Building Disaster Resiliency through an Integrated Critical Infrastructure Alerting Program

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Building Disaster Resiliency through an Integrated Critical Infrastructure Alerting Program. Daniel Stevens Manager, Emergency Planning. Background and project overview Demonstration – Vancouver 2010 Lessons learned and next steps Q&A. Integrating Situational Awareness. Three parts: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Building Disaster Resiliency through an Integrated Critical Infrastructure Alerting Program

Building Disaster Resiliency through Building Disaster Resiliency through an Integrated Critical Infrastructure an Integrated Critical Infrastructure Alerting ProgramAlerting Program

Daniel StevensManager, Emergency Planning

• Background and project overview• Demonstration – Vancouver 2010• Lessons learned and next steps• Q&A

Integrating Situational Awareness

Three parts:

• Critical Infrastructure Alert Publishing

• Emergency Information Data Publishing

• Road Impact Data Publishing

Integrating Situational Awareness

Collaborators

• City of Vancouver• EmerGeo Solutions Worldwide Inc.• E-Comm 911• GeoConnections (Federal Government)• GeoBC (Provincial Government)• Translink

Critical Infrastructure

Those physical resources, services, and information technology facilities, networks and assets which, if disrupted or destroyed, would have a serious impact on the operation of an organization, industry sector, community, region or government.

-Public Safety Canada

Problem

Situational awareness

What is happening that may impact the critical infrastructure I manage?

Emergency Response Structure inBritish Columbia

AgencyDispatch

(Police, Fire, Ambulance, etc.)

ICP

PREOCPROVINCIAL REGIONAL COORDINATIONProvincial Regional Emergency Operations Centre(s)

PECCPROVINCIAL CENTRAL COORDINATIONProvincial Emergency Coordination Centre

EOCSITE SUPPORTEmergency Operations Centre(s)

E-Comm & OthersCritical Infrastructure

Operators

Considerations

• Information overload: situational awareness - relevant, unobtrusive, and timely

• Day-to-day benefit• Low or no learning curve• Automatic and manual alerting• Geospatial view (COP)• Security of CI data• Security of incident data• Scalability

Solution

Incidentdata source

Delivery methods/User interfaces

Police CAD

Fire CAD

Ambulance CADE2MV/WS

E-Mail EmerGeoNav. COP

EmerGeoFusionPoint

Alert E-MailAlert E-MailAlert Subscriber

bob.smith@cicorporation.ca

Data is simulated and does not reflect actual locations of infrastructure assets

Info about the CI assetEmergency Contact:

Security – 604-555-2345

bob.smith@cicorporation.ca

ALERT

Use during 2010 Winter Olympic Games

• Office of Emergency Management tested system

• Used to alert of moderate to severe motor vehicle incidents on roads with Olympic Lanes

DEMO

Benefit - Security

• Security of critical infrastructure asset data

• Security of incident data

Benefit - Scalable

• Planned/upcoming incidents• Multiple incident sources• Multiple CI layers

Benefit – relevant information

• Alerts are targeted – not everyone gets the same alerts

Benefit – Low learning curve and day-to-day use

• No need for user to take a course or do anything other than check e-mail

• Actionable information can be included in e-mail

• Day-to-day use, not only for disasters.

Benefits – Geospatial View

• Includes ability to log-in and see what’s going on via Common Operating Picture (COP).

Lessons Learned

• Data mapping between systems

• Avoid black box

• Data agreements just as complex as technical development

• Work closely with developers and data providers to minimize misunderstandings

Conclusion and Next Steps

• Use by OEM Staff and Emergency Social Services

• Fine-tune criteria for issuing alerts

• Roll-out alerting to all COV CI owners

• Pilot alerting with external CI owners

• Add additional incident data sources

• Pilot use for upcoming planned events

• Expand to other alerting methods(e.g. SMS, via CAP-CP capable systems)