complaint and affidavit filed late Saturday.
Monday, April 6, 2009
WFTND Blog Update
Friday, April 3, 2009
CHICAGOIST: City Building Back-up 911 Center on the Sly
NAMIBIA ECONOMIST: EU emergency experts assess flood-hit areas
The team comprises six experts in various areas of emergency management from Denmark, Sweden, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic and the European Commission.
MOSNEWS.COM: Powerful bomb defused near supermarket in south Russia
WASHINGTON TECHNOLOGY: Watchdog group questions FEMA appointment of contractor
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano named Jason R. McNamara as FEMA’s chief of staff March 4. He previously served as associate vice president and director of emergency management and homeland security at Dewberry LLC since 2005. The planning, engineering and management firm is based in Fairfax, Va.
NJ.COM: Berkeley Heights police chief receives one-time payment of $65,264
BERKELEY HEIGHTS -- A last-minute resolution, introduced and passed while two Township Council members were on vacation, will provide the police chief with a one-time payment of $65,264.
HIGHLANDS TODAY: Arrest Made In Sebring Powder Scare
YAHOO/AP: Calif. nut plant: Kraft found salmonella in 2008
FRESNO, Calif. – A company at the heart of a nationwide pistachio recall said Friday that Kraft Foods Inc. detected salmonella in its pistachios more than six months ago but didn't report the finding until last week.
Lee Cohen, a New York plant production manager for Setton Pistachio of Terra Bella, Inc., said Kraft told them on March 24 that the tainted nuts were found in a mixed snack blend that also contained salmonella-tainted cherries.
Kraft spokeswoman Susan Davison said manufacturer Georgia Nut Co. first found the bacteria in its Kraft Back to Nature Nantucket Blend trail mix in September 2008, but it took more than six months of testing to determine what caused the contamination.
HOMELAND 1: Fargo resisted FEMA recommendation to evacuate
FEMA thought the best course of action was to evacuate and not leave anything to chance. Fargo officials disagreed, saying they knew what it would take to hold back the Red River. The conversation turned heated at times, and Fargo ultimately won.
Now that the Red River is receding and leaving only relatively minor damage, that decision looks smart. The city began returning to normal Wednesday as people went back to work, stores reopened and the river dipped to only slightly above 37 feet.
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: FEMA Proposes Forgiving Some Community Disaster Loans
WPXI: Pipe Bombs Found In Mt. Washington Had Nails Attached
GOOGLE NEWS: Spy agencies believe NKorea has nuke warheads
SEOUL (AFP) — Intelligence agencies have information that North Korea has assembled several nuclear warheads for its medium-range Rodong missiles capable of targeting Japan, an analyst said Tuesday.
Daniel Pinkston, senior analyst with the Brussels-based International Crisis Group, said the agencies believe that probably five to eight warheads have been assembled.
"Intelligence agencies believe the North Koreans have assembled nuclear warheads for Rodong missiles, which are stored at underground facilities near the Rodong missile bases," Pinkston told AFP.
"It might be right, it might be wrong -- but if others believe it is true, it has implications for the psychological aspects of deterrence," he said, describing the assessment as "quite significant."
EMS DAILY NEWS: Local Cities Will Be Without Ambulance Service Next Week
COLLEGE STATION, TX - Beginning Tuesday, unless stop gap solutions materialize, thousands in northeast Leon County will be without ambulance service for the coming weeks, if not months.
The longtime providers of emergency medical service, a company based out of Palestine, can no longer cover the costs after years of service in the Buffalo-Flo-Oakwood area. Their deal — one that was essentially a free service to the area — ends Tuesday.
Now, it will be at least May — when an election item is voted on — until ambulances can answer calls to the thousands of residents and tens of thousands of drivers passing through.
YAHOO/AP: Homeland Security boss says cartels under pressure
LAREDO, Texas – Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano says strategies outlined with Mexican officials this week will put warring drug cartels in a vice.
At a border crossing facility near the Rio Grande River, Napolitano said U.S. and Mexican officials reached agreement on several ways to stop the illegal flow of guns and drugs between the two countries.
Napolitano said beefed up border inspections, drug- and gun-sniffing dogs, more information-sharing and improved surveillance will "operate almost like a vice" on the cartels.
YAHOO/REUTERS: Ex-U.S. sailor jailed for 10 years on terrorism charges
BOSTON (Reuters) – A former U.S. Navy sailor stationed in the Middle East was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison on Friday for spying and providing material support to a terrorist organization.
Hassan Abujihaad, 33, was convicted last year by a federal jury in Connecticut of providing classified information to Azzam Publications in London, knowing that it would be used in a conspiracy to kill U.S. citizens.
TMC NET: Sprint Emergency Response Team Holds Demonstration
HS TODAY: New weather satellite helps predict hurricanes
A new satellite set to launch later this month from Cape Canaveral will help weather forecasters better predict hurricanes and assist in pinpointing distress signals to trigger search-and-rescue operations.
The $499 million GOES-O (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite) will orbit about 22,000 miles above Earth, sending back high-resolution images for the next 10 years.
YAHOO/AP: Intel chief wants new spy satellite program
WASHINGTON – The national intelligence director and defense secretary are asking the Obama administration to approve a new top-secret spy satellite program that could cost more than $10 billion, according to government, military and industry officials.
