Integrating and Coordinating Defense Support to Civil Authorities

Transcription

Integrating and Coordinating Defense Support to Civil Authorities
CHATHAM COUNTY
EMERGENCY OPERATIONS
PLAN
SUPPORT ANNEX G
INTEGRATING AND COORDINATING
DEFENSE SUPPORT TO
CIVIL AUTHORITIES
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RECORD OF CHANGES
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Removed Foreword from document.
Updated headers and footers
Changed Assistant Director to Deputy Director – Global Change
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ACRONYMS
CEMA
Chatham Emergency Management Agency
CBRNE
Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, Explosive
CERF-P
Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear Enhanced Response Force
Package
CFR
Code of Federal Regulations
CST
Civil Support Team
Deputy
CEMA Deputy Director
Director
CEMA Director
DOD
Department of Defense
DSCA
Defense Support to Civil Authorities
EOC
Emergency Operations Center
EOD
Explosive Ordinance Disposal
EOP
Emergency Operations Plan
ESF
Emergency Support Function
GA DOD
Georgia Department of Defense
GA ARNG
Georgia Army National Guard
GA ANG
Georgia Air National Guard
GEMA
Georgia Emergency Management Agency
GA EOP
Georgia Emergency Operations Plan
GSDF
Georgia State Defense Force
HRF
Homeland Response Force
IAP
Incident Action Plan
JFHQ-GA
Joint Forces Headquarters – Georgia
JOC
Joint Operations Center
LNO
Liaison Officer
OSC
Operations Section Chief
POC
Point of Contact
POD
Point of Distribution
RFA
Request for Assistance
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SAR
Search and Rescue
SOC
State Operations Center
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DEFINITIONS
The Georgia Department of Defense (GA DOD) consists of four distinct branches; the
Joint Forces Headquarters – Georgia (JFHQ-GA), Georgia Army National Guard (GA
ARNG), Georgia Air National Guard (GA ANG), and the Georgia State Defense Force
(GSDF). Each of the branches can support the 10 essential capabilities for Domestic
Operations: aviation / airlift, command and control, Chemical, Biological,
Radiological, Nuclear, Explosive (CBRNE) response, engineering, medical,
communications, transportation, security, logistics, and maintenance. GA DOD is
capable of operating as the lead for other National Guard personnel from other
States, Active Component and US Army Reserve organizations (Title X personnel) in
a Dual Status Command organization to maintain command and control of all military
forces within the State of Georgia.
The JFHQ-GA is a Joint component comprised of Army and Air National Guard
personnel. This organization coordinates Defense Support to Civil Authorities (DSCA)
in direct support of the Georgia Emergency Management Agency (GEMA). The
organizations major function is to coordinate with GEMA and provide Command and
Control through the Joint Operations Center (JOC).
The GA ARNG is comprised of more than 12,000 “Citizen Soldiers” who perform duty
in some 60 different armories located across the state. These Soldiers are assigned
to a wide variety of units, and equipped with the latest equipment and technology. The
types of units in the GA ARNG include infantry, field artillery, transportation, engineer,
military police, logistics, communications, maintenance, medical, aviation, and chemical/
biological/ radiological/ nuclear and explosive (CBRNE) response forces. GA ARNGs
rotary wing aviation consists of Blackhawks, Chinooks, and Lakotas.
The GA ANG consists of 3,000 Airmen and officers assigned to two flying wings and six
geographically separated units across Georgia. These units have state of the art training
and equipment and perform the following type missions: airlift, airborne surveillance,
airborne command and control, initial area assessment, airspace management,
communications operations installation, engineering, CBRNE, medical, security, and
support.
GA DOD has additional specialized capabilities which include the National Guard
Response Force which acts as a State and regional immediate response force capable
of conducting DSCA tasks in support of multiple states with a mobilization timeline of
100 personnel in 4 hours and the entire organization of 500 in 24 hours without prior
notification. The Civil Support Team (CST) is a small 22 person specialized organization
proficient in CBRNE response capable of responding in 3 hours. The Homeland
Response Force (HRF) is a regional support element capable of performing Command
and Control of multiple CST teams and several Chemical, Biological, Radiological,
Nuclear Enhanced Response Force Package (CERF-P) which can respond in 12 hours.
