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NBC Preparedness
By Richard A. Fleetwood - November
2001
It has happened. Here. On American soil. The ultimate nightmare...one that no one ever wanted so see, except the bad guys. Terrorist attack...thousands of deaths of innocent, unknowing victims, by the hands of a few maniacal, irrational, soulless cretins. Using tools that had until then only been used by writers of fiction in spy and thriller novels, a handful of illegal aliens commandeered civil aircraft and destroyed American landmarks known the world over, and murdered thousands of trapped victims, brave rescue personnel, and untold numbers of dreams and futures.
Warnings had been coming for months to the intelligence community from various sources, saying there would be terrorism on American soil. Some say that the highest levels of our nations leaders knew exactly where and exactly what would happen. Even worse, some in the conspiracy theory genre of the online world say that our own government was behind the events of 09.11.01. Truth? It will be known as time goes on. We will find out who, and we will avenge the lives of the lost. This nation will NOT let this horrible sacrifice of American lives go unpunished.
What is known is that the main suspect of the carnage at Ground Zero is none other than Osama Bin Laden. Because of this, President Bush and a very large contingent of allied nations began assaults on Afghani positions, camps, towns, airfields, and anyplace else the Taliban could use for bases of operations. So far, the Taliban has been driven out of their lairs into the wilderness. Time will tell what further effort is needed to rid the world of these and other terrorist regimes.
Understand it IS personal now, and we can not depend on our miltary and civilian leaders to be able to protect us in EVERY instance of future terrorist activity. Oh, if they could...but how...and who...and when? How could they protect every single citizen in every town, in every county, in every state? Who would protect all of us, and who would be singled out for more than their fair share of protection? When would all those would-be protectors cover us all, ready to sacrifice their lives for ours...in the next wave of threats? 24 hours a day, seven days a week? In shifts? Every other thursday?
It comes down to this. Our government is in a position now of being in over its head in keeping EVERY citizen safe from evil. We, as Americans, MUST take over some of the load, some of the responsibility, and some of the defensive measures, to assure that every person on our soil HAS A CHANCE of staying safe and alive in whatever the next foul waste of human flesh, wanna-be terrorist tries to do to us...as a NATION. This page provides you with some very hard to find information that just might make the difference to you.
How You Can Prepare
Hopefully, this is not your first visit to SurvivalRing and Civil Defense Now. If it is, go now to read the multitude of informative files, government documents, and more to get a good foundational background in the skills and study of PREPAREDNESS. If you are a SurvivalRing Veteran, then this new collection of downloadable files will increase YOUR P.Q. (Preparedness Quotient) by several notches. This collection of Survival information comes from mostly government sources. None of it is secret, none of it is confidential, and ALL of it is circling within emergency management circles in various levels of our government.
First responders are the people who would come running at the very first evidence, or even hint of such, to any NBC scene. They are called first responders because they TRAIN to learn how to respond to any incident, including the worst we can imagine, and exactly what we fear. The info THEY are reading will also be useful to you...if you study it and work at understanding it. NBC preparedness STARTS with learning exactly what the threats are, then learning how to counteract, mitigate, and even negate such attacks if and when they occur. This collective source before you now totals over 1000 pages if all printed out, so start reading and learning...and preparing for what may never come, or what may be drifting downwind on your street tomorrow.
There are also some files of historical interest, high level briefing material such as the Hart-Ruddman report on preparing the nation for (what was at the time) future terrorist acts, the full history of the American Civil Defense Program from 1945 to 1980, and more. Download them all, read them until you understand them, then take AFFIRMATIVE action in your family, your town, your community, your legislature, and your national administration by being vocal about our nations civilian defensive needs, and active in helping make them happen. It is up to each and every one of us to BE the greased cog in the wheel of life that helps make the changes HAPPEN.