The program calls for building two sophisticated satellites equal to or better than the huge, high-resolution secret satellites now in orbit. At the same time, the government would also commit to spend enough money on commercial satellite imagery sufficient to pay for the construction and launch of two new commercial satellites.
CNN: Gunman barricaded back door before rampage, police say
YAHOO/AP: At least 12 killed at immigration center in NY
BINGHAMTON, N.Y. – A gunman opened fire on a room where immigrants were taking a citizenship exam in downtown Binghamton on Friday, killing as many as 13 people before committing suicide, officials said.
Gov. David Paterson said at a news conference that 12 or 13 people had been killed. The suspected gunman carried identification with the name of 42-year-old Jiverly Voong of nearby Johnson City, N.Y., a law enforcement official said.
HOMELAND1: Who are those guys?
During the November 2008 terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India, computer scientists at Rice University determined who the perpetrators were even before local Indian authorities could.
Mumbai police had to wait four days to learn from the only surviving attacker that the culprits were a militant Pakistan-based group called Lashkar-e-Tayyiba. The Rice researchers had only to wait on output from a sophisticated new computer program to determine which terrorist group might be responsible for the attacks.
CNN: Alabama mass grave may contain bodies from 1870s epidemic
Friday, March 27, 2009
Emergency Management Around the World: On Common Ground
What I found was both enlightening and encouraging from an overall emergency management profession perspective. I found that, in fact, my American point of view of emergency management was not that far from many other countries. The stories that are found on my blog “Waiting for the Next Disaster” and on other websites and listserves show evidence that this perspective continues to expand and grow. An example is the daily report “Around the World Today” authored by Arthur Rabjohn, CEM, R3 Manager-Europe & Africa at WorleyParsons LLC, as well as International Association of Emergency Managers (IAEM) Europa President and IAEM Chairman of the Board. Reading the report reveals similar problems and challenges from all corners of the globe, from emergency response to program management.
It is especially interesting to note that when countries around the world have taken the initiative to improve their own emergency management capabilities, they move even closer to that perspective. The point of view, as it turns out, is not American, but global. The 9/11 from emergency management as the overall coordination and facilitation body to a primarily security focus was not only evident in the United States, but in many other countries around the world. I believe that the USA is finally in a state of change which will move us back to the viewpoint that “homeland security” is a part of emergency management, not the other way around. I see the same thing happening in many other countries, especially those with major natural disaster considerations. The “all hazards” approach is the way to go.
An example of the emergence of the all-hazards approach is in Indonesia. As reported in the Jakarta Post, the capital city of the province of Bali has created the Denpasar Disaster Management Agency. The Agency “has already tackled six disasters since it was established in December 2008, ranging from contagious diseases to floods and fires.” The article continues “The agency, the only one of its kind in the province, is responsible for all pre-disaster, disaster and post-disaster activities. The agency coordinates during pre-disaster and post-disaster periods while assuming full command of city resources when a disaster strikes.”
An example of the similar global perspective is the United Kingdom. The “Management and Co-ordination of Local Operations” system uses the Bronze/Operational (immediate "hands-on"), Silver/Tactical (ensure that the actions taken by bronze are coordinated), and Gold/Strategic (multi-agency management) levels. While differing in terminology, the basic principles are the same as the US ICS system. The UK Resilience website (http://www.ukresilience.gov.uk/) would be familiar territory to any American emergency manager.
The terminology differences are important to consider. After all, one of the principles of NIMS/ICS is consistent, standard terminology. However, it is enough of a challenge to come up with one standard in the US. While we are moving toward that goal, there are still issues of how NFPA 1600, ISO and EMAP interface, what is public and what is private, certification vs. accreditation, etc. It would be a monumental challenge to try to come up with an international standard.
Yet, that is in fact what many are working on around the globe, and should be at least a target on our radar. Damon P. Coppola, MEM, author of Introduction to International Disaster Management, argues in his paper “The Importance of International Disaster Management Studies in the Field of Emergency Management” that “there are a great number of highly successful emergency management systems found in the many industrialized nations of the world, and a handful in the developing world, that we stand to learn from considerably. Their lessons become our lessons only when we pay attention.” He cites The Netherlands, Japan, Israel, Australia, New Zealand, and India as examples.
We need to continue to strive to improve emergency management programs around the world, and to continue to promote emergency management as a profession. We also need to continue to talk to each other around the world. The more we talk, the more we find how much we have in common, the more we can help each other and the profession, and ultimately, the more we can help the people that we are entrusted to protect.
Arthur Rabjohn, CEM can be reached at arthur.rabjohn@worleyparsons.com
Damon P. Coppola, MEM, can be reached at dcoppola@gwu.edu
The author can be reached at his blog “Waiting For the Next Disaster” at http://waiting-for-the-next-disaster.blogspot.com/ and presenting “Situation Assessment: The Elusive Common Operating Picture” at CPM 2009 West.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
LA TIMES: Report calls for new food safety oversight
The food safety system is "plagued with problems," said Jeffrey Levi, executive director of Trust for America's Health, which released the report in conjunction with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
"We are way overdue for a makeover," said Michelle Larkin, director of the foundation's Public Health Team. "It costs us around $44 billion annually in medical care and lost productivity, so the stakes are really high."