The CERF-P is capable of performing Search and Recovery, Medical and
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Decontamination Operations in a “Dirty” environment composed of nearly 200
personnel who can respond in 6 hours.
The GSDF is an all-volunteer, structured, uniformed, and unsalaried branch of GA DOD
authorized by Georgia law. The purpose of the GSDF is to augment the Georgia
National Guard by providing trained volunteers to assist in activities such as disaster
relief efforts and humanitarian causes. The GSDF is organized into military units and
has various levels of training in medical support, ground search and rescue, traffic and
crowd control, and physical security.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Record of Changes .......................................................................................................... i
Acronyms and Definitions................................................................................................ iii
Table of Contents ............................................................................................................ v
I.
Introduction ........................................................................................................... 1
II.
Purpose ................................................................................................................ 1
III.
Scope ................................................................................................................... 1
IV.
Authorities............................................................................................................. 1
V.
Assumptions ......................................................................................................... 2
VI.
Implementation ..................................................................................................... 3
VII. Concept of Operations.......................................................................................... 3
A.
Immediate Response Authority .................................................................. 3
B.
Mutual Aid Agreements.............................................................................. 4
C.
Requests for Assistance (RFAs) ................................................................ 4
D.
GA DOD Capabilities ................................................................................. 4
E.
Communications ........................................................................................ 5
1.
General ........................................................................................... 5
2.
Communications Methods ............................................................... 5
F.
Public Information ...................................................................................... 5
G.
Training and Exercise ................................................................................ 5
VIII. Responsibilities..................................................................................................... 6
A.
CEMA Director ........................................................................................... 6
B.
CEMA Deputy Director............................................................................... 6
C.
EOC Operations Section Chief. ................................................................. 6
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D.
IX.
GA DOD Liaison Officer (LNO) .................................................................. 6
Annex Management and Maintenance ................................................................. 7
A.
Executive Agent ......................................................................................... 7
B.
Types and Changes ................................................................................... 7
C.
Coordination and Approval ........................................................................ 7
D.
Notice of Change ....................................................................................... 7
E.
Distribution ................................................................................................. 7
APPENDICES
Appendix 1
GA DOD RFA-Tasking Flow Chart ..................................................RTFC-1
Appendix 2
GA DOD Resources List ...................................................................... RL-1
Appendix 3
Potential/Anticipated RFAs to GA DOD ............................................. PAR-1
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I.
II.
III.
IV.
INTRODUCTION
A.
The Governor of Georgia is empowered by both the U.S. and Georgia
State Constitutions to execute the laws of the State and command the
units from the Georgia Department of Defense (GA DOD), when serving in
State status. The GA DOD consists of the Georgia Army National Guard
and Air National Guard (GA ANG), and the Georgia State Defense Forces
(GSDF). Although the primary responsibility of the GA DOD is to provide
forces to their respective Federal services for fighting the Nation’s wars,
they are particularly well suited for and provide the vast majority of
Defense Support to Civil Authorities (DSCA) during emergencies and
disasters.
B.
When activated, the GA DOD is not constrained by the same limitations as
Federal troops. It has access to military equipment and provides an
organized, well-trained pool of manpower thoroughly familiar with local
conditions and geography.
PURPOSE
A.
The purpose of this Support Annex is to establish procedures used by
Chatham County to integrate and coordinate GA DOD assets and
resources to prepare for, respond to, and/or recover from, an emergency
and/or disaster.
B.
This document can also be utilized by GA DOD when developing
contingency plans and support packages for emergency response efforts
in Chatham County.
SCOPE
A.
With the exception of immediate response authorities and support
provided under mutual aid agreements, DSCA does not include a “First
Responder” capability.
B.
GA DOD resources may not be immediately available due to the
Department’s primary mission, and local authorities must be prepared to
conduct the initial response with limited GA DOD assistance. GA DOD
assets may require some time to mobilize, train, and deploy to a Request
for Assistance (RFA).
AUTHORITIES
A.
Authorities: This Annex is developed under the authority of the Chairman
of the Board of the County Commission, Chatham County, Georgia; and
the Director of the Chatham Emergency Management Agency, Chatham
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County, Georgia. This Annex supersedes all similar and previous
versions to date.
B.
