County
of Santa Cruz
Emergency
Management Plan
April 2002
Table of Contents
General Information...................................................................................................................................................................................
3
Objectives.................................................................................................................................................................................................
6
Emergency Management Organization........................................................................................................................................................
11
Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS).............................................................................................................................
11
SEMS Terms and Definitions....................................................................................................................................................................
11
Santa Cruz County EOC
Responsibilities..................................................................................................................................................
17
Initial Response Management...................................................................................................................................................................
22
Activation Policy......................................................................................................................................................................................
24
Mutual Aid..............................................................................................................................................................................................
27
Continuity of County Government............................................................................................................................................................
30
Preservation of Vital Records..................................................................................................................................................................
32
Plan Maintenance....................................................................................................................................................................................
32
Table of Authorities.................................................................................................................................................................................
33
Part III – Santa Cruz County...................................................................................................................................................................
34
Hazards..................................................................................................................................................................................................
37
…..Earthquake.......................................................................................................................................................................................
37
…..Landslide..........................................................................................................................................................................................
40
…..Flood................................................................................................................................................................................................
42
…..Wildland Fires...................................................................................................................................................................................
44
…..Extreme Weather...............................................................................................................................................................................
46
…..Tsunami.............................................................................................................................................................................................
46
…..Hazardous Materials..........................................................................................................................................................................
48
…..Transportation...................................................................................................................................................................................
48
…..Dam Failure.......................................................................................................................................................................................
48
…..Civil Unrest........................................................................................................................................................................................
49
…..Terrorism...........................................................................................................................................................................................
49
Public Awareness.....................................................................................................................................................................................
49
Reference Plans........................................................................................................................................................................................
50
Glossary of Terms.....................................................................................................................................................................................
52
Figures
Figure
1: OES Administrative Regions
Figure
2: Typical SEMS Organization
Figure
3: County Department Emergency
Response Functions
Figure
4: California Mutual Aid Regions
Figure
6: Major Earthquake Fault Zones
Figure
7: Potential Liquefaction Zones
Figure
8: Potential Landslide Areas
Figure
10: Severe Fire Hazard Zones
Figure
11: Potential Tsunami Runup Areas
The
Santa Cruz County Emergency Management Plan addresses the planned response to
extraordinary situations associated with large-scale emergency incidents
affecting the unincorporated area of Santa Cruz County.
This plan closely follows the plan for the Santa Cruz Operational Area,
which is an intermediate level of the state emergency organization, consisting
of all the political subdivisions within the county boundaries.
The Santa Cruz County Operational Area was formed under a Memorandum of
Understanding between the County and the cities of Watsonville, Capitola,
Santa Cruz and Scotts Valley in 1994. However,
this Plan differs from the Operational Area Plan by focusing solely on the
emergency management plans of County government.
Because the County of Santa Cruz is a local agency within the
Operational Area, the County’s plan will become an Appendix of the
Operational Area Plan.
This
plan:
·
Establishes the purposes,
authorities, objectives and goals of the emergency management organization in
response to any significant emergency or disaster in Santa Cruz County.
·
Identifies the organizational structure,
responsibilities and operational concepts required to preserve the health and
safety of County residents and visitors, property and the environment from the
effects of emergencies and disasters.
·
Provides a basic review of natural, cultural and
technological hazards that could impact the County.
·
Outlines the associated emergency plans with which
this Plan interacts or which provide additional hazard-specific models for
response and recovery, which may modify elements of this Plan.
This
plan is designed to establish the framework for implementation of the
California Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS) in Santa Cruz
County to facilitate multi-agency and multi-jurisdictional coordination during
emergency Management.
This
document serves as a planning reference.
Departments within the County of Santa Cruz who have roles and
responsibilities identified by this plan are encouraged to develop emergency
Management plans, detailed standard operating procedures (SOPs), and emergency
response checklists based on the provisions of this plan.
This plan will be used in coordination with the Operational Area Plan,
the State Emergency Plan and the
Federal Response Plan.
This
plan is divided into the following four parts:
Part
I
– Provides background information and focuses on the Santa Cruz County
organization, its responsibilities and concepts for multi-hazard emergency
management.
Part
II
– Focuses on the emergency management organization under the
Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS).
Part II is the organizational guide and provides County staff assigned
to emergency response and recovery with the framework to implement SEMS.
Part
III –
Provides an overview of the County and addresses various hazards to which
Santa Cruz County is exposed
Part
IV
– Discusses the various other emergency or disaster plans that support this
plan. These supporting documents
further describe the operation or functional response to specific threats or
of specific emergency response disciplines.
Background
The
overall objective of emergency management is to ensure the effective
management of response forces and resources in preparing for, responding to
and recovering from the impacts of natural disasters, technological incidents
and security emergencies. To
carry out its responsibilities, the County Emergency Management organization
will accomplish the following objectives during a disaster or emergency from
any source:
·
Overall management and
coordination of County emergency response and recovery Management, including
on-scene incident management as required.
·
Coordinate
with appropriate federal, state and other local government agencies, as well
as applicable segments of private sector entities and volunteer agencies.
·
Establish
priorities and resolve any conflicting demands for support.
·
Prepare
and disseminate emergency public information to alert, warn, aid and inform
the public.
·
Gather,
evaluate and disseminate damage information and other essential information.
GOALS
·
Provide effective life safety
measures and reduce property loss and damage to the environment.
·
Provide
for the rapid resumption of impacted businesses and community services.
·
Provide
accurate documentation for cost recovery.
·
Provide
for timely preparation of recovery and mitigation plans.
OVERALL CONCEPT OF MANAGEMENT
This
County Emergency Management Plan addresses a wide spectrum of contingencies,
ranging from relatively minor incidents to large-scale disasters, such as an
earthquake. A buildup or warning
period providing sufficient time to warn the public will precede some
emergencies and allow time to implement mitigation measures designed to reduce
loss of life, property damage, and effects on the environment. Other emergencies occur with little or no advance warning,
thus requiring immediate activation of the County Emergency Management Plan
with simultaneous mobilization and deployment of resources.
Emergency
Phases
Emergency
management activities are often conducted within four generally defined
phases. However, because each
disaster is unique, individual disasters may not include all indicated phases:
· Planning;
·
Response;
·
Recovery; and
·
Mitigation.
Planning
Phase
The
Planning phase involves activities that are undertaken in advance of an
emergency or disaster. These
activities assess threats, develop operational capabilities and design
effective responses to potential incidents.
Planning
activities include:
·
Completing hazard analyses;
·
Designing and implementing hazard mitigation
projects consistent with the hazard analyses;
·
Developing and maintaining emergency plans and
procedures;
·
Developing mutual aid agreements;
·
Conducting general and specialized training;
·
Conducting exercises; and
·
Improving emergency public education and warning
systems.
Response
Phase
The
response phase includes increased readiness, initial and extended response
activities. Upon receipt of a
warning or the observation that an emergency situation is imminent or likely
to occur, the County Office of Emergency Services and County departments will
initiate actions to increase their readiness.
Incidents
that may trigger increased readiness activities include:
·
Receipt of a flood advisory or other special
weather statement;
·
Conditions conducive to wild land fires, such as
the combination of high heat, strong winds, and low humidity;
·
A hazardous materials incident;
·
Information or circumstances indicating the
potential for acts of violence or civil disturbance.
Increased
readiness activities may include, but are not limited to the following:
·
Briefing of key members of the Santa Cruz County
organization;
·
Reviewing and updating Emergency Organizational
Plans and Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs);
·
Increasing public information efforts;
·
Accelerating training efforts;
·
Inspecting critical facilities and equipment,
including testing warning and communications systems;
·
Warning threatened areas of the population;
·
Conducting precautionary evacuations in potentially
impacted areas;
·
Mobilizing personnel and pre-positioning resources
and equipment; and
·
Contacting State and Federal agencies that may be
involved in field activities.
The
County’s initial response activities are primarily performed at the field
response level. Emphasis is
placed on minimizing the effects of the emergency or disaster.