Michigan Center for Public Health Preparedness (MI-CPHP)
The Michigan Center for Public Health Preparedness (MI-CPHP) is part of a national network of centers established to support preparedness efforts of state and local health departments nationwide. MI-CPHP is funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. MI-CPHP training products are competency-based, performance driven, targeted to the public health workforce, and designed to enhance individual and agency competency. Built upon existing national CPHP resources, MI-CPHP products are developed in response to community need and are disseminated to the national network of centers via the Centers for Public Health Preparedness Resource Center.
DOMESTIC PREPAREDNESS: Thales's LibertyTM Multiband Land Mobile Radio Available Under GSA Blanket Purchase Agreement (BPA)
In early 2008, Thales Communications introduced the first multiband, software-defined LMR for government agencies and first responders. The LibertyTM multiband LMR enables Federal, State, Local, and U.S. Department of Defense agencies to communicate across all of the public safety bands 136-174 MHz, 380-520 MHz, 700 MHz, and 800 MHz using a single portable radio. Operating modes include P25-conventional, P25-trunked, and legacy analog. The Liberty radio offers full encryption capabilities, including the Data Encryption Standard and Advanced Encryption Standard with Over-The-Air-Rekeying. Key features include a color-coded display screen, keypad programming, and more than 2,600 channels. The Liberty radio is size, weight, and performance equivalent to existing single-band portable LMRs, and its Mil-Spec metal housing is submersible to 2 meters.
INSIDEBAYAREA.COM: Oakland police shooting: The mourning after
The horror for Oakland police that began Saturday afternoon did not end at daybreak Sunday. If anything, the light of day made the killings of the police officers all the more real as friends and family struggled to cope with their losses.
Five veteran officers were shot by the same suspect in two related events Saturday afternoon. Sgts. Mark Dunakin, 40, of Tracy; Erv Romans, 43, of Danville; and Dan Sakai, 35, of Castro Valley, died at Highland Hospital minutes after they arrived. Motorcycle officer John Hege, 41, of Concord, was pronounced brain-dead at Highland Hospital on Sunday morning, said police spokesman Jeff Thomason. A fifth officer, whose name was withheld by authorities, was grazed in the head and a
bullet entered and exited his shoulder, Thomason said.LA TIMES: White House unveils plan to fight drug cartels at border
The initiative represents the most determined U.S. effort in years to counter the powerful and dangerous cartels and assist Mexican President Felipe Calderon in a battle that has already claimed more than 7,000 lives in Mexico over the last 15 months.
EMS RESPONDER: London EMS Computers Crash on Busy Saturday Night
London ambulances' computer system, which controls all medical 999 calls, crashed during one of its busiest nights of the year so far, the Standard has learned.
The breakdown for almost two hours on Saturday night threw London Ambulance Service's emergency response into chaos, forcing patients to wait more than an hour for medical help.
Politicians have called for an urgent investigation.
EMS RESPONDER: NJ Sheriff's Ambulances Fill Void as Volunteer Squads Shrink
Passaic County's Sheriff's Department is the only one in the state that operates its own ambulance squad. In most other counties, the sheriff's officers do what civilians do in an emergency. They call 911.
"Why would you not?" Monmouth County Undersheriff Ted Freeman said. "Every town has its own first-aid squad. Right now, the volunteer services are doing an outstanding job."
The same can't be said in Passaic County, where, like in most of North Jersey, membership in volunteer squads has declined sharply with the onset of the economic recession.
ACCELERATE: Twitter: How to get started guide for business people
Don't understand what all the Twitter fuss is about? Here’s a look at how and why to get started.
EMS RESPONDER: Ohio Committee Questions Need for Paramedics
A committee charged with finding ways for Columbus to save money has recommended that the city return to a basic emergency medical system.
The last time the Columbus Division of Fire provided only basic-level care was in 1968.
Since then, Columbus has provided advanced life support to anyone who calls 911 for medical attention, whether a patient needs it or not.
EMS RESPONDER: Emergency or Not, Use 911, Minnesota County Says
If you're being chased by a serial killer in Dakota County, be sure to dial 911.
Heart attack? House on fire? You've fallen and you can't get up? Ditto.
But what if the neighbors are making too much noise, you see a suspicious car circling the block or you have a parking complaint? What if a child prankster dials your home and makes rude sounds into the phone, or if a car alarm down the street won't shut up?
In that case ... dial 911.
FIREHOUSE: Biden Says Administration Backs Firefighters
FIREHOUSE: Gaines Tapped for USFA Deputy Director
Gaines takes over the slot vacated last year by Charlie Dickinson.
NEW VERSIONS OF ALOHA AND MARPLOT
- Compatibility with shapefiles, common raster formats, and web-mapping services
- Automatic download of the latest county street maps
- Automatic download of state and national layers
- LandView-like population functions
- Instant weather forecasts and elevation data for locations of interest
- New chemical library, including updated DIPPR data, AEGLs, ERPGs, and TEELs.
- Minor bug fixes
Freedom Dynamo Electric Shaver
FROM THE WEBSITE:
Electric Shavers can really be a pain in the bare-skinned cheek (both figuratively and literally!). Well, we at ThinkGeek have a dream that one day everyone will be able to have a nice shave without the hassle of plugging into walls or the frustrations of dead batteries! You already use enough electricity throughout your day, for goodness' sake! Can't the trimming of one's hair be held as sacred as it once was?!