Chatham Emergency Management Agency (CEMA) has primary
responsibility for compliance with provisions of the Chatham County
Emergency Operations Plan (EOP), and Disaster Recovery Plan;
therefore will have primary responsibility for ensuring execution of
activities outlined in this Annex and supporting documents.
C.
This Annex is developed in accordance with the legal references below
1.
2.
3.
V.
FEDERAL.
a.
National Response Framework, January 2008
b.
Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Title 32, Part 185 –
Military Support to Civil Authorities
c.
Department of Defense Directive 3025.1, Military Support to
Civil Authorities, January 15, 1993.
STATE:
a.
Constitution of the State of Georgia
b.
Georgia Emergency Management Act of 1981, as amended
c.
Georgia Emergency Operations Plan (GA EOP), Support
Annex DSCA
d.
Georgia National Guard Emergency Response Support
Capability Handbook, June 13, 2008.
COUNTY:
a.
EOP, 2012.
b.
Chapter 4, Article III, of the Chatham County Code,
Emergency Management, March 24, 2012
ASSUMPTIONS
A.
GA DOD units will not respond to requests for assistance directly from civil
authorities (other than GEMA) except to save human life, prevent extreme
human suffering, or to prevent destruction of property (Immediate
Response Authority).
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VI.
B.
Activation and use of large scale GA DOD Resources by civil authorities
requires a State of Emergency or Disaster Declaration by the Governor.
C.
The Governor retains operational authority over all GA DOD forces.
D.
Civil authorities making a request for GA DOD resources must have
exhausted local resources, or the required resources are not available
locally.
E.
All requests for GA DOD assistance from Chatham County must be
processed through CEMA and GEMA.
F.
State activated GA DOD assets are deployed in a State-funded status and
do not necessarily have to be in a State of Emergency or Disaster
Declaration to support.
G.
All military forces, either State or Federal, remain under and follow their
military chain of command.
IMPLEMENTATION
A.
The primary responsibility for disaster relief rests with local and/or State
governments, and with those Federal agencies designated by statute.
B.
When an emergency situation is so severe and widespread, and an
effective response and support is beyond the capacity of local and State
civilian agencies, and civil resources have been exhausted, assistance
may be requested from the GA DOD.
C.
This Annex serves as a guidance document for working with the GA DOD
once an RFA or Mutual-Aid request has been issued.
VII. CONCEPT OF OPERATIONS
A.
Immediate Response Authority: Imminently serious conditions resulting
from any civil emergency may require immediate action to save lives,
prevent human suffering, or mitigate property damage. When such
conditions exist and time does not permit approval from higher
headquarters, local military commanders and responsible officials from all
DOD components and agencies (State and Federal), are authorized to
take necessary action to respond to RFAs. This response must be
consistent with the Posse Comitatus Act (18 USC § 1385), which
generally prohibits Federal military personnel and Federalized national
guard personnel from acting in a law enforcement capacity (e.g., search,
seizures, arrests) within the United States, except where expressly
authorized by the United States Constitution or United States Congress.
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B.
Mutual Aid Agreements: GA DOD units may be authorized to enter into
Mutual Aid Agreements with local civil authorities. Mutual-aid agreements
are between agencies, organizations, and jurisdictions that provide a
mechanism to quickly obtain emergency assistance in the form of
personnel, equipment, materials, and other associated services. The
165th Airlift Wing Fire Department of the GA ANG is an active ESF-04
(Fire Response), Partner within Chatham County, and has an agreement
to provide firefighting assets to civilian fire departments when practical.
C.
Requests for Assistance: When requesting assistance from GA DOD, a
RFA will be generated from the County Emergency Operations Center
(EOC) to the State Operations Center (SOC). The RFA from the EOC
should be mission specific, not a request for specific equipment or
personnel (unless needed to clarify the request) including the 5Ws and
Point of Contact (POC) information.
1.
Examples of mission specific requests include:
a.
Provide air or land transportation for: (type of equipment or
number of personnel with pickup and drop-off points and
time for mission execution).
b.
Provide security and traffic control for: (a specific area,
and/or jurisdiction for an estimated time period).
c.
Establish a mobile communications station: (outlining the
communications capability needed and duration)
d.
Establish and operate a mass feeding station.(defining the
number of people to fed, location, and number of times per
day as well as the length of time required to be in operation)
e.