Support and coordination activities take place in the Emergency
Management Center with operational links to field response units.
Examples
of initial response activities include:
·
Making all necessary notifications, including
County departments and personnel, local cities and the State OES Coastal
Region;
·
Disseminating warnings, emergency public
information, and instructions to the citizens of Santa Cruz County;
·
Declaration of a local emergency;
·
Conducting evacuations and/or rescue operations;
·
Caring for displaced persons and treating the
injured;
· Road clearing, debris removal, flood fight
·
Conducting initial damage assessments and surveys;
·
Assessing need for mutual aid assistance;
·
Restricting movement of traffic/people and
unnecessary access to affected areas;
·
Developing and implementing Initial Action Plans;
·
Securing incident sites
·
Conducting search and rescue operations; and
·
Fire suppression.
Extended
Response
Extended
response operations involve the coordination and management of resources and
information necessary to facilitate the transition to recovery.
Although not a specific action, but rather an evolutionary transition
in the response timeline, extended operations generally begin 72 hours after
the initial disaster incident.
Examples
of extended response activities include:
·
Coordination with state and federal agencies
working within the County;
·
Preparing initial damage
assessments;
·
Operating mass care facilities;
·
Conducting coroner operations,
·
Procuring, allocating and monitoring resources
required to sustain operations;
·
Coordinating mutual aide resources;
·
Restoring essential services;
·
Initiating advance planning activities;
·
Documenting expenditures;
·
Developing and implementing Action Plans for
extended operation; and
·
Disseminating emergency public information.
Recovery
Phase
Recovery
activities involve the restoration of the affected area(s) to pre-emergency
conditions. Recovery activities
may be both short-term and long-term, ranging from restoration of essential
utilities such as water and power, to implementation of mitigation measures
designed to minimize the impact of future occurrences of a given threat.
Examples
of recovery activities include:
·
Restoring utilities and infrastructure;
·
Reinstating autonomy for displaced persons
·
Reconstruction of damaged property;
·
Conducting residual hazard analyses;
·
Coordination of Federal, State, public and private
assistance; and
·
Determining and recovering costs associated with
response and recovery.
Mitigation
efforts occur both before and after emergencies or disasters.
The goal of mitigation is to reduce or eliminate the future impact of
threats consistent with the objectives of the State or Federal hazard
mitigation plan developed specifically in response to each declared disaster.
Mitigation
efforts can include:
·
Amending local development regulations, such as
zoning ordinances, building codes, and other land use codes;
·
Structural retrofitting measures;
·
Forming Hazard Abatement Districts;
·
Emphasizing public education and awareness; and
·
Incorporating hazard mitigation into long-term
development policies such as the General Plan.
Part
II
Organization
SANTA CRUZ COUNTY EMERGENCY
MANAGEMENT ORGANIZATION and RESPONSIBILITIES
The County Administrative Officer will direct the emergency management organization, serving as the Director of Emergency Services. The Emergency Services Administrator will serve as the Deputy Director of Emergency Services. The Director of Emergency Services is responsible for implementing the emergency management plan through the efforts of the Santa Cruz County Office of Emergency Services.
Established
under Section 2.106 of the Santa Cruz County Code, the
County Disaster Council was created to comply with the legal requirements of
the State and to assist the Board of Supervisors and the Director of Emergency
Services in the administration of Chapter 2.26 of the Santa Cruz County Code.
The Office of Emergency Services provides staff support to the Disaster
Council.
The
County Disaster Council is authorized to recommend for adoption to the Board
of Supervisors emergency and mutual aid plans and agreements as well as
ordinances, resolutions, rules and regulations as may be necessary to
implement such plans and agreements, and any necessary amendments.
Standardized Emergency
Management System (SEMS)
Santa
Cruz County is organized under the Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS),
which is intended to standardize response to emergencies involving multiple
jurisdictions or multiple agencies. SEMS
is intended to be flexible and adaptable to the needs of all emergency
responders in California. SEMS
requires emergency response agencies to use basic principles and components of
emergency management, including the Incident Command System, multi-agency or
inter-agency coordination, the operational area concept, and established
mutual aid systems.
Legal
Basis and Intent of the SEMS Law
To
improve the coordination of state and local emergency response, Section 8607
of the Government Code directed the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services
(OES), in coordination with local emergency management agencies, to establish
by regulation the Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS).
SEMS regulations took effect in September of 1994.
SEMS
provides for a five level emergency response organization, activated as
needed, but particularly in response to multi-agency or multi-jurisdiction
emergencies. The five SEMS levels
are:
·
Field
·
Local government
·
Operational area
·
Region
·
State
By
law, state agencies must use SEMS when responding to emergencies involving
multiple jurisdictions or multiple agencies. Local governments must use SEMS
in order to be eligible for state funding of response related personnel costs.
Furthermore, local governments are required under SEMS to maintain
minimum training competencies in SEMS.
Any
organization, such as fire, law enforcement, public works, and other agencies
responding to an emergency or providing mutual aid to such an organization,
whether in the field, at the scene of an incident or to an emergency
operations center.
A
standardized, on-scene emergency management system used nationally by fire,
law enforcement and other response agencies.
Refers
to the voluntary provision of services and facilities when local resources are
inadequate to respond to an emergency. The
California mutual aid system is based upon the State’s Master Mutual Aid
Agreement. Under this agreement,
cities, counties and the State provide a comprehensive program of services,
resources and facilities to jurisdictions when local resources prove to be
inadequate to cope with a given situation.
Written plans and operating procedures have been developed for mutual
aid systems that function on a statewide level. The most widely known mutual aid plans include those for
fire, rescue and law enforcement, but may also exist for emergency medical
service providers, sheriff-coroner, and search and rescue teams.
Field level management can request mutual aid through the SEMS
structure.
An
Operational Area consists of a county and all political subdivisions within
the county. The County is the
lead agency for the Operational Area unless another arrangement is established
by agreement. The Operational
Area manages and coordinates information, resources and priorities among local
governments within its area and serves as the communication and coordination
conduit between the state’s Regional Emergency Operations Center (REOC) and
the emergency operational centers in each jurisdiction within the County.
While
an Operational Area always encompasses the entire County area, it does not
mean that the County government directly manages the response and
recovery activities of jurisdictions within the County.
The County Operational Area staff may be coordinating information and
resources between the state and jurisdictions within the County, but the
Operational Area EOC staff is not directly managing the work taking place
within those jurisdictions.
Any
location that is used and set up to serve as the central command post for
emergency management during disasters or emergency incidents.
·
Field
At the field response level, emergency personnel carry out activities under the management of an appropriate authority in direct response to an incident or threat. SEMS regulations require the use of the Incident Command System at the field response level of an incident.
·
Local Government
Local government includes cities, counties and special districts. Each is responsible to manage and coordinate emergency response and recovery activities within its jurisdiction.
·
Operational Area
The
County is the lead agency for the Operational Area unless another arrangement
is established by agreement. In
Santa Cruz County, the Operational Area is managed by the County’s Office of
Emergency Services.
·
Region
California
is divided into six Mutual Aid Regions. The
Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (OES) manages these regions through
three regional offices. The
regional level manages and coordinates information and resources among
operational areas within the mutual aid region, and also between the
operational areas and the state level. The
Santa Cruz County Operational Area is in the OES Coastal Region.
·
State
The state level coordinates mutual aid among the mutual aid regions and between the regional level and the state level. It also serves as the initial coordination and communication link between the State and Federal disaster response system.