(goosebumps now in full effect)
The Freedom Dynamo Electric Shaver provides true liberty through its Wind 'N Go lever, avoiding any need to use actual electricity. One minute of winding, and you've got yourself enough power for a full shave! It also comes with three individual heads that properly flex and rotate to provide a close and precise performance. And for any on-the-go users, it comes with a travel case, which includes a mirror, cleaning brush and adapters (as noted below). We'll have to insist that you provide the hair, however. Sorry!
MTSTANDARD.COM: Crash recovery: Cause of downed plane still a puzzle
But acting chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, Mark Rosenker, said it is unclear if the extra passengers had any bearing on the cause of the crash.
ANCHORAGE DAILY NEWS: Redoubt quiets after sending ash north
RadioSTAT Portable Emergency Advisory Radio Station
During public health and safety emergencies, take a RadioSTAT Portable Emergency Advisory Radio Station into critical areas and speak directly to citizens via standard radio receivers.
RadioSTAT can be a lifesaver, allowing the broadcast of critical instructions and information regarding . . .
Disasters/Evacuations. | |
Medical Emergencies (hospital surge, points of distribution field information, quarantine isolation, decontamination). | |
Terrorist/Shooter Incidents. | |
HAZMAT and Traffic Information. | |
Critical Public Safety Instructions. Road Construction/Infrastructure Failures. | |
AMBER Alerts. |
RadioSTAT is built for speed and portability. All electronics are housed in an easy-to-transport, high-impact, weather-resistant case. The quick-erect antenna system folds down for transportability. The entire system may be set up in 10 minutes by one person. For details, see planning steps and specifications, which follow.
RadioSTAT broadcasts may be received on standard vehicle radios over a 3-5 mile range (25-75 square miles). The stations are priced affordably so that multiple units can be deployed simultaneously at different locations during an emergency, if required. Each RadioSTAT station can broadcast a select series of messages from a prerecorded library. Or, as situations change, new messages may be recorded on the spot. Audio software is provided for message creation, editing, processing and archiving on a field laptop or desktop PC. Messages may be staged on flash drives for quick deployment. “Live” programming may be placed on the air immediately with the flip of a switch.
RadioSTAT is a FCC-licensed service. Operate one or more RadioSTAT units within a specified territory such as a city, county or state. The signal is typically announced to the public by FASTrack or other portable signs, positioned at the periphery of the coverage area.
During non-emergency times, it is recommended that RadioSTAT operators establish the broadcast on an ongoing basis at a “home location” using a (optional) fixed antenna. This will help promote the broadcast frequency, enhances its value for citizens and affords additional frequency protection for the service. If the home location ever requires evacuation, RadioSTAT’s portability becomes an instant asset, allowing reestablishment of the signal from the new location quickly.
RadioSTAT’s portability makes it especially useful at large public gatherings. Broadcast key information, such as: schedules, traffic, parking, safety and critical instructions for patrons approaching or exiting.
USA TODAY: FedEx plane crashes in Tokyo; 2 dead
Questions were also being raised about the safety of the MD-11, a wide-body airliner built by McDonnell Douglas and based on the DC-10.
ANCHORAGE DAILY NEWS: Fifth explosion rocks Mount Redoubt volcano
Sunday, March 22, 2009
WDIV: CDC Searches For Passengers On Flight From Germany
PHYSORG.COM: New Madrid fault system may be shutting down
(PhysOrg.com) -- The New Madrid fault system does not behave as earthquake hazard models assume and may be in the process of shutting down, a new study shows.
A team from Purdue and Northwestern universities analyzed the fault motion for eight years using global positioning system measurements and found that it is much less than expected given the 500- to 1,000-year repeat cycle for major earthquakes on that fault. The last large earthquakes in the New Madrid seismic zone were magnitude 7-7.5 events in 1811 and 1812. Estimating an accurate earthquake threat for the area, which includes parts of Illinois, Indiana, Tennessee, Arkansas and Kentucky, is crucial for the communities potentially affected, said Eric Calais, the Purdue researcher who led the study.
MIAMI HERALD: Court papers reveal nuclear feud at Turkey Point
At 1:09 one afternoon last year, 90 metal rods slid into the cores of the two nuclear reactors at Turkey Point, part of an automatic shutdown that had been triggered by a utility worker's blunder moments earlier at a substation miles away. A million customers lost power.
Florida Power & Light executives ordered that the reactors be back online within 12 hours, according to court documents. The plant's top nuclear operator, David Hoffman, said that would be dangerous. When FPL executives disagreed with him, he walked out at 8 p.m., refusing to participate in actions he felt were unsafe.
At 11:49 that night, Feb. 26, 2008, he submitted a heated resignation letter, blasting FPL for constantly putting cost savings ahead of safety and creating a horrible morale problem. ''People are not valued and are treated like equipment and numbers,'' Hoffman wrote.
Hoffman's charge offers a rare insight into safety complaints made by nuclear workers, who are often forbidden by contract from saying anything negative about their bosses. The information came to light because FPL is suing him for the return of a bonus, and he's charging in a countersuit that the utility is improperly trying to silence his complaints about safety.
MLIVE: At-home caregivers prepare for emergency situations
When the power goes out -- as it has three times this year -- the Rudis have to move fast.
"We have a little backup generator, but we can only plug in two things at a time. So we have to decide what we need most," said Tammy Rudi.
General Motors retiree Wayne Nelson, 75, had more on his mind than wet feet during the February melt that flooded his Burton home.