2.
D.
Establish a water purification station (with estimated gallons
of water / day required, location, and duration of mission).
See Appendix 1, GA DOD RFA Tasking Flow Chart.
GA DOD Capabilities. DSCA may include but is not limited to: backup/supplemental communications, transportation (fixed wing and rotary
wing air and ground), mobile control tower operations, maintenance,
emergency feeding, area security, Point of Distribution (POD) support,
emergency equipment, logistical support, medical care and water supply,
power generation, search and rescue, CBRNE / decontamination
assistance, command and control, engineering support, and limited
firefighting assistance. See Appendix 2, GA DOD Capability Force
Support Packages (October 2014).
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E.
Communications.
1.
General: Communications during any emergency event may be a
challenge. Mass communications networks including radio and
land line communications methods routinely used by both
government and private agencies may not be operational or
available. Communications to, from, and between units/agencies in
the field may be difficult. Because of this possibility, both
government and private agencies should maintain redundant
communications capabilities with the County EOC. GA DOD may
be requested to augment established/damaged communications
networks.
2.
Communications Methods: Regardless of the location of the
County EOC, available communications resources will be
coordinated through ESF-02 (Communications) and may include:
a.
Commercial Land Line Telephone
b.
Commercial Satellite Telephone
c.
800 MHz Radio
d.
UHF Radio
e.
VHF Radio
f.
HF and other Ham Radio Frequencies (ARES)
g.
Internet Connectivity
h.
Message Courier
i.
Commercial Radio and Television Stations
F.
Public Information: All information released pertaining GA DOD
operational support to Chatham County during an event will be
coordinated through the Joint Information Center.
G.
Training and Exercises: During exercises and other emergency planning
activities, the use of GA DOD resources should be considered. See
Appendix 3, Potential/Anticipated RFAs to GA DOD. GA DOD can
participate in DSCA exercises. However, because of their long range
planning and scheduling of training, coordination for full scale exercises
should be done two years out for a robust size force. Their staffs have
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more flexibility and can participate in everything from seminars to
functional exercises for shorter range requirements.
VIII. RESPONSIBILITIES
A.
CEMA Director (Director): In the event of an EOC activation, the Director
will make notifications to County Commissioners as required, the County
Manager, and appropriate County Department Heads. The CEMA Director
serves as a liaison and advisor to the Command Policy Group. His role is
to serve as the EOC Manager, oversee EOC functions, collect incidentrelated forecasts and/or information and relay information, along with his
professional recommendations, to the Command Policy Group for
decisions and declarations. The Director also has signature authority and
responsibility to issues and/or requests through the County and GEMA.
During times of community crisis or major events, the CEMA Director may
serve as the lead spokesperson to the community and primary subject
matter expert in relation to the County’s emergency management function.
B.
CEMA Deputy Director (Deputy): The Deputy provides the supervisory
role across EOC functional elements. He/she takes recommendations
from the CEMA Duty Officer and determines EOC activations, operations
and terminations through consultation with the CEMA Director. In the
event activation of the EOC is ordered, the Deputy will make notifications
to CEMA Staff and the GEMA Area V Field Coordinator. The Deputy’s
primary role is to serve as the EOC Operations Section Chief and
Assistant EOC Manager. He/She will take the responsibilities of the CEMA
Director when required.
C.
EOC Operations Section Chief (OSC): OSC manages the incident’s EOC
response activities and implements the Incident Action Plan (IAP) for the
appropriate operational period. This includes prioritizing and allocating
resources and approving RFAs to GEMA for additional resource support.
The OSC confers with the GA DOD LNO to determine the availability of
GA DOD resources, and provides any required pre-tasking/mission
coordination.
D.
GA DOD LNO: The GA DOD LNO is CEMA’s primary POC with GA DOD,
and provides direct support to Chatham County during emergency
situations in which the EOC is activated. This position has the
responsibility of coordinating the RFAs to the SOC and GA DOD’s JOC
affecting GA DOD resources. The GA DOD LNO is primarily staffed by
the 165th Airlift Wing, GA ANG, Savannah. Ga DOD will augment the
165th Military Airlift Wing LNO with an Army LNO during large scale DSCA
missions.
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IX.
ANNEX MANAGEMENT AND MAINTENANCE
A.
