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Emergency Preparedness & Evacuation Drill

Emergency Preparedness & Evacuation Drill. Emergency Planning. Tuesday, March 24 Morning: Classroom Instruction Afternoon: Pre-drill Surveys & Drill Planning Wednesday, March 25 Morning: Emergency Evacuation Drill Afternoon: Drill Evaluation & Recommendations. Outline.

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Emergency Preparedness & Evacuation Drill

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  1. Emergency Preparedness & Evacuation Drill

  2. Emergency Planning Tuesday, March 24 Morning: Classroom Instruction Afternoon: Pre-drill Surveys & Drill Planning Wednesday, March 25 Morning: Emergency Evacuation Drill Afternoon: Drill Evaluation & Recommendations

  3. Outline • Common Hazards • Emergency Preparedness Cycle • Emergency Action Plan • Drill Planning • Pre-drill Survey

  4. Emergency Preparedness Cycle Evaluation & Improvements Hazard & Vulnerability Surveys Written Plan & Procedures Implementation

  5. Hazard Inventory • Laboratories and shops • Chemical/waste storage rooms • Maintenance facilities • Outside contractors

  6. Written Plans • Emergency Action Plan (EAP) • Standard Operating Procedures (SOP)

  7. Emergency Action Plan (EAP) • Emergency reporting • Evacuation procedures • Alarm system • Communication & training • Plan reviews

  8. Standard Operating Procedures (SOP) • Fire • Chemical spill • Medical emergency • Natural disaster

  9. Implementation • Written EAP & emergency procedures (SOP) • Emergency Management Team • Emergency communication methods • Emergency notification procedures • Available resources • Outside assistance • Post-emergency needs • Training & communication • Exercises & drills

  10. Emergency Management Team(EMT) EMT Executive Public Information Officer Safety Officer Liaison Officer Operations Logistics Planning Finance

  11. Emergency Communications • How will: • emergency response team be activated? • outside help summoned? • students/personnel be notified? • university handle incoming calls? • university inform parents, public, etc? • university handle media?

  12. Emergency Notification • What will you do when you witness these incidents? • A student collapses in a classroom. • An elevator stuck in mid-floor with five students inside. • A stranger screams at you and threatens violence. • A fire in a trash can. • A fire on lab bench, the fire is spreading fast. • A maintenance worker cut off his finger with a table saw.

  13. Emergency Procedures • Procedures for: • Reporting emergencies • Emergency evacuation • Account for all personnel/students • Personnel with duties during emergencies • Contact information

  14. Communication equipment • Telephones • Hand-held radios • Internet • Mass media

  15. Available Resources • Internal resources • Outside assistance • Types of assistance • Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) • Joint drills

  16. Post-emergency • Assess damages: • Data/records, critical equipment, etc • Communications • Mental health counseling • Evaluate response actions

  17. Training • Plan elements • Notification procedures • Emergency contacts • Evacuation procedures • Shelter-in-place/lockdown

  18. Types of Emergency Exercises • Orientation • Drill • Tabletop (TTE or TTX) • Functional • Full Scale

  19. Emergency Evacuation Drill • Announced VS Surprise • Orderly VS Speedy

  20. Emergency Evacuation Drill

  21. Drill Objectives Occupants will: • Recognize alarm • Take appropriation actions • Immediately begin evacuation using prescribed exit routes • Provide assistance to visitors or persons having difficulty • Take evasive action when prescribed exit route is unsafe • Report to designated assembly area • Return to building when instructed

  22. Organization Roles & Responsibilities Written procedures Evacuation route map Evacuation hours Pre-drill inspections Drill safety Communication & training Logistics during drill Coordination within facility & w/ outside Drill evaluation Planning an Evacuation Drill

  23. Evacuation Management • Command structure • Chairperson • Command staff: team mobilization, outside notification, crowd control, site control, traffic control, search & rescue, etc • Floor coordinators

  24. Honolulu Community College: Evacuation Drill Management Team Vice Chancellor-Administrative Services Health Nurse Safety Officer Maintenance Supervisor Security Supervisor Deans Evacuation Bldg clearance Site control

  25. Escape Procedures • Classroom procedures • Procedures for offices, etc. • Communication of procedures • Locked exits during weekends

  26. High Rise: Disabled Persons • Designated helpers • Establish procedures

  27. Two-assistant Seat Carry • Helpers Stand on each side of wheelchair. • Helpers grasp each other’s upper arm or shoulder. • Person places arms firm around each helper’s neck. • Helpers lean forward, place arms under person’s legs, firmly holed each other’s wrists. • Working together, helpers lift, using legs, and then carefully stepping forward.

  28. One-person Backpack Lift • Helper kneels at front of person. • Person places arms up and over helper’s shoulders & chest. • Helper leans forward before rising slowly to a full standing position.

  29. Accountability • Designated assembly area • Account by name • Report missing persons • Wait for a clear signal

  30. Re-Entry • Determine authority • Establish communication methods

  31. Pre-drill Facility Survey

  32. Building Survey • Number of rooms & usage • Occupants & mobility problems • Evacuation routes • Exits • Alarm systems • Portable fire Extinguishers

  33. Exit Routes: Design & Construction • Fire resistance • Adequate number & width • Clearly visible & marked • Unlocked & unobstructed • Side-hinged, open in direction of travel • Not through high hazard areas • Discharge to outside

  34. Exit Routes: Maintenance • Adequate lighting • “Exit” sign • “Not an Exit” sign • Directional signs • No storage • During renovations

  35. Fire Extinguishers • Policies on evacuation • Total or partial? • Personnel trained?

  36. Fight only a SMALL fire!

  37. RISK ASSESSMENT • Fire too big? • Fight: Fire has not spread, flames not higher than your head • Flee: Fire involve flammable solvents, > 60 ft2, partially hidden • Air safe to breathe? • Fight: Adequate oxygen, small quantities of toxic gases • Flee: Need respiratory protection • Too hot or too smoky? • Fight:Temperature raised slightly, good visibility, PPE not needed • Flee: Too hot within 10-15 ft of fire, need to crawl, poor visibility • Safe evacuation path? • Fight: Clear path behind you as fighting fire • Flee: Fire is not contained; fire, heat, smoke may block path

  38. Fire Extinguisher Basics • Fire tetrahedron • How extinguisher works • Types of extinguishers • Using an extinguisher • Monthly inspections

  39. Fire Tetrahedron

  40. How a Fire Extinguisher Works

  41. Classification of Fires Class A: Wood, paper, cloth, trash, plastics Class B: Flammable liquids Class C: Energized electrical equipment Class D: Metals (potassium, sodium, etc)

  42. Extinguisher Type Type of Fire A, Water Combustibles (Paper, cloth, wood, rubber, plastics) B, CO2 or Flammable liquids Dry Chemical (Oils, gasoline, grease, solvents) C, CO2 or Electrical Equipment Dry Chemical (Wiring, electrical equipment, computer) A,B,C Combustibles, Flammable Liquids, Multi-purpose Electrical Equipment D Metals (Magnesium, sodium)

  43. Using a Fire Extinguisher • Sound the alarm • Identify evacuation path • P.A.S.S • Back away • Evacuate

  44. P A S S Pull the pin Aim low at the base of flames Squeeze the handle Sweep side to side

  45. Maintenance • Monthly inspection • Location • Pin & tamper seal • Pressure gauge • Nameplate • General condition

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