Nelson depends on a portable oxygen machine. His backup generator was out in the garage -- shin-deep under water.
NORTHWEST ARKANSAS TIMES: Ice storm brings to light emergency preparedness for those with disabilities
During the ice storm in January, situations arose due to power outages that were a matter of life or death for some.
These concerned people who depend on oxygen and other equipment.
About 17 of them, including their caregivers, were taken care of at the Washington County Health Department in Fayetteville for five days.
One of the temporary residents was a quadriplegic man who depended on a breathing treatment.
These were just a few of the Washington County residents with disabilities and other health concerns facing the disaster.
NIEM (National Information Exchange Model)
NIEM, the National Information Exchange Model, is a partnership of the U.S. Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security. It is designed to develop, disseminate and support enterprise-wide information exchange standards and processes that can enable jurisdictions to effectively share critical information in emergency situations, as well as support the day-to-day operations of agencies throughout the nation.
NIEM enables information sharing, focusing on information exchanged among organizations as part of their current or intended business practices. The NIEM exchange development methodology results in a common semantic understanding among participating organizations and data formatted in a semantically consistent manner. NIEM will standardize content (actual data exchange standards), provide tools, and managed processes.
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: Next-Generation Law Enforcement Fusion Centers: Crime Analysis in Action
Every time a cop walks the beat, a trooper patrols the highway or a deputy questions a suspect, a key question enters their minds: Is everything as it should be?
In the wake of major terrorism acts, that question has taken on national and global significance. You also hear: Are we safe? From my perspective as a law enforcement professional of 25 years, we are. Here's why:
WCTV: New E.O.C. Building Going Up
Taylor County is constructing a new emergency operations center.
Emergency management officials say it will allow them to coordinate all emergency activities.
YAHOO/BUSINESS WIRE: James Lee Witt Associates Receives Contract to Develop Continuity of Operations and Continuity of Government Plans for the City o
POST-GAZETTE: FEMA to review city fire equipment contract
The Federal Emergency Management Agency will ask the city of Pittsburgh for documents explaining its $977,550 purchase of a firehouse ventilation system from an Ohio company with federal money and without a competitive process, agency officials said today.
The city is buying the system, made by Sweden-based Nederman Inc., from Toledo-area firm Clean Air Systems Inc. Two other vendors have complained that they were not given the opportunity to submit their own proposals, though FEMA -- which is paying $716,760 of the cost under an Assistance to Firefighters Grant -- demands "full and open competition" on all purchases made with its grants.
FEMA regularly reviews grants, and in this case will conduct "a full desk review," said Lisa Lewis, director of the agency's grants management division. "With the concerns [expressed by competing vendors] we'll take a closer look at it" than normal.
WTHR: FEMA makes laptops more secure after theft
Griffith - The Federal Emergency Management Agency is putting new safeguards in place to protect sensitive information stored on laptop computers after one containing personal information for about 50 Indiana flood victims was stolen from an inspector's car.
FEMA is installing more protection software on all of its laptops and now uses additional encryption and data-tracking software in all portable data storage devices, the Post-Tribune of Merrillville reported Sunday.
PORTLAND NEWS: Multnomah County gets new emergency management director
Multnomah County Chairman Ted Wheeler has named interim director David Houghton to head the county's Office of Emergency Management.
The announcement comes weeks after a scathing report by the District Attorney's Office that accused the agency charged with coordinating disaster response with "flagrant mismanagement and a systematic failure of basic record keeping" that created an environment "ripe for abuse."TIMES-PICAYUNE: Obama undecided on whether to make FEMA separate department
WGNO: Rainwater Encouraged By New FEMA Tone
TIMES PICAYUNE: N.O. FEMA office gets 'Decision Team'
MISSOURI NEWS: Homeland Security Secretary advocates "all hazards" approach
United States Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has instituted an "all hazards" approach to public safety since joining the Obama Administration.
Homeland Security grew from the ashes of September 11, 2001 in response to the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington. Yet, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano won't single out terrorism as the biggest threat to the security of the nation.
"There are always a number of threats to our security," Napolitano said during a news conference at the State Emergency Management Agency in Jefferson City. "They can be international, they can be terrorist, they can be domestic and domestically raised. So, it's hard to say what is the single largest."
SAIPAN TRIBUNE: Work on $2.8M emergency center project delayed
Once completed, the project will provide a state-of-the-art command and control center to better equip the CNMI to address both man-made and natural disasters.
POST-GAZETTE: Volunteer presents extensive credentials for emergency management position
When Dr. Tom Stein volunteered to be Franklin Park's emergency management coordinator, it was pretty clear he was the right guy for the job.
In addition to being an emergency room doctor and assistant professor of emergency medicine at Allegheny General Hospital, he is a colonel in the Army Reserves, has decades of military disaster and emergency training, is on the board of directors for the Red Cross of Western Pennsylvania and is a member of Allegheny County Council's Emergency Medical Services executive committee.
YAHOO NEWS: 5,000 evacuated after hazardous acid spill in Pa.
WIND GAP, Pa. – Evacuation orders for about 5,000 people in northeastern Pennsylvania remain in effect even as authorities say the leak of a hazardous chemical has been contained.
Authorities say a tanker truck carrying more than 16 tons of hydrofluoric acid overturned early Saturday near Wind Gap, about 60 miles north of Philadelphia.