Figure
1:
OES Administrative Regions

This is a brief
summary of the functions found at all SEMS levels:
Figure
2:
Typical SEMS Organization

|
Primary
SEMS Function |
Field
Response Level |
EOC
|
|
Command
& Management |
Responsible
for the control of resources |
Responsible
for overall emergency policy, strategy and coordination |
|
Operations |
Coordinates
response of all field operations in accordance with the Incident Action
Plan |
Coordinates
all jurisdictional operations |
|
Planning/Intelligence |
Collection,
evaluation, documentation and use of information related to the incident
|
Collects,
evaluates and disseminates information and maintains documentation |
|
Logistics |
Provides
facilities, personnel, services, equipment and materials in support of
the incident |
Provides
facilities, services, personnel, equipment and materials |
|
Finance/Administration |
Collects
cost, time and materiel data related to the incident |
Collects,
analyzes and evaluates all cost data associated with time, materiel,
personnel and other costs of the incident |
Santa Cruz County will comply with SEMS
regulations and will:
1.
Use SEMS when a local
emergency is declared or proclaimed, or the EOC is activated.
2.
Establish coordination
and communications with field incident commanders either through Departmental
Operating Centers (DOCS) to the EOC, when activated, or directly to the EOC.
3.
Use existing mutual aid
systems for coordinating fire, law enforcement and other resources.
4.
Establish communications
and coordination with any federal, state or local emergency response agency
having jurisdiction at an incident within the County’s borders.
Public Information
Emergency
public information to both the general public and the media will only be
provided through the Operational Area Public Information Officer.
If the EOC has not yet been activated, the Incident Commander will
release information based on the facts of the incident.
The Incident Commander may elect to delegate this authority to a field
level Public Information Officer (PIO). All
other individuals working at either the field response level or the EOC will
refer inquiries from the media or general public to the Public Information
Branch or the Incident Commander.
A
declaration of local emergency enables the Santa Cruz County to request state
assistance under the Natural Disaster Assistance Act (NDAA).
To qualify for permanent restoration assistance, the Director of the
Governor’s Office of Emergency Services must concur with the local emergency
declaration. The Governor must
proclaim a state of emergency for disaster response and permanent restoration
assistance. For matching fund
assistance for cost sharing required under federal public assistance programs,
the President must declare a major disaster or emergency.
Coordination
with Special Districts
The
emergency response role of special districts is generally focused on their
normal services or functional area of responsibility.
During disasters, some types of special districts will be more
extensively involved in the emergency response by directly coordinating,
communicating, and assisting local governments.
In
Santa Cruz County, overlapping boundaries complicate relationships with
special districts and the local governments.
For the special districts that serve the County unincorporated areas,
they will coordinate and communicate directly with the County EOC.
Coordination with Private and Volunteer
Agencies
Within
the County, coordination of response activities with many non-governmental
agencies may occur. However, the
County EOC will coordinate with private and volunteer agencies that have
multi-jurisdictional or countywide response roles.
Coordination with volunteer and private agencies may be accomplished
through telecommunications, liaison with community councils that represent
several agencies, or involvement of agencies in special multi-agency groups on
specific issues.
Coordination with State and Federal Field
Response
There
are some instances where a state or federal agency will have a field response.
State agency field response may result as part of a flood fight effort,
oil spill, hazardous materials accident or other hazard scenario.
Federal field response could result from the same scenarios or aircraft
accident.
When
a state agency or federal agency is involved in field operations, coordination
will be established with Santa Cruz County Office of Emergency Services.
State or federal agencies operating in the field may be found in any
ICS section, branch, or unit or part of a unified command.
The incident will determine their location.
The Management section is responsible for
overall coordination and administration of the incident.
Management also includes certain support staff functions required to
support the EOC.
·
Director of Emergency
Services – The County Administrative Officer (CAO) is the Director of
Emergency Services and is responsible for the County’s response to and
recovery from any disaster or emergency.
·
EOC Coordinator – The
Emergency Services Administrator is the EOC Coordinator.
The EOC Coordinator is responsible for coordination and planning during
any emergency; for maintaining liaison with state, federal, private sector and
other disaster response agencies and organizations as needed and for managing
mutual aid. In the Emergency
Services Administrator’s absence, one of four designated backup staff may
serve as the Deputy EOC Coordinator.
·
Legal Officer – The
Legal Officer is the County Counsel or his or her designee.
The Legal Officer provides advice to the CAO and the EOC Coordinator in
all legal matters relating to the emergency.
·
Public Information
Officer – The Public Information Officer (PIO) acts under the direction of
the Director of Emergency Services and the Deputy Director of Emergency
Services in coordinating the County’s media interactions and dissemination
of information to the public. Designated
staff of the County Administrative Office is assigned PIO duties.
· Safety Officer: Staffed by Risk Management, the Safety Officer acts as an advisor to the EOC Coordinator. He or she monitors the emergency organization to ensure the safety and security of all personnel involved.
The
Operations Section directs County operational resources and coordinates mutual
aid resources. In addition, the
Management Sections is responsible for coordinating with incident commanders
in the field. The following are
typical Branches in an Operations Section, although other Branches can also be
activated as dictated by the incident:
· Law: Staffed by the Sheriff/Coroner, the Law Branch directs the response activities of the Sheriff’s Office, reserves, search and rescue, evacuation and Coroner functions. In consultation with the EOC Coordinator, it also coordinates all law mutual aid requests and resources.
· Fire: Staffed by CDF/County Fire, the Fire Branch directs the response activities of County fire and mutual aid fire resources, coordinates heavy rescue missions with other Operations Section branch leaders. In consultation with the EOC Coordinator, this branch coordinates all fire mutual aid requests and resources.
· Emergency Medical Services (EMS): Staffed by the Health Services Agency, the EMS Branch functions as a liaison with medical resources throughout the County. The Branch must also manage disaster medical resources; patient distribution and evacuation; support the provision of hospital care; support out of hospital disaster-designated emergency services; coordinate pre-hospital emergency services; and support temporary field treatment sites. This Branch manages all medical mutual aid requests and resources in consultation with the EOC Coordinator.
· Health: Staffed by the Health Services Agency, the Health Branch coordinates all public health resources throughout the County. This Branch is responsible for ensuring public health, controlling outbreaks of diseases and maintaining the safe supply of food and water.
· Human Services: Staffed by the Human Resources Agency, this Branch coordinates the mobilization, supply, operation and demobilization of care and shelter sites and coordinates registration and utilization of volunteer resources throughout the County. This will involve close cooperation with other emergency organizations such as the American Red Cross, Salvation Army, a variety of community based human care organizations as well as state and federal agencies involved in disaster assistance. In consultation with the EOC Coordinator, this Branch will coordinate care and shelter mutual aid requests and resources.
Because of the range of functions included in the Operations Section, Santa Cruz County will not utilize a specific Section Chief assignment. Branch Chiefs will report to the EOC Coordinator unless incident conditions warrant assignment of an Operations Chief who will, in turn, report to the EOC Coordinator .
The Planning Section is under the direction
of the Emergency Services Administrator or his or her designee.
The duties and responsibilities of the Planning Section are gathering,
condensing and analyzing of all information regarding the incident.
The Section is responsible for gathering damage assessment estimates,
completing Initial Damage Estimates utilizing the RIMS reporting system,
situation reports, conducting planning meetings, documenting EOC activities
and assisting in preparation of the EOC Action Plan.
The following units are typically established in the Planning Section
as necessary:
·
Situation Analysis Unit:
Staffed by the Office of Emergency Services, this Unit’s primary role
is to collect, condense and analyze all information about the incident.
Situation Analysis is also responsible for maintaining the Master
Incident Record and map data.
·
Damage Assessment Unit:
Staffed by the Assessor’s Office and the Planning Department, the
Damage Assessment Unit collects data on damage to public and private property,
casualties, loss of infrastructure and related information.
Staff in the Unit prepares periodic damage reports to the EOC
management and to the Coastal Region of OES through the RIMS reporting system.
·
Documentation Unit:
Staffed by the Auditor/Controller and General Services Department, the
Documentation Unit maintains and files all EOC action records and maintains a
history of the emergency response to provide complete documentation for the
purpose of recovery of funds.
·
Technical Unit:
Staffed by various departments, the Technical Unit provides expert
information and analysis in areas such as Geographic Information System
products, analysis and liaison; stream levels and flood forecasting; hazardous
materials or geologic analysis.
