Principles of Emergency Management and Emergency Operations Centers (Eoc), Hardcover/Michael J. Fagel
Emergency operations centers (EOCs) are a key component of coordination efforts during incident planning as well as reaction to natural and human-made events. Managers and their staff coordinate incoming information from the field, and the public, to support pre-planned events and field operations as they occur. This book looks at the function and role of EOCs and their organizations. The highly anticipated second edition of Principles of Emergency Management and Emergency Operations Centers (EOC) provides an updated understanding of the coordination, operation of EOCs at local, regional, state, and federal operations. Contributions from leading experts provide contemporary knowledge and best practice learned through lived experience. The chapters collectively act as a vital training guide, at both a theoretical and practical level, providing detailed guidance on handling each phase and type of emergency. Readers will emerge with a blueprint of how to create effective training and exercise programs, and thereby develop the skills required for successful emergency management. Along with thoroughly updated and expanded chapters from the first edition, this second edition contains new chapters on: The past and future of emergency management, detailing the evolution of emergency management at the federal level, and potential future paths. Communicating with the public and media, including establishing relations with, and navigating, the media, and the benefits this can provide if successfully managed. In-crisis communications. Leadership and decision-making during disaster events. Facilitating and managing interagency collaboration, including analysis of joint communications, and effective resource management and deployment when working with multiple agencies. Developing and deploying key skills of management, communication, mental resilience. Planning for terrorism and responding to complex coordinated terrorist attacks. Developing exercises and after-action reports (AARs) for emergency management. Michael J. Fagel , PhD, CEM has been involved with all phases of public safety and emergency response since the early 1970s. His career has spanned decades in FEMA as well as law enforcement, emergency medical services, fire rescue and emergency management, and Occupational Safety Health Administration (OSHA). Fagel was deployed to the World Trade Center attacks in 2001 for the U.S. Department of Justice for over 100 days. He also was deployed to the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995, while he served as a FEMA (then DHS) reservist for ten years. He helped to stand up the CERIAC Intelligence Center for the National Guard Bureau. He is a university instructor at numerous institutions in the graduate programs in public policy specializing in anti-terrorism, critical infrastructure, and homeland security. He teaches at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Northern Illinois University and Eastern Kentucky University, while also working as field instructor for the National Center for Biomedical Research and Training (NCBRT) at Louisiana State University (LSU) since 2002. He has worked with numerous defense contractors and helped to implement a National Emergency Management Program policy for a US ally in the Middle East. He has also spent 17 years at the Argonne National Laboratory in Homeland Security and Training, and has served as an elected and appointed official in public safety. Fagel is a member of the ASIS School Safety Security Council. His third textbook, Crisis Management and Emergency Planning , was published in 2016 by CRC Press. He serves as a Subject Matter Expert and SME worldwide on crisis response and planning. Rick C. Mathews founded the Mathews Group, LLC, in October 2017, which provides consulting, training, education, and a host of other services--most to agencies, companies, and others within the broad homeland security enterprise. The founding occurred as he transitioned from over 40 years of full-time employment within public service. His career included 30 years as an EMT and paramedic. He served as the EMS director for many of those in both large community and small rural services. He has delivered training and education to EMS, fire service, law enforcement personnel, and others for over 45 years, and continues in this effort today. During his career, Mathews has been called upon to lead the development of training and education for the emergency responder, public safety, counterterrorism, and homeland security communities at local, state, and federal levels. During the early years of his career, he developed and delivered local and state-level training and education programs in Indiana, Oklahoma, and Texas. Immediately after the 9/11 attacks, he was invited to LSU to manage the development and delivery of bioterrorism training