The Kidney Community Emergency Response (KCER) Coalition
An emergency or disaster is an event that can result in significant harm to lives and/ or property, as well as disruption in daily activities. Emergency management officials create response mechanisms and guidelines to manage such events.
But for the kidney community, emergencies and disasters can be the difference between life and death. Dialysis and kidney transplant patients must take special preparedness measures to ensure their own health and safety during and after disasters.
The Kidney Community Emergency Response (KCER) Coalition provides technical assistance to ESRD Networks, CMS organizations, and other groups to ensure timely and efficient emergency preparedness, response, and recovery for the kidney community.
Please browse the information about the Coalition, membership, Response Teams, and resources for patients, providers, and ESRD Networks.
Feel free to contact us with any questions.
BIG MEDICINE: Marking the one year anniversary of the sinking of the Alaska Ranger
FREE PRESS: Carbon monoxide detectors made Michigan law
MUNICIPAL SOLUTIONS: Is your Security Consultant an Expert?
HOMELAND1: Seven phrases you should never say on television
JEMS: Why the U.S. should consider equipping medics with ketamine
WASHINGTON TECHNOLOGY: Auditors declare FEMA acquisition files a disaster
Contracting documents at the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s headquarters office are such a mess that the agency was unable to find two-thirds of the files requested during a recent audit.
Contracting officers at FEMA’s Washington office could not locate 16 of the 24 files the accounting firm Urbach Kahn and Werlin requested, according to the audit released March 13 by the Homeland Security Department’s inspector general.
And the files FEMA did find were not in good shape, the auditors said.
YAHOO/AFP: Medvedev orders large-scale Russian rearmament
MOSCOW (AFP) – President Dmitry Medvedev on Tuesday announced a "large-scale" rearmament and renewal of Russia's nuclear arsenal, accusing NATO of pushing ahead with expansion near Russian borders.
Meeting defence chiefs in Moscow, Medvedev said he was determined to implement reforms to streamline Russia's bloated military and stressed Moscow continued to face several security threats needing robust defense capacity.
"From 2011, a large-scale rearmament of the army and navy will begin," Medvedev said.
FREE PRESS: Sri Lankan national charged with threatening flight crew
REUTERS: London police launch counter-terrorism PR campaign
LONDON (Reuters) - London police launched a new counter-terrorism publicity campaign on Monday, calling on residents of the capital to keep their ears and eyes open for anything suspicious and to report it.
The campaign is not linked to any specific threat, police said, but rather a reminder that attacks have happened in the past and could easily happen again. The slogan is: "Don't rely on others. If you suspect it, report it."
"Terrorists can be stopped in their tracks if suspicious activity is passed to the police," Deputy Assistant Commissioner John McDowall, the head of the Metropolitan Police counter-terrorism command, said in a statement.
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: First Responders See New Risk in Suicide by Chemicals
Two recent cases of suicide by hazardous chemicals prompted author August Vernon and Red Hat Publishing to develop a set of guidelines for first responders to consider when approaching a scene that could involve suicide and hazardous materials.
The two cases involved men in their 20s who sealed themselves inside a vehicle with tape to prevent the gas from escaping. The household chemicals mixed together produce a flammable, noxious gas and cause victims to go unconscious and eventually suffer heart failure.
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: Main Federal Disaster Relief Law Has Fallen Behind Modern Threat Levels
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: New Method for Detecting Explosives
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: Smart Grid Security Requirements Released
AUTONEWSCAST: Porsche Delivers Cayenne Emergency Medical Vehicles to Stuttgart’s Fire Service
ICMA: Disaster Recovery: A Local Government Responsibility
Disasters happen. A massive flood inundates a central downtown. A tornado levels a small town in a matter of minutes. A hurricane ravages a community.
And, all disasters are local. They happen in cities and towns and counties of all sizes where citizens look to their local government managers and elected officials to lead the immediate response, guide the longer-term recovery, and reassure them that life will be normal again . . . someday.
Regardless of community size or the nature of the disaster, local government leaders are responsible for overseeing all four phases of emergency management—preparedness, response, recovery, and mitigation (see Figure 1). Federal and state governments play a supporting role in the immediate aftermath and in providing funding and guidance for long-term recovery and mitigation.
Preparation and response—half of the emergency management cycle—generally get the most attention, particularly in high-risk areas. Preparing to respond usually involves significant training and practice to ensure that key local employees and supporting resources are ready to jump into action quickly and that local residents understand their roles and responsibilities in preparing for and responding to disasters.
Local government leaders—particularly those who have been through a major community disaster—recognize that preparing for long-term disaster recovery demands as much attention as preparing for short-term response. After a major disaster, the recovery process takes months and even years to bring a community back to a "new normal" and as strong as or better than before the disaster.
FEDERAL COMPUTER WEEK: DHS sees upgrade for Common Operating Picture
The Homeland Security Department wants to upgrade its Common Operating Picture (COP), the situational awareness tool used at the department’s National Operations Center (NOC), and make it more accessible to state and local authorities, a senior department official has said.
DHS’ activated the COP in May 2006 and currently uses it as a situational awareness tool for strategic, operational and tactical purposes at the NOC. The department now plans to spend millions to upgrade it, refresh technology and eventually to build a new version of the COP that would allow for improved visualization and increased users.