·
Recovery Planning Unit:
Staffed by various departments and lead by the Office of Emergency
Services, the Recovery Planning Unit would be activated and charged with
developing initial recommendations for mid to long-term reconstruction and
recovery plans when the emergency incident has caused widespread significant
damage to infrastructure, public and private property.
The Logistics Section is
staffed by the General Services Department and provides for all EOC support
needs. The Section orders all resources, provides communications,
facilities, transportation, supplies, equipment, fuel, food, and makes
arrangements for support of mutual aid resources as necessary.
Finance Section
The Finance Section is staffed by the Auditor/Controller’s Office and provides for the tracking of time worked by all emergency personnel involved in the incident, provides cost analyses and projections, and establishes cost accounting systems to monitor and provide documentation of County expenses.
The Office of Emergency Services provides follow up support to the Finance Section on monitoring long term cost recovery.
The five essential SEMS functions will be
established as “Sections” within the EOC and all other functions will be
organized as branches, groups or units within sections.
The types of functions and their relationship on one another will
depend upon the size and nature of the incident.
Only those functional elements that are required to meet current
objects will be activated.
Figure
3:
County Department Emergency Response Functions
|
Department |
Function
in Level I |
Function
(as required) in Level II |
ADDED
Functions in level III |
|
Administrative Office |
Management Oversight |
Management Oversight; PIO |
Incident Management, PIO |
|
Agricultural Commissioner |
Ensure a safe and accessible food supply, care for agricultural and forest lands; supply disaster entomological and veterinary assistance |
Support to EOC Planning Section/Damage Assessment Unit Ag Damage Assessment and Liaison |
Support to EOC Planning Section/Damage Assessment Unit Ag Damage Assessment and Liaison |
|
Assessor |
|
Support to EOC for damage assessment |
Staff EOC Planning Section - Damage Assessment Unit |
|
Auditor/Controller |
|
Support for incident cost tracking; EOC Planning Section/Documentation Unit |
Staff EOC Finance/Administration Section |
|
Board of Supervisors |
|
|
Policy Actions |
|
Clerk of the Board |
|
|
|
|
County Clerk/Recorder |
|
|
Property Research |
|
County Counsel |
|
Support to EOC Management Section |
Staff EOC Management Section |
|
County Fire |
Area Fire Coordinator |
Staff EOC Operations Section as Fire & Rescue Branch Coordinator |
Staff EOC Operations Section as Fire & Rescue Branch Coordinator |
|
District Attorney |
|
|
Support Consumer Fraud Prevention efforts |
|
Elections |
|
|
|
|
Emergency Services |
Incident Management |
Staff EOC Management Section: Planning Section/Situation Analysis Unit |
Staff EOC Management Section: Planning Section/Situation Analysis Unit |
|
Environmental Health |
HazMat Coordination |
Support EOC Operations Section - Medical Branch/HazMat Unit |
Staff EOC Operations Section - Medical Branch/HazMat Unit |
|
General Services |
Purchasing support |
Staff EOC Logistics Section as Section Coordinator |
Staff EOC Logistics as Section Coordinator |
|
Health Services |
Assess immediate medical needs and response system capacity; manage disaster medical resources; manage patient distribution and evacuation; support the provision of hospital care; support out of hospital disaster-designated emergency services; coordinate pre-hospital emergency services; and support temporary field treatment sites |
Staff EOC Operations Section as Medical Branch Coordinator |
Staff EOC Operations Section as Medical Branch Coordinator |
|
Human Resources |
|
EOC Operations Section - Care & Shelter Branch Support |
Staff EOC Operations Section as Care & Shelter Branch Coordinator |
|
Information Services |
|
Support to EOC |
Staff EOC Logistics Section - Technical Support Branch: Expansion of EOC computer stations; network support; assure telephone communication; alternate EOC setup |
|
Parks |
|
Support to EOC Logistics Section |
Staff EOC Logistics Section/ Support Branch |
|
Personnel |
|
Support to EOC Logistics Section |
Support to EOC Logistics Section |
|
Planning |
Structural and Geologic Threat Assessment; Field Damage Assessment; stream monitoring |
Activate DOC; GIS support to EOC; stream monitoring; Structural and Geologic Threat Assessment; support to EOC Damage Assessment Unit |
Staff EOC Planning Section - GIS Unit & Recovery Planning Unit; Operations Section - Stream Monitoring Unit; |
|
Public Works |
Prioritize and coordinate immediate Public Works emergency response activities such as road clearing and debris removal; establishing alternate road access, flood fighting and safety evaluation of bridges, roads and sanitation pump stations |
Activate DOC; staff EOC Operations - Public Works Branch |
Staff EOC Operations Section - Public Works Branch |
|
Redevelopment Agency |
|
Support EOC Recovery Planning |
Staff EOC Planning Section - Recovery Planning Unit |
|
Risk Management |
|
|
Liaison with EOC Management Section; Support to EOC Coordinator for EOC safety issues; evaluate applicability of insurances in particular incidents |
|
Sheriff/Coroner |
Area Law Coordinator; evacuation control; traffic control; access restriction; security; coroner |
Staff EOC Operations Section Law Branch |
Staff EOC Operations Section - Law Branch |
|
Telecommunications |
|
EOC Logistics Section Support |
EOC Logistics Section - Staff the Technical Support Branch |
|
Transportation Commission |
Liaison between State and Local transportation officials and coordinate information related to transportation issues |
work with CAL TRANS to disseminate information regarding alternate means of transportation and provides other support duties as needed. |
Staff EOC Operations Section/Transportation Branch |
|
Treasurer/Tax Collector |
|
|
|
Organizational
Concept
The
Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS) will be used to manage and
control response activities. During
initial response, Santa Cruz County field responders will place emphasis on
saving lives and property, controlling the situation, and minimizing the
environmental impact of the emergency. Santa
Cruz County departments, volunteer agencies, and private sector services will
be utilized in initial response operations.
The disaster/incident may be controlled solely by County emergency
responders or with other agencies through the mutual aid system.
If the resources available at the field response level are not
sufficient to mitigate the situation, the Incident Commander may request that
the Santa Cruz County Emergency Operations Center be activated to support
field operations.
Emergencies
Emergency
incidents will be managed in one of three modes, depending on the magnitude
and scope of the incident.
Decentralized
Coordination and Direction (Level I)
This
management mode is similar to day-to-day operations and would be used for
those emergency situations in which normal management procedures and local
resources are adequate. Local
public safety and emergency function coordinators provide necessary support,
as established by appropriate agreements and ordinances.
The County Emergency Operations Center (EOC) may be activated upon the
discretion of the County’s Director of Emergency Services or designee.
Inter-agency coordination (i.e., fire, medical, law enforcement) is
accomplished via pre-established radio and telephone communications systems
and procedures at the incident site and at agency dispatch facilities.
Centralized
Coordination (Level II)
This
mode is used for emergencies that involve several departments requiring close
coordination between local, Operational Area or State resources.
In these situations, the County EOC would be activated on a context
specific basis. Key management
level personnel from the principally involved agencies will be located in the
Emergency Operations Center (EOC) to provide incident coordination.
An
EOC is a location from which centralized emergency management can be preformed
during an emergency or disaster. This
facilitates a coordinated response by the Director of Emergency Services,
Emergency Management staff and representatives from organizations who are
assigned emergency management responsibilities.
An
EOC provides a central location of authority and information, and allows for
face-to-face coordination among personnel who must make emergency decisions.
The following functions are performed in the Santa Cruz County EOC:
·
Managing and coordinating emergency operations;
·
Receiving and disseminating warning information;
·
Developing emergency policies and procedures
specific to the incident;
·
Collecting intelligence from, and disseminating
information to, the various EOC representatives, and as appropriate to other
County, city, special district, state and federal agencies;
·
Preparing intelligence/information summaries,
situation reports, operational reports, and other reports as required;
·
Preparing, analyzing and maintaining general and
specific maps, information displays and other data pertinent to management of
the emergency; and
·
Directing, controlling and coordinating the
operational and logistical support of County resources committed to the
emergency.
