same hq august 6, 2010 1 bill anderson, [email protected]

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  • Slide 1
  • SAME HQ August 6, 2010 1 Bill Anderson, [email protected]
  • Slide 2
  • 2 Introduction to The Infrastructure Security Partnership (TISP) Answering the question Is Resilient Infrastructure the same as Critical Infrastructure Protection? Doctrine is the backbone for all levels of resilience Role of Public Private Partnerships within the homeland security enterprise Case Studies TISP 2012 - 2013 Program Plan
  • Slide 3
  • Established in 2001 by 11 professional and technical organizations and federal agencies as a public private partnership. Leads public and private sector collaboration that advances the practice and policies of infrastructure security and resiliency to sustain the nations resources. Collectively, TISP represents nearly two million individuals with organizations that are involved in the planning, design, construction, and operation of infrastructure. Primary objective is to create a collaborative and coordinated environment to enable a more secure and resilient regions and infrastructure. Our mission is to lead public and private sector collaboration that advances the practice and policy of infrastructure security and resiliency. Improving Resilience of the Nations Infrastructure 3
  • Slide 4
  • Society of American Military Engineers is the current Secretariat SAME Strategic Plan States: Goal 1: Emergency Preparedness and Contingency Operations: Support joint engineer operations, emergency preparedness, response and recovery in the continental United States and abroad in support of the National Security Strategy and the National Response Framework. Objectives 1.1 Educate SAME members on the importance of infrastructure resilience to our nation. 1.2 Foster dialogue and relationship building between the private sector and government entities responsible for emergency preparedness and infrastructure resilience in order to increase the effectiveness of private sector resources in meeting national requirements. 1.3 Enhance the strategic partnership between SAME and The Infrastructure Security Partnership (TISP) in support of the SAME and TISP goals and objectives. 1.4 Facilitate education among the military services and industry on joint engineer doctrine and service capabilities in support of all phases of combat and stability operations. 1.5 Facilitate dialogue among the uniformed services and industry on issues related to effective joint engineer operations in the theater of operations, with emphasis on engineering, construction and facility management requirements. 4
  • Slide 5
  • Secretariat functions include: o Staffing and performance measurement o Event development and marketing support o Budget and Revenue Management o Administrator of Membership Functions American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) served as the secretariat between 2001-2008 Secretariat functions transferred to (Society of American Military Engineers (SAME) in October 2008 5
  • Slide 6
  • 6 SAME Dr. Robert Wolff, Executive Director TISP Bill Anderson, TISP Director & COO TISP Board of Directors Executive Council (TISP BOD Officers, Past Chairs, Committee Chairs) CIRCECACCAREPCSLHSEMACMACCNPC
  • Slide 7
  • Join or Re-Join TISP. o Categories include Individual, Small and Large Corp., National, State, and Local Agencies, Not-for-profits, Chapters o Lots of Benefits o www.tisp.org www.tisp.org Sponsor TISP. TISP is more than a networking professional coalition. Coalitions like TISP are designed to bridge organizations with common goals/missions to coordinate policy and programs. This is includes public sector entities which are NOT allowed to sponsor an organization. o Sponsor Events o Keystone and Foundation Sponsors: $10,000 - $5,000 7
  • Slide 8
  • National Infrastructure Protection Plan. Risk Management. o Protection and Prevention o Mitigation o Response o Recovery Resilience is like an engineering architecture for Risk Management 8
  • Slide 9
  • 9 I don't know what the hell this "logistics" is , but I want some of it. Admiral E. J. King To borrow from Admiral King, I don't know what the hell this resilience" is , but I want some of it.
