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G 2300 Intermediate Emergency Operations Center Functions – Rapid City, SD
Wednesday April 17th – Friday April 19th, 2024 8:00 am – 5:00 pm – (Mtn. time)
**You will receive specific class information with the student materials/links via e-mail, approximately 5 days prior to class start.**
G 2300 Intermediate Emergency Operations Center Functions is a three-day course with the goal of assisting individuals and jurisdictions who desire to develop or improve their Emergency Operation Centers (EOC). By the end of the course, students will be able to demonstrate, through activities and a Final Exam, the managerial and operational roles of the modern-day EOC as a NIMS Command and Coordination functional group operating within a Multiagency Coordination System (MACS).
Selection Criteria:
The intended audience(s) are federal, state, tribal, territorial, local level, business and nongovernmental emergency management personnel who may be designated to support an Emergency Operations Center (EOC) within their jurisdiction or organization. The materials were developed with the assumption that audience members may have little or no actual experience as a member of an EOC Staff.
The audience may include students from a variety of agencies, organizations and functional disciplines, including fire service, law enforcement, emergency management, public works departments, as well as public health organizations, medical emergency teams, and hospitals, businesses and non-governmental organizations
National Incident Management System (NIMS) Emergency Operations Center training should be completed by personnel who are regularly assigned to positions within an EOC or by those persons who desire to seek qualification and certification in an EOC position or function.
Course Objectives
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Explain the EOC’s critical link to the other NIMS Command and Coordination Structures.
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Identify EOC staffing solutions by aligning EOC Skillsets to common EOC structures.
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Explain the planning, operational and resourcing functions of the EOC.
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Using a scenario, identify the essential elements of information (EEI) that support EOC decision making and information sharing.
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Using a scenario identify changes in EOC activation level, staffing, resources and information requirements for an expanding incident.
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Identify the role of an EOC during the transition to recovery.
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Explain the location, design, equipment and technology considerations for the EOC.