All-Hazard Incident Management Team. Mobilization Procedures

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All-Hazard Incident Management Team Mobilization Procedures Purpose/Mission/Capability The purpose of the Type 3 All-Hazard Incident Management Team (AHIMT3) is to provide organized teams of highly trained personnel to assist local agencies with incident management. Agencies Having Jurisdiction (AHJ s) retain authority over the incident and work with AHIMT3s to accomplish by the following: Protection of life, property and the environment. Maintain a high standard of Incident Management providing safe and efficient management of complex incidents. Coordination of a multi-jurisdictional response utilizing local and statewide mutual aid. Provide incident management assistance while minimizing cost to a requesting agency. Provide incident management assistance to aid help mitigation efforts and restoration of the incident scene. Ensure that AHJ s maintain compliance with applicable incident management statutory and regulatory requirements (NIMS/SEMS/etc ) Configuration: Participating Agencies/ Local Operating Areas: The AHJ determines the size and composition of the AHIMT3 depending on incident type and complexity. This could be a long team, short team or specific resources for an incident. California State Geographic Deployments: Incident Commander (ICT3) Deputy Incident Commander (ICT3) Safety Officer (SOF3) Information Officer (PIO3) Liaison Officer (LOFR) Operations Section Chief (OSC3) Finance Section Chief (FSC3)

Logistics Section Chief (LSC3) Supply Unit Leader (SPUL) Facilities Unit Leader (FACL) Communications Unit Leader or Incident Communications Technician (COML or COMT) Medical Unit Leader (MEDL) Plans Section Chief (PSC3) Resource Unit Leader (RESL) Situation Unit Leader (SITL) The AHIMT3 composition will vary by assignment and the needs of the requesting agency. When authorized, a AHIMT3 can deploy quickly as a full team, a partial team ("short" team) or as single resources with select personnel necessary to assist a AHJ during an emergency a planned event or other mobilization request. The Type AHIMT3 could embed into an existing AHJ incident management structure or establish and oversee a incident management structure for the AHJ and/or provide transitional incident management support to the AHJ prior to arrival of a Type 1 or Type Incident Management Team. FEMA Deployments-Use the FEMA Team Configuration Guideline: An order for a AHIMT3 (whether through EMAC or through the National Firefighting Mobilization System) will be filled with a minimum of fourteen members that comprise the following positions: Incident Commander (ICT3) Safety Officer (SOF3) Information Officer (PIO3) Assistant PIO (PIO3) Liaison Officer (LOFR) Operations Section Chief (OSC3) Deputy Operations Section Chief (OSC3) Staging Area Manager (STAM) Finance Section Chief (FSC3) Logistics Section Chief Type 3 (LSC3) Communications Unit Leader or Incident Communications Technician (COML/COMT) Plans Section Chief (PSC3) Resource Unit Leader (RESL) Situation Unit Leader (SITL) Note: The fourteen AHIMT3 members, and any other AHIMT3 members subsequently ordered to supplement the original order, will be from an organized, governmentsponsored AHIMT3 and will meet recognized qualifications for the positions they are filling. An order for an AHIMT3 is for the personnel only and does not include any communications or office equipment or supplies (this should be supplied by the AHJ). If the AHIMT3 arrives and determines that they need additional or specialized personnel, equipment or supplies, they can order those through the appropriate process.