Executive Agent: CEMA is the executive agent for Annex management
and maintenance. This Annex and supporting documents will be updated
periodically as required to incorporate new directives and changes based
on lessons learned from exercises and actual events. This section
establishes procedures for interim changes and full updates of the Annex.
B.
Types and Changes: Changes include additions of new or supplementary
material and deletions. No proposed change should contradict or override
authorities or other plans contained in statute, order, or regulation.
C.
Coordination and Approval: Any department or agency with assigned
responsibilities within the Annex may propose a change to the plan.
CEMA is responsible for coordinating all proposed modifications to the
Annex with primary agencies, support agencies and other stakeholders.
CEMA will coordinate review and approval for proposed modifications as
required.
D.
Notice of Change: After coordination has been accomplished, including
receipt of the necessary signed approval supporting the final change
language, CEMA will issue an official Notice of Change. The notice will
specify the date, number, subject, purpose, background, and action
required, and provide the change language on one or more numbered and
dated insert pages to replace the modified pages in the EOP, Annex, or
supporting documents. Once published, the modifications will be
considered part of the EOP for operational purposes pending a formal
revision and re-issuance of the entire document. Interim changes can be
further modified or updated using the above process.
E.
Distribution: CEMA will distribute the Notice of Change to all participating
agencies. Notice of Change to other organizations will be provided upon
request. Re-issuance of the individual annexes or the entire EOP will take
place as required. Working toward continuous improvement, CEMA is
responsible for an annual review and update of the EOP to include related
annexes, and a complete revision every four years (or more frequently if
the County Commission of GEMA deems necessary). The review and
update will consider lessons learned and best practices identified during
exercises and responses to actual events, and incorporate new
information technologies. CEMA will distribute revised EOP documents for
the purpose of interagency review and concurrence.
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GA DOD RFA TASKING FLOW CHART
APPENDIX 1
GA DOD RFA TASKING FLOW CHART
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GA DOD RFA TASKING FLOW CHART
RFA TASKING FLOW CHART
COUNTY EOC
OPERATIONS
RFA
GEMA
REGION 5
RFA
GEMA
SOC
COORDINATION
AUTHORITY
RFA
RFA
(WARNING ORDER)
COUNTY EOC
GaDOD LNO
GEORGIA
DOD
RFA
(WARNING ORDER)
DOD MISSION
TASKINGS
JTF-GA
DOD
ASSET
RFA
(ORDERS)
DOD
ASSET
DOD
ASSET
DOD
ASSET
DOD
ASSET
DOD
ASSET
CHATHAM COUNTY
AREA OF OPERATIONS
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APPENDIX 2
GA DOD RESOURCES LIST
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GA DOD RESOURCES LIST
The following is a list of Emergency Response Support Capabilities as provided by GA
DOD as of February 2015:
PERSONNEL - Approximately 14,000 National Guard and State Defense Forces with
the following capabilities:
 Chaplain
 Public Affairs
 Riot/Crowd Control
 Search and Rescue
 Security- Armed and Unarmed
 Traffic Control
 National Guard Response Force (100 in 4 hrs; 500 in 24 hrs)
 Civil Support Team Response (initial CBRNE of 22 in 3 hrs)
 CERFP (follow-on CBRNE), 400 in 12 hrs
TRANSPORTATION
AIR:
 Air Traffic Control
 Boeing 707 Communications and Surveillance / E-8C JSTARS
 C-130 Hercules Cargo Aircraft
 CH-47 Cargo Helicopter
 UH-60 Black Hawk Medevac Helicopter w/ hoist
 UH-60 Black Hawk Utility Helicopter
 LUH-72 Lakota Light Utility Helicopter
GROUND:
 Busses (44 and 30 Passenger)
 Dump Trucks
 Fuel Trailers, 5000 gal
 Fuel Trucks (1200 and 600 gal)
 Fuel Blivets, 500 gal
 Heavy Expanded Mobility Tactical Trucks