·
Maintaining contact and coordination with
supporting DOCs, other local government EOCs and the Coastal Region of State
OES
·
Providing emergency information and instructions to
the public, making official releases to the news media and the scheduling of
press conferences as necessary.
The
County EOC is located in the Santa Cruz Consolidated Emergency Communications
Center at DeLaveaga Park in Santa Cruz. The
EOC is well supplied with a computer network, Internet access, telephones,
dedicated fax lines, copy machines, televisions and all county communications
systems. The staffing pattern is
SEMS based and operational periods are determined during the initial stages of
an incident. The CAO, Emergency
Services Administrator or specifically designated staff may serve as the EOC
Director with additional staffing provided by County Department heads (or
other designated department personnel) and other supporting agencies including
the California Highway Patrol, CalTrans, PG&E, American Red Cross and
other organizations as needed.
The
Office of Emergency Services is currently developing an inventory of multiple
sites that could function as the County’s alternate EOC in different
incident scenarios. The
operational capabilities of the alternate EOC are similar to those of the
primary EOC. Direction and
control authority will be transferred from the primary EOC to the alternate
EOC when deemed necessary. The
Logistics Section will arrange for relocation of EOC staff members to the
alternate EOC. All Section Chiefs will advise their emergency response
personnel of the transition to the alternate EOC.
The Management Section will coordinate notification of other local
governments and the REOC.
Emergency
response coordination may be conducted from the EOC or from other locations
depending on the situation. The
EOC may be partially or fully staffed to meet the demands of the situation.
Their
activities can include but are not necessarily limited to:
·
Establishing an area-wide assessment function;
·
Determining resource requirements for the affected
area and coordinating resource requests;
·
Establishing and coordinating the logistical
systems necessary to support multi-incident management;
·
Establishing priorities for resource allocation.
Information
is provided to the Emergency Operations Center (EOC) by agency dispatch
facilities and/or by liaison personnel.
Centralized
Coordination and Direction (Level III)
This
mode of operation would be utilized in an incident impacting all or a major
portion of the County. In this
situation, the Operational Area Emergency Operations Center (EOC) would be
fully activated and all coordination and direction activities would be
accomplished through the EOC.
The
County EOC is activated when field response agencies need support.
Activation may involve partial or full staffing, depending on the
support required. The following
list depicts the circumstances when the County EOC must be activated:
·
A state of emergency is proclaimed by the Governor
for the county;
·
The County is requesting resources from outside its
boundaries, except those resources used in normal day-to-day Operations which
are obtained through agreements such as fire or law enforcement mutual aid;
and
·
The County has received resource requests from
outside its boundaries, except those resources used in normal day-to-day
operations, which are obtained through existing agreements such as fire or law
enforcement mutual aid.
The
three circumstances listed above require an automatic activation of the Santa
Cruz County EOC. Other than these
circumstances, the activation of the Santa Cruz County EOC must be authorized.
The Santa Cruz County Director of Emergency Services, the Deputy
Director of Emergency Services or Deputy EOC Coordinators are authorized to
activate the County EOC.
The
EOC coordinates activities and augments, but does not replace, any County
department’s emergency operations. It
also serves as the communications link between the State's Coastal Region
Emergency Operating Center and the emergency operations centers of the Santa
Cruz Operational Area member jurisdictions.
It provides a single point of contact for information on the emergency
situation, as well as resource needs and priorities.
Activation
involves the notification of emergency response personnel, as well as
notifying the affected public. The
County utilizes an Emergency Response Roster to alert and activate its
emergency response personnel.
Emergency Response Roster
The
Emergency Alert List is to be activated and implemented when an emergency or
disaster affects the County and poses a significant threat to life, property,
and/or the environment. The Santa
Cruz County Director of Emergency Services, the Deputy Director of Emergency
Services or the Deputy EOC Coordinators are authorized to activate the roster.
The Director of Emergency Services, or designee, will determine what
parts of the Emergency Response Roster will be implemented, including what
sections of the Santa Cruz County Emergency Operations Center (EOC) will be
alerted and requested to respond. Critical information and resource requests will be
provided electronically to the OES Coastal Region using the Response
Information Management System (RIMS) or other methods as appropriate.
RIMS Overview
California’s
Response Information Management System (RIMS) is an internet-based system used
to coordinate and manage the State’s response to disasters and emergencies.
This system increases the level of service and efficiency by improving
the ability to respond, manage and coordinate the incident; and improves the
ability to respond to major disasters by communicating directly with the
State’s Office of Emergency Services Coastal Region.
The
following SEMS reports or resource requests will be submitted to the State’s
Office of Emergency Services via RIMS during or after an emergency.
1.
The Incident/Major Incident Report form will
be used to immediately transmit initial information regarding the emergency.
2.
The Situation Summary is a current
assessment of the emergency. The
report identifies major problems and immediate needs.
The report should be submitted to State OES within the first four hours
of an incident and updated continuously every six hours.
3.
The Status Report is submitted every six
hours and provides detailed data and description of the situation specific
functions such as fire, law, utilities, medical and care and shelter.
4.
The Initial Damage Estimate (IDE) includes
the location and description of damages and provides a dollar estimate of the
damage. The IDE is used to
request a State or Federal declaration of emergency and should be updated and
submitted every 12 hours.
5.
The After Action Report summarizes the
response actions and, evaluates the SEMS functions and, if necessary, provides
recommendations for improvement in a specific area. This report should be submitted within 60 days.
6.
Resource Requests are intended to focus
requests of the State to provide specific human, technological or materiel
needs that are unavailable within the county.
Incident
Action Plan
The
Incident Action Plan contains objectives reflecting the overall incident
strategy, specific tactical actions, and supporting information for the next
operational period.
The
plan is developed around a specific operational period, and states the
objectives to be achieved and describe the strategy, tactics, resources, and
support required to achieving the objectives within the time frame of the
incident.
The
Planning/Intelligence Section is responsible for facilitating the action
planning meeting as well as completing and distributing the action plan.
Action plans are developed for a specified operational period, which
may range from a few hours to 24 hours. The
operational period is determined by first establishing a set of priority
actions that need to be performed. A
reasonable time frame is then established for accomplishing those actions.
Incident
Action Plans will vary in content and form depending upon the kind and size of
the incident. The Incident
Command System provides for the use of a systematic planning process, and
provides forms and formats for developing the Incident Action Plan.
The general guidelines for use of an action plan are:
·
Two or more departments are involved
·
A number of organizational elements have been
activated
·
The incident continues into another planning or
operational period
The
Incident Action Plan should provide all agencies with a clear set of
objectives, actions, and assignments for the next logical period of time in
managing the response. It should
also provide the organizational structure and the communications plan required
to manage the incident effectively.
Incident
Action Plans have four main elements:
·
Statement of Objectives
- Statement of what is expected to be achieved.
Objectives must be measurable.
·
Organization - Describes what elements of the SEMS organization
will be in place for the next Operational Period.
·
Tactics and Assignments
- Describes tactics and control operations, including what resources will be
assigned.
·
Supporting Material-
Examples could include a map of the incident, a communications plan, medical
plan, a traffic plan, weather data, special precautions, and a safety message.
Damage Assessment and Situation Reporting
When
a disaster occurs, it is necessary to collect and analyze information
concerning the nature, severity, and extent of the situation, and to report
the information through established channels.
The information will be used to assess the extent of the
disaster/incident and determine the appropriate level of response for the
County.
The
Planning Branch of the County EOC will coordinate compilation of estimates of
the extent and severity of damage and transmit this information to the REOC on
a regular basis during the response period.
Information
needed to determine the operational problems and immediate needs of the
community is critical. The
specific information on dollar amounts of the damage and the economic
consequences of the disaster are also important, but may not be collected
until the operational problems and immediate needs are collected and analyzed
as the County begins the transition to recovery and mitigation operations.