File Downloads
SurvivalRing NBC Preparedness
| Filename |
Pages |
Last Changed |
File Size |
| BioTerrorismPreparedness.pdf |
28 |
9/25/2001 12:00:04 AM |
479kb |
INFO: Effective Elements Of Bioterrorism Preparedness: A Planning Primer for Local Public Health Agencies By Micheal R. Fraser Ph.D. and V. Scott Fisher MSP National Association of County and City Health Officials Washington, D.C. January 2001 |
| bioplan.pdf |
32 |
9/25/2001 12:00:04 AM |
193kb |
INFO: Improving Local and State Emegency ResponseTo Terrorist Incidents Involving Biological Weapons By Department of Defense Prepared in response to the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici Domestic
Preparedness Program by the Department of Defense, August 1, 2000 |
| WASHBIO.PDF |
49 |
9/25/2001 12:00:04 AM |
908kb |
INFO: Fire Department Response to
Biological Threat at
B’nai B’rith Headquarters This is Report 114 of the Major Fires Investigation Project conducted by Varley-Campbell
and Associates, Inc./TriData Corporation under contract EMW-94-C-4423 to the United
States Fire Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Washington, DC
April 1997 |
| MedTraining.pdf |
166 |
9/25/2001 12:00:24 AM |
472kb |
INFO: Developing Objectives, Content, and Competencies for the
Training of Emergency Medical Technicians, Emergency
Physicians, and Emergency Nurses to Care for Casualties
Resulting From Nuclear, Biological, or Chemical (NBC) Incidents
FINAL REPORT
April 23, 2001
Washington, DC
April 1997 |
| combatchembiorad.pdf |
96 |
9/25/2001 12:00:24 AM |
318kb |
INFO:
Combating Chemical,
Biological, Radiological and
Nuclear Terrorism:
A Comprehensive Strategy
By Frank J. Cilluffo, Sharon L. Cardash, Gordon N. Lederman
Center for Strategic and International Studies Washington, DC
December 2000
|
| EMER-CHEMICAL.PDF |
11 |
9/25/2001 12:00:24 AM |
65kb |
INFO:
Chemical Emergency
Produced by the
National Disaster
Education Coalition:
American Red Cross,
FEMA, IAEM, IBHS,
NFPA, NWS, USDA/
CSREES, and USGS
|
| FM3-4-1PCD.PDF |
192 |
9/25/2001 12:00:24 AM |
3893kb |
INFO:
COORDINATING
DRAFT
NBC
MULTISERVICE PROCEDURES
FOR NBC DEFENSE OF
FIXED SITES, PORTS, AND
AIRFIELDS
FM 3-4-1
MCWP 3-37.5
Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force
Preliminary |
| BWSUM.PDF |
15 |
9/25/2001 12:00:24 AM |
1027kb |
INFO:
Biological Warfare Improved Biological Warfare Improved
Response Program Response Program
Executive Summary
1998 Summary Report on
BW Response Template and Response Improvements
Prepared through a cooperative
effort among
New York City Mayor’s Office of
Emergency Management
and Departments of Fire, Health,
Environmental Protection and Police
Emergency Responders and
Managers from
Colorado Maryland
Delaware New York State
Florida Texas
Kansas Washington State
New Jersey
Department of Agriculture
Department of Defense
Department of Energy
Department of Health and Human Services
Environmental Protection Agency
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Federal Emergency Management Agency
March 10, 1999 |
| erg2000.pdf |
383 |
6/28/2001 3:59:26 AM |
1751kb |
INFO:
2000 Emergency Response Guidebook (ERG2000)
Developed jointly by Transport
Canada (TC), the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Secretariat of Transport
and Communications of Mexico (SCT)
For use by fire fighters, police, and other emergency
services personnel who may be the first to arrive at the scene of a transportation incident
involving dangerous goods. It is primarily a guide to aid first responders in quickly
identifying the specific or generic hazards of the material(s) involved in the incident,
and protecting themselves and the general public during the initial response phase
of the incident. For the purposes of this guidebook, the “initial response phase” is that period
following arrival at the scene of an incident during which the presence and/or identification of
dangerous goods is confirmed, protective actions and area securement are initiated, and
assistance of qualified personnel is requested. It is not intended to provide information on the
physical or chemical properties of dangerous goods.
This guidebook will assist responders in making initial decisions upon arriving at the scene of a
dangerous goods incident. It should not be considered as a substitute for emergency response
training, knowledge or sound judgment. ERG2000 does not address all possible circumstances
that may be associated with a dangerous goods incident. It is primarily designed for use at a
dangerous goods incident occurring on a highway or railroad. Be mindful that there may be
limited value in its application at fixed facility locations.
Publish date = 2000 |
| cpg1-10.pdf |
21 |
6/28/2001 3:48:02 AM |
214kb |
INFO:
Guide For the Development of a
State and Local Continuity of
Government Capability
Federal Emergency Management Agency
July 27, 1987 |
| slg101.pdf |
279 |
6/28/2001 3:51:34 AM |
617kb |
INFO:
Guide for All-Hazard Emergency Operations
Planning
Federal Emergency Management Agency
One goal of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is to develop, in partnership with
State and local governments, a national emergency management system that is comprehensive, riskbased,
and all-hazard in approach.
