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NGB Joint Staff Agenda TCIP 2008

NGB Overview NGB J3 NGB J6 NGB J34 Panel Discussion. NGB Joint Staff Agenda TCIP 2008. NGB Relationships – (DoDD 5105.77). “A Joint Activity of the Department of Defense” (3.1). NGB is under Authority, Direction & Control of SecDef

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NGB Joint Staff Agenda TCIP 2008

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  1. NGB Overview NGB J3 NGB J6 NGB J34 Panel Discussion NGB Joint Staff Agenda TCIP 2008 NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  2. NGB Relationships – (DoDD 5105.77) “A Joint Activity of the Department of Defense” (3.1) • NGB is under Authority, Direction & Control of SecDef • SecDef normally exercises AD&C through SecAR and SecAF for T10 matters • CNGB is a principal advisor to SecDef through CJCS on non-federalized (Title 32 and state active duty) forces • CNGB is the principal advisor to SecAR, CSA, SecAF, and CSAF on matters relating to the NG NOTE: Parenthetical references are sections of DoDD 5105.77 SECDEF (3.1.1) (3.1.1) CJCS SecAR CSA SecAF CSAF (3.1.1) (3.1.2) (5.1.4) (5.1.4) (5.1.1) (5.1.1) CNGB Combatant Commands (3.2.2) (3.2.3) (5.1.2) DARNG DANG SECDEF CJCS DoD Components (other than DA/DAF NATIONAL GUARD BUREAU (5.1.3) (5.1.3 & 5.1.4) Authority, Direction, and Control Advisory Communicate NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  3. National Guard Capabilities National Guard Consequence Management CapabilitiesMr. Malcholm ReeseNGB J3 NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  4. Weapons of Mass Destruction –Civil Support Teams (WMD-CST) Commander & Deputy Operations Team Administration & Logistics Team Communications Team Medical Team Survey Teams MISSION:Support civil authorities at a domestic CBRNE incident site by identifying CBRNE agents/substances, assessing current and projected consequences, advising on response measures, and assisting with appropriate requests for state support. (Analytic, advisory, civil-military interface and communications functions) • KEY CHARACTERISTICS: • Certified by Secretary of Defense • Unique to National Guard • Main role is support to Governor and IC • Sophisticated Reachback System • Interoperable with Civil Responders NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  5. NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  6. CBRNE Enhanced Response Force-Package (CERF-P) NG CERF-P Command & Control MEDICAL DECON FATALITY SEARCH AND RECOVERY (FSRT) CASUALTY EXTRACTION MISSION:On order: Responds to chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, or high yield explosive (CBRNE) incident and assists local, state, and federal agencies in conducting consequence management by providing capabilities to conduct patient decontamination, emergency medical services, and casualty search and extraction. (Casualty Search and Extraction/Recovery, Mass Casualty Decontamination, and Emergency Medical Treatment ) • KEY CHARACTERISTICS: • Comprised of NG Modified Table of Equipment units • Unique to National Guard • Specialized Training and Equipment meets National Fire Protection Association and National Institute of Safety and Health/ Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards • ARNORTH validated capabilities • Interoperable with Civil Responders • At least one CERFP per Federal Emergency Management Agency Region NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  7. Population 17 Teams cover 79% of CONUS Population within 250 mile radius for a one team response NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  8. Concept of Operation Response Timeline N+0 N+1.5 N+3< N+6 N+8 < N+ 12 Incident Site CST ADVON Hot Zone CST MAIN Local & State First Responders NG CERFP CERFP ADVON CST Notification Staging Area CST ADVON Departs Or CERFP MAIN CERFPTier II & III ResponseOperationsN+6 to N+72 Hours NG CERFP CST Main Departs Assembly Area NG CERFP MainDeploys to Assembly Area or Staging Area CERFP ADVON Departs CERFP MAIN Departs CSTs & NG CERFP Provide A Phased Capability CERFP Alerted • CSTs detect and identify CBRNE agents/substances, assess the effects and advise the local authorities on Managing the effects of the attack and assist with request for other forces • CERFPs locate and extract victims from a contaminated environment, perform medical triage and treatment, and perform mass patient/casualty decontamination NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  9. National Guard Capabilities National Guard Consequence Management CapabilitiesMr. Malcholm ReeseNGB J3Questions? NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  10. National Guard Bureau J6 Joint CONUS Communications Support Environment (JCCSE) BG Hank McCann Director, NGB J6 NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  11. Overview of the Joint CONUS Communications Support Environment (JCCSE) The Joint Information Exchange Environment (JIEE) The National Guard Bureau (NGB) Joint C4 Coordination Center (JCCC) The Joint Incident Site Communications Capability (JISCC) Agenda NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  12. The vision for JCCSE is to enable the reliable and timely flow of key information to support state and Federal military activities, routine and otherwise, required for HD, CS, and other mission needs. JCCSE - Vision • Must enable a COP • Based on partnerships with Interagency and Combatant Command partners as well as the NG community • Supports employment of the NG in civil support operations (both State and federal) • Supports interoperability through common standards approach NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  13. JCCSE - Vision Joint CONUS Communications Support Environment (JCCSE) JCCSE, is