Published:
New Emergency Response Technology at the Republican National Convention
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 8 /PRNewswire/ -- For the first time, a new hi-tech
solution to emergency response planning was used to help secure the Republican
National Convention, held September 2008 at the Xcel Energy Center inSaint
Paul, MN. TheSaint Paul Fire Department set a new standard for the
first-response industry with its use of the Coordinated NIMS Incident Planner,
or CNIP.
Developed bySan Francisco-based Emergency Services Interactive Systems
(ESIS-Systems.com), CNIP assists in the development and management of Incident
Action Plans -- a government requirement for all response agencies, and, some
say, an administrative nightmare. CNIP simplifies the planning process and
allows for centralized management of emergency response procedures. CNIP meets
all Incident Action Plan standards and criteria as mandated by the National
Incidence Management System (NIMS) in Presidential Homeland Security Directive
5.
"With CNIP, we could make changes and update our plans," saysSaint Paul
Fire Captain Brian Kroeger, who used CNIP to manage his department's complex
staffing requirements. A key advantage of the new software is its fully
flexible platform -- a huge advantage in pre-planning or in an actual
emergency, since both are guaranteed to change directions without notice.
Staffing the event meant a significant increase in personnel. While the
SPFD's normal day consists of 115 fire and EMS workers, the Convention, the
largest event ever handled by the city, required as many as 180 full-time fire
and EMS workers to staff 12 operational periods -- a potential scheduling
nightmare.
Kroeger says CNIP's interface, and its ability to drag and drop personnel
on an organization tree, made the constant changes workable. "With that
capability," he says, "I could more easily change reporting and move people
around easily."
The full version of the SPFD's response strategy was 30 pages long, which
would have been too cumbersome to use effectively. So the SPFD input their
plan into CNIP and created one-page plans that were distributed to staff. The
software's ease of use and flexibility simplified the process. "CNIP put the
plan into a useable format," Kroeger says. "The one-page plans were easier to
look at."
Fortunately, the Convention concluded without a major incident. Thousands
of media people, some 12,000 protestors, almost 2,000 delegates and a couple
thousand more Convention attendees added to the 3.2 million population ofthe
Twin Cities metropolitan area. "It's a small area," says Kroeger. "If
something were to happen, it would affect the whole area."
Although the SPFD used CNIP to manage its emergency response plan, CNIP
can also develop Incident Action Plans and connect them to different agencies
-- something that has never before been available. The software's debut at the
2007 All Star Game inSan Francisco was a huge success and gave national
attention to the possibilities offered by the new software. CNIP brought
together agencies that had never before collaborated on a unified Incident
Action Plan, including the Police and Fire Departments, Sheriff, Public
Health, Transportation, Public Works, FBI, Homeland Security, Coast Guard and
the 95th Civil Support Team.
Contact Information:
For more information about CNIP, call Stacy D. Horn at (415) 441-1366 or
e-mail SDHorn@ESIS-Systems.com.
For more information about Emergency Services Interactive Systems, visit
http://www.esis-systems.com or e-mail Dan Linehan at
DLinehan@ESIS-Systems.com.
This release was issued through eReleases(TM). For more information,
visit http://www.ereleases.com.
SOURCE Emergency Services Interactive Systems
Copyright © 2008, PRNewswire
Copyright © 2008, NewsBlaze,
Daily News
Tags: ,HMS,CPR,STW,PSF,CA-Emergency-Services
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