Crucial to this system are emergency operations plans (EOP), which describe who will do what, as well
as when, with what resources, and by what authority--before, during, and immediately after an
emergency.
This State and Local Guide (SLG) provides emergency managers and other emergency services
personnel with information on FEMA's concept for developing risk-based, all-hazard emergency
operations plans.
September 1996 |
| ops_rpt1.pdf |
18 |
6/28/2001 3:58:24 AM |
803kb |
INFO:
Operations Report for the
National Terrorism Preparedness Institute
1 June - 30 September 1998 FY98
1 October - 30 September 1999 FY99
National Terrorism Preparedness Institute
St. Petersburg Junior College
1999 |
| FEMA_107.pdf |
32 |
6/28/2001 3:46:54 AM |
399kb |
INFO:
THE
AMERICAN CIVIL DEFENSE 1945 - 1984
EVOLUTION OF PROGRAMS AND POLICIES
By B. Wayne Blanchard, Ph.D.
Planning Specialist for Civil Defense Programs
National Emergency Training Center
Emmitsburg, Maryland
MONOGRAPH SERIES
1985
Volume 2 Number 2
|
| Local EMA Director.pdf |
62 |
6/28/2001 4:13:14 AM |
289kb |
INFO:
GUIDELINES for
LOCAL EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT
DIRECTORS
By State of Maine
Department of Defense, Veterans and Emergency Management
Maine Emergency Management Agency
NOVEMBER 1998 |
| NUKE_HAZ_CHKLST.pdf |
5 |
6/28/2001 4:21:10 AM |
16kb |
INFO:
NUCLEAR EMERGENCY RESPONSE CHECKLIST
By the State of California Emergency Plan
The California Emergency Plan establishes four Readiness Conditions numbered inversely from Condition
Four through Condition One and corresponding to federal categories A-D. These will be used in planning
for or responding to war emergencies. These readiness conditions provide the basis for an orderly
transition from normal peacetime activities to wartime readiness at each level of the State Emergency
Management Organization.
Orders to make the transition from one readiness condition to another will be disseminated by the
Governor or his designated representative using the California Law Enforcement Teletype System
(CLETS) and followed by official release to the news media.
Simultaneous with the announcement of either Condition Two or Condition One, the Governor may
proclaim a State of War Emergency to permit full mobilization of Emergency Management Organizations
and complete transition to wartime emergency status. A State of War Emergency will exist automatically
on receipt of attack warning or an actual attack.
location
publish date |
| jscp2.pdf |
21 |
6/28/2001 4:23:46 AM |
1329kb |
INFO:
Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan (JSCP)
Briefing prepared for
Joint Medical Planners
Working Group
Strategic Planning Sequence
Role of the Contingency Planning Guidance
JSCP Tutorial
What’s new in JSCP 98-1
10 January 01 |
| ORNL-PlanGuid.pdf |
355 |
6/28/2001 4:29:12 AM |
1185kb |
INFO:
Planning Guidance for the Chemical Stockpile Emergency Preparedness Program
FEMA and Dept. Of Army
This planning guide was developed under the direction of the U.S. Army and the Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) which jointly coordinate and direct the
development of the Chemical Stockpile Emergency Preparedness Program (CSEPP). It
was produced to assist state, local, and Army installation planners in formulating and
coordinating plans for chemical events that may occur at the chemical agent stockpile
storage locations in the continental United States.
This document provides broad planning guidance for use by both on-post and off-post
agencies and organizations in the development of a coordinated plan for responding to
chemical events. It contains checklists to assist in assuring that all important aspects are
included in the plans and procedures developed at each Chemical Stockpile Disposal
Program (CSDP) location. The checklists are supplemented by planning guidelines in the
appendices which provide more detailed guidance regarding some issues.
The planning guidance contained in this document will help ensure that adequate
coordination between on-post and off-post planners occurs during the planning process.
This planning guide broadly describes an adequate emergency planning base that assures
that critical planning decisions will be made consistently at every chemical agent
stockpile location.
This planning guide includes material drawn from other documents developed by the
FEMA, the Army, and other federal agencies with emergency preparedness program
responsibilities. Some of this material has been developed specifically to meet the unique
requirements of the CSEPP.