an umbrella concept to enable the reliable and timely flow of key information to support state and Federal military activities for Homeland Defense and Civil Support. It includes the communications systems and programs that provide connectivity, collaboration-situational awareness, and C4 coordination. Currently, the key components of JCCSE are Joint Incident Site Communication Capability (JISCC), Joint Information Exchange Environment (JIEE), and the Joint C4 Coordination Center (JCCC). Key Components • Connectivity: JISCC-NGB J6 completed fielding of 58 communications suites in all 54 states and territories. • Collaboration/Situational Awareness: JIEE- Creates an information sharing environment to support access to event related data and situation reporting, standardized battle staff processes (RFIs/RFAs), and Joint C4 Asset Coordination. • C4 Coordination: JCCC-Organization and facility supports the USNORTHCOM horizontal information exchange of the IT common operating picture (COP). NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  14. Used by the NGB Joint Coordination Center (JoCC) and Joint Force Headquarters – States as the primary Situational Awareness tool Supports improved routine and crisis operations by: Provides access to event-related information to responders at multiple levels Supports standardized requests for information and assistance Supports the building of the NGB COP Supports asset coordination Joint Info Exchange Environment (JIEE) NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  15. The NGB’s “eyes and ears” for National Guard communications related activities Three Operational JCCC Nodes located at JP1, Smyrna, DE and North Smithfield, RI Core Functions: Assist states with coordination for the employment of NG C4 capabilities in support of HD/CS missions Develop and maintain the NG C4 COP Provides interface with USNORTHCOM on communications related activity Also provides expertise to assist states in developing spectrum plans Joint C4 Coordination Center (JCCC) NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  16. JISCC is employed in support of operational NG response forces at the direction of the JTF – State Commander JISCC capabilities Commercial Telephone Commercial Internet Radio interoperability with 1st Responders Satellite reach-back Deployed to 54 states & territories Joint Incident Site Communications Capabilities (JISCC) NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  17. JCCSE capabilities are in all 54 states and territories Continuing to work with USNORTHCOM to mature capabilities through the JCCSE Strategic Advisory Board (JSAB) Continuing to work with both DoD and DHS to improve domestic incident response information sharing Recent Operational Successes: California Wildfires Midwest Floods 2007 & 2008 Hurricane Season Support Summary NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  18. National Guard Bureau J6 Joint CONUS Communications Support Environment (JCCSE) BG Hank McCann Director, NGB J6 Questions ? NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  19. National Guard Bureau J34 Provost Marshal Col Thomas McGinley NGB J34 NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  20. NGB PM-J34 Organization & Functions PROGRAMS • Assessments • DHS Teams • DIB Teams Information Sharing Personal Protective Services National Guard Reaction Forces Non Lethal Capabilities SWB Border Violence NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  21. Canada WASHINGTON Maine Montana Montana North Dakota Minnesota Vermont Oregon Oregon New Hampshire Idaho Idaho Wisconsin South Dakota South Dakota Massachusetts NEW YORK Michigan Wyoming Wyoming Connecticut PENNSYLVANIA Iowa Iowa New Jersey Nebraska Nebraska Ohio Nevada Nevada Indiana Maryland Utah Utah ILLINOIS WEST VIRGINIA COLORADO CALIFORNIA Kansas Kansas Virginia MISSOURI Kentucky North Carolina Tennessee Oklahoma Arizona Arizona Arkansas Arkansas New Mexico South Carolina Atlantic Alabama Georgia Ocean Mississippi TEXAS Louisiana FLORIDA Pacific Mexico Ocean Gulf of Mexico DIB TEAMSDHS TEAMS Colorado OR, WV (2), MI, NV, New York WA, MN, GA, VA, TX West Virginia Critical Infrastructure Protection • CIP Teams are comprised of National Guard Soldiers and Airmen trained to conduct vulnerability assessments of industrial sites and other infrastructure critical to US Government agencies • Provide a comprehensive assessment capability of critical infrastructure / key resources (CI/KR) to help develop a common operating picture and decision making information for various government agencies in prevention, deterrence, mitigation and response. NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  22. National Guard Reaction Force • Each state, territory and district has a NGRF comprised of a battalion-sized (app 500 pax) • Initial company-sized QRF response (app 130 pax) within 8 hours of an incident with the BN (-) (app 370 pax) within 24 hours. • NGRF missions: • - key site security • - security patrols/show of force, - establishing roadblocks - control civil disturbances - secure WMD incident sites. • NGB currently working to develop NGRF standards for training, equipment, deployment and reporting. NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  23. Non-Lethal Capability Sets (NLCS)Riot Control Module • 240 sets distributed to all states • - 36 legacy sets @ Kentucky • 344 instructors trained by United States Marine Corps at Ft. Leonard-Wood NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  24. National Guard Bureau J34 Provost Marshal Col Thomas McGinley NGB J34 Questions? NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

  25. National Guard Bureau Panel Discussion NGB Joint Staff, October 2008

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