 Heavy Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheeled Vehicle / 2 seat Cargo and 4 seat /
Tactical Ambulance
 Light Medium Tactical Vehicle
 Semi-Trucks and Trailers
 Vans / Sedans
 Vehicle maintenance
- Fixed Facilities (Various Locations)
- Mobile Maintenance Teams (Limited Number and Capabilities)
 Wreckers
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

Water Buffalos (400 gal)
Fuel Trucks (5000 gal, 2500 gal, 500 gal)
OTHER SERVICES:
 Chaplain
 Ground Firefighting (Limited Savannah Airport Based)
 Air Firefighting (Bambi Bucket)
 Housing (billeting on CNGC-Marietta, GGTC-Fort Stewart, CRTC-Savannah)
 Armories (temporary warming / holding shelters)
 MILITARY/LEA (Limited Support Available)
 Parachute Delivery
COMMUNICATIONS
 Air traffic control
 FM
 HF
 Limited Computer and Local Area Network
 Radio
 Satellite
 UHF
 VHF
 Wire
FOOD/FEEDING SUPPORT
 Fixed Dining Facility @ Hunter Army Airfield
 Food Service
 Mobile Kitchens
MEDICAL
 CBRNE Monitoring, Detection, and Decontamination
 Doctors and Nurses plus Triage Teams
 EMT and Emergency Treatment Facilities
 Water Purification (Limited Distribution) / ROWPUs
ENGINEER SUPPORT
 Augers
 Bucket Truck
 Chainsaws
 Civil Engineer Assessment Teams
 Combat Earthmover (Light Dozer Type)
 Crane, Truck Mounted
 Dump Trucks
 D7 Bulldozer (Heavy Type)
 Excavator
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







Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD)
Fork-Lift (various sizes and for various terrain)
Front-End Loader
Grader
Lighting, Mobile Sets
Power (Electricity) Generators 3Kw-60Kw (Multiphase)
Pallet jacks
Sandbag machine
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APPENDIX 3
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POTENTIAL/ANTICIPATED RFAs TO GA DOD
GA DOD Possible Missions in support of GEMA and the State during DSCA events.
GA DOD can support all ESFs with the exception of ESF-14, Long Term Recovery and
Mitigation.
ESF-01 (Transportation)
 BPT provide fixed / rotary wing aviation to support evacuation operations (78
ATC, 165 AW)
 BPT provide heavy earth moving equipment, dump trucks, chainsaws, and
operators to clear roadways during re-entry operations (GA ARNG Engineer
units, 165 ASOS, 165 AW, 116 ACW)
 BPT provide rotary wing or fixed wing assets to support route reconnaissance
during re-entry operations (78 ATC, 116 AW)
 BPT to support traffic contra-flow along evacuation routes (GA ARNG
Infantry, Artillery, Armor, Military Police units, 165 AW & 116 ACW security
forces)
ESF-02 (Communications)
 BPT provide mobile communications equipment to support tactical ground
and/or air communications in an affected area (GA ARNG communications
units, 283 CBCS, 165 ASOS, 224 JCSS)
 BPT provide mobile communications equipment to Aviation Support
Operations Center (ASOC) in Savannah (GA ARNG communications units,
283 CBCS, 165 ASOS, 224 JCSS, 165 AW, 116 ACW)
 BPT provide personnel as members of a State Communications Strike Team
to operate the GEMA Mobile Communications Vehicle(s) during the response
phase of operations (SDF)
 BPT provide communications equipment operators at logistics nodes during
response operations (GA ARNG communications units, 283 CBCS, 165
ASOS, 224 JCSS, 116 AW)
ESF-03 (Public Works and Engineering)
 BPT provide temporary water pumping, purification, and storage (GA ARNG &
GA ANG ROWPUs and water buffalos)
 BPT provide engineer support to support restoration of various routes (debris
clearance, etc.) and municipal systems (GA ARNG Engineer units)
 BPT provide aerial and ground based damage assessments of routes,
bridging, and infrastructure
PAR 3
FEBRUARY 2015
EOP / SUPPORT ANNEX G / APPENDIX 3
POTENTIAL / ANTICIPATED RFAS TO GA DOD
ESF-04 (Firefighting)
 BPT provide rotary wing aviation assets, buckets and associated support
equipment necessary to support wildfire suppression operations (78 ATC)
 BPT provide ground firefighting support (165 AW)
ESF-05 (Emergency Management)
 BPT provide rotary or fixed wing aviation support to Preliminary Damage
Assessment (PDA) operations (78 ATC, 116 ACW)
