Standards for Civil Preparedness 1 (1978)


Standards for Civil Preparedness 1 (1978) : (1) Organization and Administration of Civil Preparedness (1.a) Statement of Purpose (1.b) Joint-Action vs. Individual Jurisdiction Approach (1.c) Organizing Local Civil Preparedness Action (1.d) Administration of Local Civil Preparedness Program (2) The Local Civil Preparedness Director/Coordinator (2.a) Position and Responsibilities of the Local Director/Coordinator (2.b) Civil Preparedness Staffing for Jurisdictions of Various Sizes (2.c) Selection, Qualifications, and Salary of Local Director/Coordinator (2.d) Professional Training and Growth (3) Tangible Components of Emergency Readiness: Local Government Emergency Plans (3.a) Need for Local Emergency Plans (3.b) Local Planning Process (3.c) Hazard Analysis (4) Organization and Content of Local Government Emergency Plans (5) Nuclear Civil Protection Planning (5.a) Fully-Qualified Emergency Planning Standard (5.b) Minimum-Level Emergency Planning Standard (6) Tangible Components of Emergency Readiness: Facilities and Equipment (6.a) Emergency Operating Center (6.b) Shelter (6.c) Radiological Defense (6.d) Warning System (6.e) Emergency Communications (6.f) Emergency Public Information (6.g) Law Enforcement (6.h) Fire Service (6.i) Rescue (6.j) Emergency Medical (6.k) Public Works Engineering (6.l) Emergency Welfare (6.m) Schools (7) Tangible Components of Emergency Readiness: Trained Personnel (7.a) Training Required for Local Government Personnel (7.b) Training for Personnel Required to Supplement/Extend Government Capabilities (7.c) Training for the Public (8) Intangible Components of Emergency Readiness: Ability to Execute Emergency Plans (8.a) Evaluating Local Ability to Execute Plans (8.b) Fully-Qualified Readiness Standard (8.c) Minimum-Level Readiness Standard (DCPA, Standards for Local Civil Preparedness (CPG-1-5), April 1978, pp. iii-iv)
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