May 17, 1996 |
| cpg1-8_2.pdf |
25 |
6/28/2001 4:35:36 AM |
384kb |
INFO:
Sample Emergency Operations Plan
6-l. General. The sample plan provides illustrative examples of the parts of
an EOP discussed in this CPG--basic plan, functional annexes, and hazard-specific appendixes.
6-2. Limitations of the Sample Plan. The sample is not a complete EOP, but is intended to provide
examples to clearly illustrate the principles of the recommended planning approach and the prescribed
relationships among the plan parts. The basic plan, annexes, and appendixes are incomplete and should
not be expected to stand up to rigorous review techniques that are applicable to real plans and plan
elements. A sample document that could stand up to such testing would require a very lengthy list of
elements, a few examples of which are sufficient to illustrate the appropriate content for the parts of the
plan. This sample should not, therefore, be used as a model plan.
6-3. Sample Plan Table of Contents. While numerous plan elements are mentioned in this CPG, only a
few are illustrated in the following pages. Including all would far exceed the scope of this effort and would
unnecessarily duplicate guidance already in existence, or better reserved for other programs and projects.
The table of contents at the beginning of the sample plan is both functional and illustrative. It provides a
complete outline of the Liberty County EOP, including both the elements for which samples are provided
and those that have been mentioned or are implied to exist but remain as hypothetical as Liberty County
itself.
This inflated table of contents establishes the context for the plan elements provided and, once
again, underscores the importance of those that have been excluded. Page numbers are given for the
sample plan elements that are present. An asterisk (*) entered in the place of the page number indicates
that the plan element is not included in the sample plan. The page numbering system, beginning with the
sample plan table of contents, changes from the standard one for CPG’s to one that is typical for a local
EOP.
FEMA
1990 |
| 2676.pdf |
166 |
6/29/2001 11:35:40 AM |
472kb |
INFO:
Developing Objectives, Content, and Competencies for the
Training of Emergency Medical Technicians, Emergency
Physicians, and Emergency Nurses to Care for Casualties
Resulting From Nuclear, Biological, or Chemical (NBC) Incidents FINAL REPORT
Introduction
Weapons of mass destruction (WMD) are those nuclear, biological, chemical, incendiary, or
conventional explosive agents that pose a potential threat to health, safety, food supply, property or
the environment. The terrorist use of WMD is believed to be a significant threat to our society. For
any observer of current events, the reality of the US terrorist threat is demonstrated by reports of
failed attempts, numerous anthrax hoaxes, , and actual attacks, such as the inoculation of
Salmonella into Oregon salad bars in 1984, the New York Trade Center bombing in 1993, the
release of sarin in Japan in 199410 and again in 1995, the Oklahoma City bombing in 1996, and
the US Embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998.
By U.S Department of Health & Human Services, Office of Emergency Preparedness
American College of Emergency Physicians
American Board of Emergency Medicine
American College of Medical Toxicology
American Hospital Association
American Nurses Association
Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology, Inc.
Emergency Nurses Association
International Association of Fire Chiefs
National Association of Emergency Medical Services Physicians
National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians
National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians
National Association of State Emergency Medical Services Directors
Society for Academic Emergency Medicine
April 23, 2001 |
| finalreport.pdf |
79 |
8/6/2001 4:21:04 PM |
171kb |
INFO:
Human Behavior and WMD Crisis /Risk
Communication Workshop
This report is a comprehensive analysis of the Human Behavior
and WMD Crisis/Risk Communication Workshop, held on December 11-
12, 2000. It describes the results of the workshop, and
includes lessons learned from past experiences, addresses
unresolved issues that were identified by combining the
expertise of the participants, and it presents prioritized
recommendations for future research, analysis, and other
activities. This section of the report includes recommendations
not only from the panel itself, but from a senior advisory board
created specifically for this workshop.
By Co-Sponsored by
Defense Threat Reduction Agency
Federal Bureau of Investigation
U.S. Joint Forces Command
March 2001 |
| sandy-e.pdf |
18 |
8/23/2001 4:21:42 AM |
85kb |
INFO:
List of Type-, Shock- and EMP-tested built-in Parts for Swiss Blast Shelters
By Swiss Federal Office of Civil Protection
Construction division
CH-3003 Berne
All listed build-in parts are complying with the Base protection degree as demanded in the Technical directives concerning
the shock resistance of components installed in constructions of the civil protection (TW Schock 1995)
February 1st, 2001 |
| nssg.pdf |
149 |
9/14/2001 11:07:10 PM |
1621kb |
INFO:
Road Map for National Security:
Imperative for Change
The Phase III Report of
the U.S. Commission on National Security/21st Century
By The United States Commission on National Security/21st Century
American power and influence have been decisive factors for democracy and security throughout the last half-century. However, after more than two years of serious
effort, this Commission has concluded that without significant reforms, American power and
influence cannot be sustained. To be of long-term benefit to us and to others, that power and
influence must be disciplined by strategy, defined as the systematic determination of the proper
relationship of ends to means in support of American principles, interests, and national purpose.