Harry McDavid, chief information officer of DHS’ Office of Operations, Coordination and Planning, said in a recent interview that when DHS originally developed the COP, the urgency brought by the 2001 terrorist attacks and Hurricane Katrina didn’t allow for much advanced planning and officials made use of existing technology. However, McDavid said officials overseeing COP have since planned how to develop its capabilities and have worked with other DHS agencies on topics such as geospatial information, Service Oriented Architecture and federated search engines.
CHICAGO OEMC: Mayor Daley Announces Major Upgrade To Chicago's 911 System
Mayor Richard M. Daley today announced the completion of major upgrades to Chicago's Computer Aided Dispatch (CAD) system at a press conference at the Office of Emergency Management and Communications (OEMC), 1411 W. Madison St.
The CAD system coordinates the City's delivery of police, fire and Emergency Medical Service resources to 911 calls
"On an average day, Chicago's 911 Center answers 15,000 calls for emergency service. Our call takers and dispatchers answer those calls with calm professionalism. Their job is a critical one," said Mayor Daley
"That is why it is so important that we provide 911 with the best tools availble to assist the residents who are calling in need," he said.
The upgrade was paid for by a $6 million grant from the United States Department of Homeland Security and includes a new UNIX operating system, an upgraded Oracle database, new HP servers and Storage Area Network cabinets.
One of the most groundbreaking elements of this upgrade is the integration of the Operation Virtual Shield (OVS) camera network into each CAD workstation.
FEDERAL COMPUTER WEEK: DHS forms new research centers
TIME: Fusion Centers: Giving Cops Too Much Information?
LA TIMES: Little-known U.S. agency hunts down radioactive castoffs
But in the wrong hands, federal officials say, the highly radioactive isotope could pose a serious threat to public safety and conceivably provide terrorists with material for a dirty bomb.
HS TODAY: FEMA Would Succeed In or Out of DHS, Deputy Says
TENNESSEAN: Metro, Belmont look to team up on emergency information center
NEWS-LEADER: Ex-trooper to head Missouri emergency agency
Paul Parmenter, 61, was with Troop C for 11 years before his retirement in 2002 after serving in the patrol 29 years.
BIG MEDICINE: Main federal disaster relief law has fallen behind modern threat levels
In new research published in the Journal of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, New York University Professor Mitchell Moss explains that the cornerstone Federal disaster relief legislation, the Robert T. Stafford Act, is dangerously out of date, and must be reformed to provide for rapid relief after a catastrophe.
Two years after Hurricane Katrina, and six years after the September 11 attacks, the Federal government still lacks the legal authority to provide rapid financial assistance to residents, small businesses and municipal governments following a major disaster, according to the Journal article (Vol. 6 : Issue 1, Article 13, January 2009).
Sunday, March 15, 2009
NY TIMES: Fears of a ‘Real I.R.A.’ Bomb Plot
Updated | 2:29 p.m. Henry McDonald of The Guardian reported on Thursday that police in both Ireland and Northern Ireland have been searching all week for a large bomb, “after receiving intelligence reports that the Real I.R.A. has smuggled a large device into Northern Ireland from the south.”
Hours later, Ulster Television reported that a “bomb alert” near a British army base in Northern Ireland had ended when a controlled explosion was “carried out on a hoax bomb near Ballykinler Army base in Co Down.” As Irish Times explained the area is of particular concern because: “It is understood a 300-lb. bomb left near a primary school in Castlewellan last month was destined for Ballykinler.”YAHOO/AP: FBI cited for poor freedom of information work
WASHINGTON – The FBI tells two out of every three Freedom of Information Act requesters that it can't find the records they asked for — a failure rate five times higher than other major federal agencies, a private study has found.
The FBI's performance results from an outdated and deliberately limited search process, according to the National Security Archive, a private group that publishes declassified government documents and files many FOIA requests.
CNN: Taliban threaten to kill aid workers as spies
CNN: Cheney says Obama's policies 'raise the risk' of U.S. terror attack
BBC NEWS: Australia oil coast 'half clear'
PC WORLD: LG Rumor Updated Today
YAHOO TECH: Stolen-data trove offers look inside a botnet (AP)
SAN FRANCISCO - Getting hacked is like having your computer turn traitor on you, spying on everything you do and shipping your secrets to identity thieves.
Victims don't see where their stolen data end up. But sometimes security researchers do, stumbling across stolen-data troves that offer a glimpse of what identity theft looks like from criminals' perspective.
Researchers from U.K.-based security firm Prevx found one such trove, a Web site used as a stash house for data from 160,000 infected computers before it was shut down this month.
The find offers a case study on just how much data criminals are stealing every day, from the utterly inconsequential to the alarmingly private.
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: First Responder IPT to be Heavy in Practitioners
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: 3-D Personnel Locator 'Bakeoff' Planned for April and May
The Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate (DHS S&T) is planning a sort of a "Consumer Reports type bake-off" for April and May of this year in order to ascertain the current capabilities 3-D personnel locators.
The directorate is interested in seeing how systems currently available perform under the conditions where most of the fatalities occur and then in some more complicated environments.
"3-D location is the holy grail of the first responder community," Jose Vasquez, director of first responder technologies for the Department of Homeland Security Science and Technology directorate said. While it would be great to know exactly where every firefighter was during a fire at all times, this is another one of those applications where it is apparent that perfect is the enemy of pretty good, he said.