If
the regular telephone lines servicing the County are not operable, alternative
communication systems will be used to establish links to other county,
regional and state emergency organizations.
The
Operational Area Satellite Information System (OASIS) has a low susceptibility
to geologic hazards and is independent of the public telephone system.
OASIS is intended to be a backup to the existing Santa Cruz County
communication resources, which include a countywide radio system, amateur
radio systems, and digital packet radio for data communications.
The two major components
of the system are the satellite communications systems and the high frequency
radio backup.
Emergency
Alert System (EAS)
Alerting
and warning the public may be accomplished through the Emergency Alert System,
special broadcasts, or through other means.
This task will be accomplished with assistance from the Public
Information Officer as deemed necessary.
The County of Santa Cruz is a participant in the Bay Area Local Area
Emergency Alert System (EAS) plan. This
enables use of the telephone, or special equipment installed in the EOC, to
send messages to the public. The
EAS plan is, by reference, included as a part of this plan.
Auxiliary
Communications Service (ACS)/Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services
(RACES)/Amateur Radio Emergency Services
(ARES)
Auxiliary
Communications Service (ACS)/Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Service
(RACES)/Amateur Radio Emergency Services operates on radio amateur frequencies
by authority of the FCC in support of emergency communications.
ACS/RACES/ARES, as a participant in the Operational Area EOC can
augment existing systems, substitute for damaged or inoperable systems, and
establish communications links with otherwise inaccessible areas.
Special consideration will be given to using ACS/RACES/ARES to support
disaster medical care and emergency public information functions.
The Emergency Services Administrator will select the local ACS/RACES
Officer to serve as the County OES contact for all amateur radio
organizations. The State will be
notified of any changes.
The foundation of California’s emergency
planning and response is a statewide mutual aid system which is designed to
ensure that adequate resources, facilities and other support is provided to
jurisdictions whenever their own resources prove to be inadequate to cope with
a given situation. The basis for
the system is the California Disaster and Civil Defense Master Mutual Aid
Agreement, as provided for in the California Emergency Services Act.
This Agreement was developed in 1950 and has been adopted by the state,
all 58 counties and most incorporated cities in the State of California.
The Master Mutual Aid Agreement creates a formal structure wherein each
jurisdiction retains control of its own facilities, personnel and resources,
but may also receive or render assistance to other jurisdictions within the
state. State government is
obligated to provide available resources to assist local jurisdictions in
emergencies.
A statewide mutual aid system, operating
within the framework of the Master Mutual Aid Agreement, allows for the
progressive mobilization of resources to and from emergency response agencies,
local governments, operational areas, regions and the state with the intent to
provide requesting agencies with adequate resources.
The statewide mutual aid systems include several discipline-specific mutual aid systems such as fire and rescue, law, medical and public works. The adoption of SEMS does not alter existing mutual aid systems. These systems work through local government, operation area, regional and state levels consistent with SEMS.
Mutual aid regions are established under the Emergency Services Act. Six mutual aid regions have been established within California. Santa Cruz County is within Region II.
Figure 4:
California Mutual Aid Regions

To facilitate mutual aid, discipline-specific
mutual aid systems work through designated mutual aid coordinators at the
operational area, regional and state levels.
The basic role of a mutual aid coordinator is to receive mutual aid
requests, coordinate the provision of resources from within the
coordinator’s geographic area of responsibility and pass on unfilled
requests to the next level.
Mutual aid requests that
do not fall into one of the discipline-specific systems are handled through
the emergency services mutual aid system by emergency management staff at the
local government, operational area, regional and state levels.
Mutual aid coordinators may function from an
EOC, their normal departmental location or other locations depending on
circumstances. Some incidents
require mutual aid but do not necessitate activation of the affected local
government or operational area EOCs because of the incident’s limited scope
or impact. In such cases, mutual
aid coordinators typically handle requests from their normal work location.
When EOCs are activated, all activated discipline-specific mutual aid
systems should establish coordination and communications with the EOCs.
·
When an operational area
EOC is activated, operational area mutual aid system representatives should be
at the operational area EOC to facilitate coordination and information flow.
·
When the OES Coastal
Region EOC (REOC) is activated, regional mutual aid coordinators should have
representatives in the REOC unless it is mutually agreed that effective
coordination can be accomplished through telecommunications.
State agencies may be requested to send representatives to the REOC to
assist OES regional staff in handling mutual aid requests for disciplines or
functions that do not have designated mutual aid coordinators.
·
When the State Operations
Center (SOC) is activated, state agencies with mutual aid coordination
responsibilities will be requested to send representatives to the SOC.
·
Mutual aid systems
representatives at an EOC may be located in various functional elements
(sections, branches, groups or units) or serve as an agency representative,
depending on how the EOC is organized and the extent to which it is activated.
Volunteer agencies and private agencies may
participate in the mutual aid system along with governmental agencies.
For example, the disaster medical mutual aid system relies heavily on
private sector involvement for medical/health resources.
Some volunteer agencies such as the American Red Cross, Salvation Army
and others are an essential element of the statewide emergency response to
meet the needs of disaster victims. Volunteer
agencies mobilize volunteers and other resources through their own systems.
They also may identify resource needs that are not met within their own
systems that would be requested through the mutual aid system.
Volunteer agencies with extensive involvement in the emergency response
should be represented in the EOC.
Some private agencies have established mutual
aid arrangement to assist other private agencies within their functional area. For example, electric and gas utilities have mutual aid
agreements within their industry and established procedures for coordinating
with governmental EOCs. In some
functional areas, a mix of special district, municipal and private agencies,
provide services. Mutual aid
arrangements may include both governmental and private agencies.
Liaison should be established between
activated EOCs and private agencies involved in a response.
Where there is a need for extensive coordination and information
exchange, private agencies should be represented in activated EOCs at the
appropriate SEMS level.
Incoming mutual aid resources may be received
and processed at several types of facilities including marshaling areas,
mobilization centers and incident facilities.
Each type of facility is described briefly below.
Marshaling Area:
Defined in the Federal Response Plan as an area used for the complete the
assembly of personnel and other resources prior to their being sent directly
to the disaster affected area. Marshaling
areas may be established in other states for a catastrophic incident affecting
California.
Mobilization Center:
Off-incident location at which emergency serve personnel and equipment
are temporarily located pending assignment, release or reassignment.
For major area-wide disasters, mobilization centers may be located in
or on the periphery of the disaster area.
Incident Facilities/Staging Areas:
Incoming resources may be sent to staging areas, other incident
facilities or directly to an incident, depending on the circumstances.
Staging areas are temporary locations at an incident where personnel
and equipment are kept while awaiting tactical assignments.
Mutual aid resources will be provided and
utilized in accordance with the California Master Mutual Aid Agreement.
During a declared emergency, inter-jurisdictional mutual aid will be
coordinated at the County, operational area or mutual aid regional level.
When activated, the Santa Cruz County EOC
coordinates mutual aid requests on behalf of County departments and special
districts. Requests should
specify, at a minimum:
·
Number and qualifications
of personnel needed
·
Type and amount of
equipment needed, equipment that will be provided locally
·
Required reporting time
and location
·
Reporting procedures
·
Estimated duration of
assignment
·
Local transportation
requirements; equipment that will be provided locally
Continuity
of County Government
A
major disaster could result in the death or injury of key government
officials, the partial or complete destruction of established seats of
government, and the destruction of public and private records essential to
continued operation of government.
Governments
at all levels are responsible for providing continuity of effective leadership
and authority, as well as the direction of emergency response and recovery
functions. The California
Government Code and the Constitution of California provide the authority for
state and local government to reconstitute itself in the event incumbents are
unable to serve pursuant to Government Code, Title 2, Article 15, commencing
with section 8635.F
Government
at all levels is responsible for providing continuous, effective leadership
and authority under all aspects of emergency management.
Under California’s concept of mutual aid, local officials remain in
control of their jurisdiction’s emergency operations while others may
provide additional resources upon request.