This Commission was established to redefine national security in this age and to do so in
a more comprehensive fashion than any other similar effort since 1947. We have carried out our
duties in an independent and totally bipartisan spirit. This report is a blueprint for reorganizing
the U.S. national security structure in order to focus that structure’s attention on the most
important new and serious problems before the nation, and to produce organizational competence
capable of addressing those problems creatively.
The key to our vision is the need for a culture of coordinated strategic planning to
permeate all U.S. national security institutions. Our challenges are no longer defined for us by a
single prominent threat. Without creative strategic planning in this new environment, we will
default in time of crisis to a reactive posture. Such a posture is inadequate to the challenges and
opportunities before us.
We have concluded that, despite the end of the Cold War threat, America faces distinctly
new dangers, particularly to the homeland and to our scientific and educational base. These
dangers must be addressed forthwith.
We call upon the new President, the new administration, the new Congress, and the
country at large to consider and debate our recommendations in the pragmatic spirit that has
characterized America and its people in each new age.
location
January 31, 2001 |
| INTERNMENT.pdf |
234 |
11/1/2001 10:29:28 PM |
2485kb |
INFO:
Military Police
Internment/Resettlement Operations
*FM 3-19.40 (FM 19.40)
In 1996, the United States (US) Army Military Police (MP) Corps restructured its four combat
support (CS) missions into the following five CS functions. These functions adequately describe
MP capabilities in support of US forces deployed worldwide.
• Maneuver and mobility support.
• Areasecurity.
• Law and order (L&O).
• Internment/resettlement (I/R).
• Police intelligence operations.
Field Manual (FM) 3-19.40 depicts the doctrinal foundation, principles, and processes that MP
will employ when dealing with enemy prisoners of war (EPWs), civilian internees (CIs), US
military prisoner operations, and MP support to civil-military operations (populace and resource
control [PRC], humanitarian assistance [HA], and emergency services [ES]). FM 3-19.40 is not a
standalone manual, and it must be used in combination with other publications.
These
publications are pointed out throughout the manual, and a consolidated list is provided in the
bibliography.
1996 |
| ertss.pdf |
110 |
11/1/2001 11:14:36 PM |
4702kb |
INFO:
EMERGENCY RESPONSE TO
TERRORIISM
SELF--STUDY
By FEMA/USFA/NFA-ERT:SS
The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) was established in 1979.
FEMA's mission is to focus Federal
effort on preparedness for, mitigation of,
response to, and recovery from
emergencies encompassing the full
range of natural and manmade
disasters.
FEMA's National Emergency Training
Center (NETC) in Emmitsburg,
Maryland, includes the United States
Fire Administration (USFA), its National
Fire Academy (NFA), and the Emergency
Management Institute (EMI).
To achieve the USFA's legislated
mandate (under Public Law 93-498,
October 29, 1974), "to advance the
professional development of fire service
personnel and of other persons engaged
in fire prevention and control activities,"
the U.S. Fire Administration has
developed an effective program linkage
with established fire training systems
which exist at the State and local levels.
The field courses of the USFA's National
Fire Academy have been sponsored by
the respective State fire training
systems in every State.
The USFA is proud to join with State
and local fire agencies in providing
educational opportunities to the
members of the nation's fire services.
June 1999 |
| prog.cours 2002.ang.pdf |
11 |
10/17/2001 4:25:28 AM |
172kb |
INFO:
PROGRAMME
OF INTERNATIONAL CIVIL DEFENCE
COURSES
2002
By International Civil Defense Organization
Switzerland
Dec. 2001 |
Courtesy of SurvivalRing..
Send comments to rafleet@gmail.com
Got more information such as the above to share with the world, and need a place to put it for everyone to access it? Email me with details...I'll be glad to add it here for you. Thanks,
Richard
Founder - SurvivalRing
Updated Nov-16-2001 - © 2001 By Richard A.
Fleetwood
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