  • Slide 10
  • 10 RESILIENCE: a capacity to absorb or mitigate the impact of hazard events while maintaining and restoring critical services. www.tisp.org Resilience Economic Stability and Growth Social and Community Preservation Environmental Protection and Sustainability
  • Slide 11
  • 11 There are OVER 35,000 items on CI in HSDL
  • Slide 12
  • 12 Assets will be Compromised some things are inevitable
  • Slide 13
  • 13 DoctrineTrainingTrust
  • Slide 14
  • 14 Policy Protection Detection Recovery Planning Training Deterrence Response Restoration Doctrine is the lightning rod for developing any capability
  • Slide 15
  • 15 We emphasize: Resilience over protection Impact over likelihood All-round defense Defense in depth Continual risk assessment Centralized control (governance), decentralized execution (safeguards) We think (and analyze): outside the wire We understand: All CIs are networks CIP/R follows the physical or virtual pipe Collaboration and information sharing are essential Most threats & vulnerabilities are non-technical, so safeguards should also be non-technical, supported by technical safeguards (80/20 rule) Doctrine articulates fundamental principles, which distinguishes it from contextual policies, standards and procedures
  • Slide 16
  • 16 Strategic Operational Tactical
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  • 18 Tactical Resilience must be addressed throughout Strategic
  • Slide 19
  • 19 NaturalAccidental Internal External Deliberate Internal External Deterioration
  • Slide 20
  • 20 NationalRegionalCommunityIndividual
  • Slide 21
  • 21 TERRORISM ACCIDENT EARTH EFFECT DETERIORATION STRATEGIC OPERATIONAL TACTICAL INDIVIDUAL COMMUNITY REGIONAL NATIONAL
  • Slide 22
  • 22 TERRORISM ACCIDENT EARTH EFFECT DETERIORATION STRATEGIC OPERATIONAL TACTICAL INDIVIDUAL COMMUNITY REGIONAL NATIONAL N I P P
  • Slide 23
  • 23 TERRORISM ACCIDENT EARTH EFFECT DETERIORATION STRATEGIC OPERATIONAL TACTICAL INDIVIDUAL COMMUNITY REGIONAL NATIONAL RDRG
  • Slide 24
  • 24 Self-Organizing Framing the tasks by: describing the axes understanding the intersections Chop it up, isolate it, and address it
  • Slide 25
  • 25 Focus and Collaboration Moving the effort forward by: o Specialization on levels, axes and intersections o Aligning collaborative resources o Sharing information o Collaborating across sectors o Cross-training, cross-pollination o Sharing vocabulary, building understanding Partnership Working Together
  • Slide 26
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  • Slide 27
  • 27 Asbury Park, New Jersey: Founded as beachfront property during the 1870s and by the 1880s was attracting over half a million people during the summer months. It's real boom period occurred between the 1920s and the 1960s, however, when it was the Jersey Shore's number one destination. It's downfall came about due to race riots that began during the 4th of July weekend in 1970. Visitors never returned. Cheshire, Ohio: In 2002, American Electric Power purchased it for about $20 million because of high levels of sulfuric acid emissions produced by it's adjacent power plant. Hindostan Falls, Indiana: Founded in 1814 and became the Martin Country Seat. Although it was a prosperous milling town, it was suddenly abandoned 1928 due to a possible Smallpox outbreak. Holly Springs, North Carolina: Founded during the early 19th century. Most of the town's men died during the battle at Gettysburg. When the war ended there were several failed attempts to revive the Holly Springs economy. While it never completely disappeared, it remains a very small but vibrant community.
  • Slide 28
  • 28 A N I NCOMPLETE H ISTORY OF E NGINEERING M ISTAKES 1. Tocoma Washington Bridge Collapse, 1940 o 0 causalities 2. Cleveland East Ohio Gas Explosion, 1944 o 130 causalities 3. Hyatt Regency Hotel Walkway Collapse 1981 o More than 300 casualties 4. Chernobyl Nuclear Plant Meltdown 1986 o 336,000 relocated
  • Slide 29
  • 29 A N I NCOMPLETE H ISTORY OF E NGINEERING M ISTAKES 5. St. Francis Dam Flooding, 1928 o Estimated 450 causalities 6. The Boston Molasses Tank Collapse, 1920s o 171 casualties 7. 1970s DC-10 Crashes and Malfunctions o 273 casualties on Flight 191 (May 25, 1979)
  • Slide 30
  • 30 A N I NCOMPLETE H ISTORY OF E NGINEERING M ISTAKES 5. St. Francis Dam Flooding, 1928 o Estimated 450 causalities 6. The Boston Molasses Tank Collapse, 1920s o 171 casualties 7. 1970s DC-10 Crashes and Malfunctions o 273 casualties on Flight 191 (May 25, 1979)
  • Slide 31
  • 31 At the time of disaster, what do you first do: o First, Ensure you, your dependents, and family are okay and have everything needed to withstand the duration of the disaster o Second, found out what you need to do to recover o Third, volunteer to help neighborhood and community For a community to survive it needs to have partnerships for support from outside communities o Resource suppliers and Consumers o Governmental leaders o Social Organizations
  • Slide 32
  • 32 Resilient Peoples and Communities attract business and skilled people for stable economic development and sustainable resources. Resilient peoples and communities are optimistic, motivated and efficient, skilled and creative, coherent, resourceful, and courageous. These types of communities can adapt to adversity to survive until outside help and resources arrive 24-48 hours after the initiating disaster occurs.