A key aspect of this control is the ability to communicate official
requests, situation reports and emergency information throughout any disaster
a community might face.
Article
15 of the California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 of Division 1 or Title
2 of the Government Code) provides the authority, as well as the procedures to
be employed to ensure continued functioning of political subdivisions within
the State of California. Article
15 provides for the succession of officers who head departments responsible
for maintaining law and order, or in furnishing public services related to
health and safety.
The
first step in assuring continuity of government is to have personnel who are
authorized and prepared to carry out emergency actions for government in the
event of a natural, technological or other disaster.
Article 15, Section 8638 of the
Emergency Services Act authorizes governing bodies to designate and appoint
three standby officers for each member of the governing body.
Chapter 2.26.050 of the Santa Cruz County Code, Succession of
Director’s Powers and Duties, states:
A. The following persons are designated, in
the order named, to succeed to all the powers and duties of the Director of
Emergency Services during the absence or unavailability of the Director and of
any other persons who are hereby designated with prior authority to succeed to
such powers and duties:
1.
Assistant County Administrative Officer;
2.
Deputy Director of Emergency Services;
3.
Chairperson of the Board of Supervisors;
4.
Vice-chairperson of the Board of Supervisors;
5.
Any other member of the Board of Supervisors.
Article
15, Section 8637 of the Emergency Services Act authorizes political
subdivisions to provide for the succession of officers (department heads)
having duties related to law and order and or health and safety.
Article
15, Section 8643 of the Emergency Services Act describes the duties of a
governing body during emergencies as follows:
Each
department within the County should identify, maintain and protect its own
essential records. Vital records
are defined as those records that are essential to:
Emergency
Management Plan Maintenance
The
plan may
be modified as a result of post-incident analyses and/or post-exercise
critiques. It may be modified if responsibilities, procedures, laws,
rules, or regulations pertaining to emergency management and operations
change. The Emergency Services
Administrator, County Disaster Council and County Administrative Officer will
review modifications to the Santa Cruz County Emergency Plan prior to
recommendation to the Board of Supervisors for final approval.
Every
four years, the entire emergency management plan will be reviewed, updated,
republished, and redistributed. The
Santa Cruz County Office of Emergency Services will maintain records of
revision to this plan.
Training
The
Santa Cruz County's Office of Emergency Services (OES) will inform County
departments of training opportunities associated with emergency management.
Departments with responsibilities under this plan must ensure their
personnel are properly trained to carry out these responsibilities.
County
OES will ensure that emergency response personnel can demonstrate and
maintain, to the level deemed appropriate, the minimum SEMS performance
objectives as contained in the Approved Course of Instruction (ACI) Syllabus
referenced in the SEMS regulations.
County OES is responsible for planning and conducting emergency exercises for Santa Cruz County. Exercises will be conducted on a periodic basis, but not less than annually, to maintain readiness. Exercises will include as many County departments as practical. County OES will document exercises by conducting a critique, and using the information obtained from the critiquing to revise the Emergency Management Plan (EMP).
The
following provides emergency authorities for conducting and/or supporting
emergency management:
|
Federal
|
·
Federal Civil Defense Act of 1950 (Public Law
920, as amended). ·
Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act of
1988 (Public Law 93-288, as amended). ·
Army Corps of Engineers Flood Fighting (Public
Law 84-99). ·
Federal Communications Corporation (RACES) ·
Federal Response Plan |
|
State |
·
California Emergency Services Act (Chapter 7 of
Division 1,Title 2 of the Government Code). ·
Natural Disaster Assistance Act (Chapter 7.5 of
Division 1, Title 2 of the Government Code), commencing with section
8680. ·
Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS)
Regulations (Chapter 1 of Division 2 of Title 19 of the California Code
of Regulations) and (California Government Code b8607 et sec). ·
Hazardous Materials Area Plan Regulations
(Chapter 4 of Division 2, Title 19, Article 3, b2720-2728
of the California Code of Regulations) and (California Health and Safety
Code, Division 20, Chapter 6.95, Section 25503.5) ·
California Department of Water Resources Flood
Control (California Water Code b128). ·
Orders and regulations that may be selectively
promulgated by the Governor during a STATE OF EMERGENCY. ·
Orders and regulations, which may be selectively
promulgated by the Governor to take affect upon the Existence of a STATE
OF WAR. |
|
Local |
·
Emergency organization and disaster procedures
ordinance No. 2532 adopted February 21, 1978 by the Santa Cruz County
Board of Supervisors. ·
Resolution adopting the California Master Mutual
Aid Agreement, adopted July 1958 by the Santa Cruz County Board of
Supervisors. ·
Santa Cruz County Code Title 2, Chapter 2.26
Emergency services. ·
SEMS Memorandum of Understanding for the Santa
Cruz Operational Area adopted October 25, 1994 by the Board of
Supervisors. |
General
Santa
Cruz County is located on the central coast of California in the southern
portion of the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services’ Coastal Region.
It extends from the Pacific Ocean on the west, to the crest of the
Santa Cruz Mountains on the east, the Pajaro River on the south and to the San
Mateo County line on the north. It
is adjacent to Santa Clara, San Mateo, San Benito and Monterey Counties.
Santa Cruz County covers an area of 441
square miles and has a population of approximately 245,201 inhabitants
according to U.S. Census Bureau, July 1999 data.
Agriculture, tourism and rapidly expanding technology, manufacturing
and service sectors are the major local industries.
There
are two major highways that run through the County; State Highway 1, which
runs north and south along the coastline and State Highway 17, which runs
northeast through the Santa Cruz Mountains to the Santa Clara Valley. There
are several secondary highways; State Highway 9 connects Santa Cruz and the
San Lorenzo Valley to Los Gatos and Saratoga in Santa Clara County.
The communities of the Pajaro Valley are connected to the City of
Gilroy in South Santa Clara County via State Highway 152 and to San Benito
County by State Highway 129.
The
County’s single rail line originates in Monterey County and roughly follows
the coastline and terminates at the Lone Star Cement plant in the community of
Davenport. This line is owned by
Union Pacific Railroad and is utilized on a limited basis to carry lumber,
coal, iron oxide and gypsum inbound and cement outbound.
The
Watsonville Municipal Airport serves the general aviation community and
supports modest commercial operations. It
provides the only fixed runway facility in the County capable of handling
large aircraft and is an essential facility in disaster response.
The
County’s entire seaward boundary is included in the Monterey Bay National
Marine Sanctuary. The Sanctuary
enjoys special protections to preserve the unique marine environment and
species of the Bay.
Santa
Cruz County, with its varying topography, mix of urban and rural areas,
rapidly growing permanent, transient and recreational population is subject to
a wide variety of impacts from various hazards and threats. There are three broad categories of hazards, which include:
natural, technological and domestic security threats:
·
Earthquakes
·
Landslides
·
Floods
·
Wildland fires
·
Extreme weather/storm
·
Tsunami
Several
active and potentially active
earthquake faults are located within Santa Cruz County including the San
Andreas, San Gregorio, Corralitos and Zayante Faults as well as numerous fault
complexes and branches of these major faults.
Even
a moderate earthquake occurring in or near the areas mentioned above could
result in deaths, casualties, property and environmental damage, as well as
disruption of normal economic, government and community services and
activities. The effects could be
aggravated by collateral incidents such as fires, flooding, hazardous material
spills, utility disruptions, landslides, and infrastructure collapse.
After any significant earthquake, there may be short and long-term
economic impacts to both the public and private
sectors. Individuals can lose
wages due to businesses inability to function because of damaged goods or
facilities. Historically, many
small businesses fail after a major earthquake due to direct loss of income
and inability to remain financially viable after the recovery period.
Governments as well, suffer loss of tax revenues to support essential
services as property values are reduced and sales and other related taxes may
take years to recover to their pre-disaster levels.