NWCG Deployment Configuration (proposed 10/28/2016 not adopted for National use at this time): This alternative provides a basic package with known capability for national mobilization. The fixed roster, which includes 3 trainee positions, does not preclude the AHIMT3 from ordering additional operational, support or trainee positions as single resource items with approval of the Agency Administrator. Incident Commander (ICT3) Operations Section Chief (OSC3) Planning Section Chief (PSC3) Logistics Section Chief (LSC3) Finance/Administration Section Chief (FSC3) Safety Officer (SOF3) Public Information Officer (PIO3) Liaison Officer (LOFR) Division Supervisor (DIVS) Division Supervisor (DIVS) Trainees (3) Teams are scalable based on the need of an incident; Because, the size of the team can be an indicator of complexity thus as incident complexity increases, so likely will the size of the Type 3 AHIMT managing the incident. In general a Type 3 AHIMT should have between 12 and 20 personnel depending on the skills required for the incident type. Qualifications/Selection of Team Members: Training Requirements All AHIMT3 qualified team members will be required to successfully complete the following courses: ICS-100: Introduction to ICS for Operations First Responders. ICS-200: Basic NIMS/ICS for Operational First Responders. ICS-300: Intermediate ICS for Expanding Incidents for Operational First Responders. ICS-400: Advanced ICS for Command and General Staff, Complex Incidents, and MACS

FEMA IS-700: NIMS, An Introduction. FEMA IS-800: National Response Plan, An Introduction or FEMA IS-800b: National Response Framework, An Introduction. O-305 All-Hazard Incident Management Team Training or the NWCG S-420 Command and General Staff Course. Position Specific Training For Fire and Rescue personnel position specific training requirements as outlined in the current version of the California Incident Command Certification System Qualification Guide. Non-fire disciplines personnel whose employing agencies have a credentialing and qualifications standard will adhere to those requirements. If a discipline does not have standards for credentialing or qualifications they will follow FEMA s recommended requirements (In California these FEMA recommendations are required). Experience Requirements All AHIMT3 qualified members will maintain certification and qualification validating they are capable and qualified with currency in the position(s) they are fulfilling on the Type 3 AHIMT. Jurisdiction/Governance: Participating Agency Administrators provide the governance and oversight to the local AHIMT3 Personnel and liability remains the responsibility of the AHIMT3 members sponsoring agency. Each AHIMT3 will create and maintain a Team Manual outlining the following: Mission Administrative Procedures Qualification Training Experience Requirements Activation Procedures Team Structure Incident Reporting and documentation requirements. Prior to being available for initial entry into ROSS, or other mobilization systems, for in State and National deployments a review of each team s personnel training and experience will be conducted by a representative of the CalOES Fire and Rescue Division or their designee. The AHIMT3 employer and/or sponsoring agency will validate and ensure its' personnel meet all applicable AHIMT3 training and qualifications requirements utilizing an incident qualifications system recognized by CalOES and the entry of AHIMT3 personnel into ROSS and/or any other accepted resource mobilization system shall be in accordance with the current ROSS and/or other accepted resource mobilization system's business practice.

California AHIMT3 Status: The CalOES Fire and Rescue Division will maintain an on-call roster of each available AHIMT3 in California. Rotation: Within each OES Region the closest available AHIMT will be assigned. OES will maintain a Geographic Coordination Area rosters of regionally available AHIMT3s within ONCC and OSCC similar to that used for Federal Type 2 IMT s. National Rotations of California AHIMT3s will be managed similar to the Type 1 National rotation system. An AHIMT3s without an assignment goes to the top of the list until they are assigned and then reverts to the bottom until the list is used or other teams are unavailable. Proximity and availability will be the guiding principles for any assignment. CalOES Fire and Rescue, retains the authority to manage AHIMT3 rotation and management as necessary to achieve team experience objectives, ensure proficiency, manage fatigue, or for other reasons when assignments are out of local area. AHIMT3 Mobilization/ordering process: The mobilization for AHIMT s outside of their local operating area and local agreements will use the CalOES Fire and Rescue Division s resource ordering process Duration of Assignments The duration of assignment for a AHIMT3 may vary by incident. Typically a deployment should last no longer than 14 days. After 14 days a AHIMT3 should expect to either return incident management back to the AHJ (in the case of a de-escalating event) or transition incident management to a Type 2 or Type 1 IMT (as in the case of a longer term or escalating event). Lengthening assignments can be an indicator of additional or growing incident complexity. Exceptions to this would be a steady state incident where Incident Action Plans In this type of incident one Incident Action Plan are being completed for multiday operational periods and work assignments do not change such as during the recovery and restoration stages of a large incident.