  • Slide 33
  • 33 Resilient Infrastructures and Enterprises save lives, time and money. Structural and Operational resilience is essential in lifeline systems and components to facilitate core functions and core services during preparation, response and recovery disaster phases. Water and Wastewater Systems Electric Power Systems Oil and Natural Gas Systems Telecommunication Systems People and Goods Transport Systems and Logistics Solid Waste Management
  • Slide 34
  • 34 IS-660 - Introduction to Public-Private Partnerships: This course provides an introduction to the role of public-private partnerships in emergency preparedness and planning. The goal of this training is to establish a common vocabulary for public sector agencies and private sector organizations interested in utilizing partnerships to improve response, recovery, and resilience. IS-662 Improving Preparedness and Resilience through Public-Private Partnerships: This course describes how to establish and sustain public-private partnerships, as well as how to communicate and share resources in a partnership. training.fema.gov/emi/
  • Slide 35
  • 35 Success and duration of the long-term disaster recovery phase for enterprises and communities is dictated by the extent to which they are prepared to immediately enact recovery response efforts. o Pre-disaster planning and partnership are mechanisms for avoiding circumstances requiring short-term decisions that create or exacerbate long-term problems. o Immediate response recovery happens while the Emergency Operation Center is supporting the incident command and where response intersects and overlaps with recovery efforts. o Need a web portal to connect and interface available public recovery resources and private sector recovery operations through existing databases throughout the nation.
  • Slide 36
  • 36 Sustaining Membership Directory web-based SAME Member Disaster Capabilities and Recovery Resource Database: compilation of additional information
  • Slide 37
  • 37 Organization Contact Information Organization Profile o Description of Company or Agency o Type of Firm: A/E/C o Infrastructure Sectors of Service o Federal Government Business Categories o NAICS Code o Total Number of Employees o Number and location of Offices in US o Number and location of Offices Overseas o Description of Preparedness, Disaster Response, Response Recovery Capabilities and Resources o Date last updated this information Emergency Resource Profile o Provide a list of Emergency POCs o Description of Organization experience with prior disasters preparedness and response o Organizational Certifications (PS-PREP, SAFETY ACT, Local Certifications, Society Certifications) o Description of Services and Resources willing to donate quantity and duration o Description of Contract Services and Resources types of contracts and contingency contracts include period of performance o EMAC registered?
  • Slide 38
  • 38 RIDR Task Force o Develop Infrastructure Resilience Primer Community Health Resilience Task Force o Develop framework for resilience and situational awareness Certification, Academic Research and Education Programs Committee o The Critical Infrastructure Symposium o Listing good resilience training and education programs
  • Slide 39
  • 39 Engineering, Construction, and Architecture Committee o Coordinate National Dialogue on standards development o Building New Infrastructure to be Resilient o Explaining the ROI and Life Cycle Cost for investing in infrastructure, community and regional resilience State + Local Security and Emergency Management Agencies Committee o Track current resilience initiatives o Educate Resilience o Regional Resilience and Economic Development Workshop Membership and Award Committee o Develop New Resilience Design and Construction Award and New Organizational Resilience Award with DHS
  • Slide 40
  • 40 Bill Anderson, Director [email protected] Jacqueline Barrett, Administrative Assistant [email protected] Ask me Why I am a Proud Member of TISP www.tisp.org [email protected]