Homeland
Security assists emergency responders with new National Incident
Management System
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New Internet course unveiled
[SEPT. 29, 2004]
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The
Department of Homeland Security's Federal Emergency Management
Agency is offering a new online course that will help first
responders understand the concepts and principles underlying the new
National Incident Management System and to begin incorporating the
system into their own planning and policies. To streamline
coordination at the federal, state and local levels, President Bush
directed the creation of NIMS, a newly developed, standardized
incident management approach to emergency incidents.
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"NIMS establishes standard incident
management processes, protocols and procedures so that all
responders -- including those at the federal, state, tribal and
local level -- can coordinate their responses, share a common focus
and place full emphasis on resolving the event," said Homeland
Security Secretary Tom Ridge. "This new course introduces NIMS in a
way that is easy and accessible to the nation's emergency
responders."
The training experts at Homeland
Security's Emergency Management Institute created the online course,
which takes about three hours to complete. The course can be found
at
http://training.fema.gov/EMIWEB/IS/is700.asp.
The recently announced NIMS Integration
Center is being established to provide strategic direction and
oversight of the system. The center was established by Secretary
Ridge, with Federal Emergency Management Agency as the lead, to
assure the all-hazards approach is an integral part of response
training. The new center will develop and facilitate national
standards for NIMS education and training and refine the system over
time.
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"Emergency management is a departmental
priority, and enhancing the capabilities of first responders and
emergency managers is key in responding to all hazards," said
Michael D. Brown, Homeland Security's under secretary for emergency
preparedness and response. "This new online course is one of many
ways Secretary Ridge and I are working with our partners to put NIMS
into practice for the American people."
NIMS builds
on the long-used and successful Incident Command System and the
proven principles of unified command. Another key feature of NIMS
includes communication and information management so that responders
and managers across all agencies, professions and jurisdictions have
a common operating picture for a more efficient and effective
response.
[News release] |