Under severe ground acceleration (ground shaking) and liquefaction, Geographic Information System (GIS) analysis reveals that in Santa Cruz County; 5% of the structures or approximately 3,884; 14% of all County roads (303 miles), and a number of essential facilities including: 6 fire stations, 9 schools, and 18 churches, all lie within ½ mile of a fault zone and could suffer major damage.
Figure
6:
Major Earthquake Fault Zones

Figure 7:
Potential Liquefaction Zones
In
a strong earthquake, it is extremely likely that landslides will occur
simultaneously, depending on ground conditions, or even years later when
slideplanes reactivated by the earthquake are set in motion by apparently
unrelated events such as heavy rains. Santa
Cruz County is extremely susceptible to landslides due to the topography and
geological soil characteristics. Based
on GIS survey analysis, 7.5% of the developed parcels (5,523), 11% of roads
(233 miles), 17% of Sheriff’s facilities (2), along with 35% of non-County
fire stations (3), are within or intersected by known landslide-prone areas.
Figure 8:
Potential Landslide Areas

Santa
Cruz County’s geography focuses rainfall into four primary watershed basins,
the San Lorenzo River, Soquel Creek, Aptos Creek and Corralitos/Salsipuedes
Creeks. While the
Corralitos/Salsipuedes watershed feeds into the Pajaro River, and can be a
crucial element in exposure to flooding of the Pajaro in the Watsonville area,
the Pajaro’s drainage is predominantly from Southern Santa Clara, San Benito
and Monterey Counties.
Geographically,
the San Lorenzo, Soquel, Aptos and Corralitos/Salsipuedes drainages are
relatively short and steep compared to the Pajaro river drainage system; and
have significantly shorter flow periods and therefore, shorter warning times
for peak flow incidents.
Under
a widespread heavy rain scenario (accumulation of .30 inches of rain per hour
or more), severe flooding is likely in low-lying areas within a basin.
Based on the 100 year flood plain (FEMA Zone A), 11 % of the developed
parcels (8,359) 5% of roads (103 miles), 25% of the sheriff’s facilities
(3), 30% of the fire stations (7), 9% of schools (16) and approximately 15% of
the churches (32) are located within or intersected by the 100 year flood
plain.
Widespread
fires, both in rural and urban environments, pose a major threat to Santa Cruz
County. Based on a Geographic
Information System (GIS) fire hazard analysis, 5% of the developed parcels in
the County (3,538), 8.0% of roads (178 miles), 5% of the CDF fire stations
(2), and approximately 4% of the churches are located within a fire-hazard
area.
Figure 10:
Severe Fire Hazard Zones

The
San Gregorio fault is a northwest-southeast trending fault, which begins just
offshore in Monterey Bay roughly paralleling the coastline for approximately
100 miles in a northerly direction. Although
relatively little studied until recently, the fault is thought to be the
source of several significant earthquakes in historical times.
The Cities of Santa Cruz, Capitola, and Watsonville as well as the
residential communities along the coastline would be significantly impacted
from a tsunami created by an earthquake on this fault.
A
tsunami generated by a Richter magnitude 6.8+ earthquake on the San Gregorio
fault could arrive just minutes after the initial shock. The lack of warning time from such a nearby event will result
in higher casualties than if it were a distant tsunami where the Tsunami
Warning System for the Pacific Ocean could warn threatened coastal areas in
time for evacuation.
The
County is actively participating with a variety of local, state and national
organizations in developing a tsunami threat assessment analysis along with a
map of coastal inundation zones. When
the work is complete, the resulting Tsunami Plan will be included by reference
as a part of this plan.
Figure
11:
Potential Tsunami Runup Areas
·
Hazardous materials release
·
Transportation accidents
·
Utilities failure or damage
·
Dam failure
Hazardous
materials are formulated, used and transported throughout Santa Cruz County.
Commercial, agricultural and industrial use of hazardous materials
provides an opportunity for accidental release.
Because the local economy depends largely on the agricultural industry,
the threat level and the possibility of a hazardous materials release cannot
be ignored. There are a number of
local industrial and manufacturing firms, which produce fertilizers,
pesticides, and other chemical agents. These
products are also locally stored and transported to other parts of the region
on local roadways, thus presenting a threat to public health, safety and the
environment.
The
Hazardous Materials Area Plan, which addresses this issue, is, by reference,
included as a part of this Plan.
There
are two major highways that run through the County; State Highway 1 and State
Highway 17. There are also other
secondary yet heavy-traffic routes such as State Highways 9, 129, and 152.
Statistically, all of these routes combined account for 54% of the
total highway accidents in the County. Should
a major transportation incident occur, which could impact the County, it will
most probably be along these transportation corridors.
These are:
The
three earth fill dams in or affecting Santa Cruz County are Sempervirens Dam,
located on Sempervirens Creek, a tributary of East Wadell Creek in Big Basin
State Park; Newell Creek Dam, located on Newell Creek, a tributary of the San
Lorenzo River; and Hernandez Dam, located on the San Benito River, sixty-five
miles south of Hollister.
A
dam failure may cause loss of life, damage to property, displacement of people
residing in the inundation path, as well as other threats.
Damage to utilities in the inundation areas could also impact support
systems in communities outside the immediate hazard area.
A catastrophic dam failure, depending on the size of the dam and
affected population downstream, could exceed the response capability of local
governments.
The
Dam threat analysis is planned for completion during 2003 and will be included
by reference as a part of this plan
·
Civil Unrest
·
Terrorism
The
effects of a civil unrest are varied and are usually based upon the type,
severity, scope and duration of the disturbance.
The effects include traffic congestion or gridlock, illegal assemblies,
disruption of utility service, property damage, injuries and potential loss of
life.
According
to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) publication Principle Threats Facing Communities and Local Emergency Management
Coordinators, most terrorist activities are bombing attacks.
Principal targets include military personnel and facilities, commercial
establishments, and federal government buildings and property.
The
effects of terrorist activities can vary significantly, depending on the type,
severity, scope, and duration of the activity.
Terrorist activities may result in disruption of utility services,
property damage, injuries and the loss of lives.
To
date, terrorism has been targeted primarily against United States interests
abroad. However, the September
11, 2001 attacks, anthrax mailings and the Oklahoma City bombing are reminders
that terrorist attacks may occur anywhere in the United States.
Although no confirmed terrorist attacks have occurred in Santa Cruz
County, the threat remains valid. The
County Office of Emergency Services is actively working with surrounding
Counties, State and Federal authorities in a reanalysis of terrorism response
plans given recent events. The
revised Terrorism Plan is projected to be completed during 2002 and will be
included by reference as a part of this plan.
The
public's response to any emergency is based on an understanding of the nature
of the emergency, the potential hazards, the likely response of emergency
services, and knowledge of what individuals and groups should do to increase
their chances of survival and recovery. Public
awareness and education prior to an emergency or disaster will directly affect
Santa Cruz County's emergency response and recovery efforts.
Santa
Cruz County’s Office of Emergency Services (OES) will make emergency
preparedness information from local, state and federal sources available to
the citizens of Santa Cruz County. Furthermore, the Office of Emergency
Services will provide special emphasis on specific hazards periodically
throughout the calendar year, aiding in the disaster preparation and education
of the communities within the Santa Cruz County.
These
plans are specific to various agencies, functions or threats and typically
contain specific policies and standard operating procedures, checklists, maps
and charts, forms, contact lists, legal references and other resource material
designed to provide users with the basic considerations and actions necessary
for effective emergency response for the specific hazard, incident or
function. These plans may work in
concert with or may amend this plan when activated. They are, by reference, included as Appendices to this Plan.
· Coastal Incident Response Plan
· Coroner’s Mutual Aid Plan
· Dam Inundation Plan
· Disaster Medical Services Plan
· Emergency Alert System Plan
· Emergency Manager’s Mutual Aid Plan
· Energy Contingency Plan
· Fire Mutual Aid Agreement
· Flood Mitigation Plan
· Hazardous Materials Area Plan
· Health Mutual Aid Plan
·