GT EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: Terrorist Screening Center Recognized for Information Sharing Efforts
Yesterday, on the first day of its annual conference, the National Fusion Center Coordination Group recognized the Terrorist Screening Center (TSC), with an award for TSC's information sharing and outreach initiatives to bridge the counterterrorism efforts of federal agencies and state and local law enforcement.
TSC is a component of the FBI which maintains the U.S. government's consolidated terrorist watchlist.
USA TODAY: Official: Australian oil spill worse than thought
Authorities declared a disaster zone along 37 miles of some of Australia's most popular beaches in Queensland state after they were covered in a blanket of heavy fuel oil that spilled from a ship hit by rough seas on Wednesday.
Queensland state Deputy Premier Paul Lucas told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio Saturday that officials originally thought between 5,300 and 7,900 gallons of oil had leaked from the ship. Lucas said it is "now apparent" that the amount of oil spilled was around 60,700 gallons . He did not explain how he arrived at that estimate or offer any further details.
BBC NEWS: Obama warns of US food 'hazard'
President Barack Obama has said the US food safety system is a "public health hazard" and in need of an overhaul.
He sounded the warning during his weekly radio and video address, as he appointed a new head of the federal Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
New York Health Commissioner Margaret Hamburg has been named for the post.
APP.COM: Monmouth Democrats shuffle top jobs; GOP lambasts move
But Democrat John D'Amico Jr. said Republicans had expressed no concerns about the political spoils system for several decades when they had control of the county government.
"I'm somewhat amused by these passionate objections," D'Amico said at a Hall of Records meeting room packed with about 300 people Thursday night. "In 1985, when the Republicans took control, every single division head got a pink slip on Christmas Eve and they were told they were finished by the end of the year."
The chief financial officer, Mark E. Acker, a 25-year employee who earns a $176,000 salary, and two other department heads who had served under the former Republican administration were ousted.
Other changes were internal promotions, except for the appointment of Glenn Mason to emergency management coordinator. Mason was Freeholder Amy A. Mallet's running mate on the Democratic ticket last November. Mallet's victory gave the Democrats the board majority for the first time since 1985.Saturday, March 14, 2009
BIO-MEDICINE: AHRQ Issues Recommendations for Safeguarding Children During Public Health Emergencies
SECURITY MANAGEMENT: Fusion Centers Under Fire in Texas and New Mexico
Civil libertarians are pushing for legal limits on personal data law enforcement organizations can collect after a Texas fusion center's bulletin singled out Muslim and antiwar groups for direct scrutiny.
In late February, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) criticized a leaked intelligence bulletin from the North Central Texas Fusion System asking law enforcement officers to report on the activities of Islamic and anti-war lobbying groups, specifically the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the International Action Center (IAC). CAIR is a national Muslim advocacy group, while IAC is an American activist organization that opposes all U.S. military intervention overseas.
USA TODAY: NFL exempt from terrorism lawsuits
The law, called the SAFETY Act (Support Anti-terrorism by Fostering Effective Technologies), aims to help security providers by guaranteeing they will not pay any claims that terror victims might file after an attack.
FEMA: Underground Power Lines Spare Bardstown Big Repair Bills
FRANKFORT, Ky. -- It's the trees. Nestled in north-central Kentucky, the densely wooded Camelot subdivision of Bardstown, Ky., often found trees or broken limbs falling on its overhead power lines during storms, leaving the subdivision in the dark. The City of Bardstown was repeatedly forced to dispatch utility crews, each time at great expense. In a single year of bad weather, the city might pay a minimum of $15,000 just to keep the overhead wires repaired.
For city Risk Manager Michael Forsee, the obvious solution was to bury the power lines, but the $100,000 cost was prohibitive. He applied for a Hazard Mitigation Grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) when he learned that the grants provide funds for local communities to strengthen their infrastructure against natural disasters. The Camelot subdivision fit the criteria.
DAILY WORLD: New chief should rebuild FEMA
GOVERNMENT TECHNOLOGY: Emergency Responders Need Equipment Compatibility, DHS Official Says
FEDERAL COMPUTER WEEK: DHS plans enhanced interoperability standard
The Homeland Security Department expects to complete an enhanced version of its Bridging Systems Interface technical standard in the this summer to better enable interoperability among emergency response agencies, a senior official said at the GovSec conference today.
The enhanced standard will allow for better connections between systems that link disparate radio systems, said Luke Berndt, chief technical officer for DHS' Office of Interoperability and Compatibility. It also will provide for better linkages with different types of first responder radio systems.
YAHOO/WWJ RADIO: Seagull Crashes Through Chopper 950 Window
Southfield (WWJ) -- An unwelcome passenger aboard Chopper 950 Thursday morning. WWJ Newsradio 950 Traffic Reporter Bill Szumanski was in the helicopter when a seagull crashed through a window and landed between his feet.
The pilot of the chopper, Joel Alexander, throttled down to a safer speed.
"Because of the wind that is rushing in through the open window, you really don't want maintain the hundred, 115 miles per hour we would normally be at," Szumanski said shortly after the helicopter landed.
Listen to what Szumanski told WWJ's Roberta Jasina and Joe Donovan: AUDIO
The bubble of the chopper is made of plexiglass.
Everyone in the chopper is okay, except for the seagull who unfortunately was killed. The aircraft will be out of commission for a few days while repairs are made.