 BPT provide rotary wing aviation support for VIP missions (78 ATC)
 BPT provide staffing / LNO support at SOC, ASOC, and County EOCs
ESF-06 (Mass Care, Emergency Assistance, Housing, and Human Services)
 BPT assist in conducting sheltering operations for general evacuee
populations (GA ARNG and GA ANG armories will be used for temporary
warming centers to transport personnel to more permanent shelters)
 BPT transport or assist in movement of evacuees (JFHQ - buses)
 BPT provide shower points to evacuees and various emergency response
personnel
 BPT provide field kitchens to evacuees and various emergency response /
support personnel
ESF-07 (Logistics and Resource Management)
 BPT augment State Logistics Staging Area (LSA) staff (J4, GA ARNG and GA
ANG logistics units, SDF in support)
 BPT provide heavy-lift rotary wing support to the LSA to airlift emergency
supplies (78 ATC)
 BPT provide on-site aviation fueling, maintenance, load master,
communications and temporary landing zone support for aircraft supporting
the State’s (GEMA) LSA (78 ATC, 165 AW, 165 ASOS)
 BPT provide material handling equipment (MHE) to the LSA (forklifts, pallet
jacks, and portable ramps) (GA ARNG Maintenance Shops, logistics units
and GA ANG support squadrons)
 BPT provide tractor trailer rigs with enclosed cargo trailers and flatbed trailers
to support LSA operations (GA ARNG transportation units)
 BPT conduct POD operations in multiple locations to support retail distribution
of water, MREs, ice, and tarps to affected areas (generally all units in GA
DOD with SDF in support)
 BPT assist in transportation of antiviral/antidotes during public health
disasters (78 ATC, MP, all units with wheeled assets)
 BPT conduct Joint Reception, Staging, Onward Movement and Integration
(JRSOI) operations for military forces entering/departing Georgia through
PAR 4
FEBRUARY 2015
EOP / SUPPORT ANNEX G / APPENDIX 3
POTENTIAL / ANTICIPATED RFAS TO GA DOD


EMAC (GA DOD JRSOI centers are located at Robins Air Force Base, Fort
Benning and Fort Gordon which can be run by all GA ARNG and GA ANG
units)
BPT augment the State Logistics Section Movement Control Unit with
resources capable of integrating the Defense Movement Control System into
the overall movement control plan (GA ARNG logistics commands and
transportation units)
BPT provide food service support for State emergency worker camps (GA
ARNG logistics units and GA ANG FSS units)
ES-08 (Public Health and Medical Services)
 BPT assist in establishing and operating temporary morgues / graves
registration (GA ARNG / HRF)
 BPT assist in patient transport (nursing homes, hospitals, etc.) (GA ARNG
and GA ANG: units with HHWMVs or FLAs; JFHQ buses)
 BPT assist in distribution of antiviral/antidotes during public health disasters
(78 ATC, MP Bn, generally all units with wheeled assets, 165 AW and 116
ACW medical personnel)
 BPT operate temporary field hospitals (HRF/201 RSG, 78 TC)
 BPT provide water purification capabilities (78 TC, 265/201 RSG)
ES-09 (Search and Rescue)
 BPT provide rotary wing aviation support to SAR operations (78 ATC)BPT
provide physical security forces to cordon areas during SAR (GA ARNG
Infantry, Armor, Military Police, Artillery units; GA ANG security forces; SDF in
support)
 BPT augment SAR operations with ground personnel (GA ARNG Infantry,
Armor, Military Police, Artillery units; GA ANG security forces; SDF)
 ESF 10 (Oil and Hazardous Materials Response)
 BPT provide monitoring teams in response to a radiological incident (HRF,
GA ANG CE units and 116 ACW EOD)
ESF-11 (Agriculture and Natural Resources)
 BPT provide veterinarian support
ESF-12 (Energy)
 BPT transport motor gasoline and diesel fuel and provide on-site dispensing
at temporary refueling points (GA ARNG logistics units)
 BPT provide generators and portable light sets
ESF-13 (Public Safety and Security)
 BPT provide traffic control points at critical intersections along hurricane
PAR 5
FEBRUARY 2015
EOP / SUPPORT ANNEX G / APPENDIX 3
POTENTIAL / ANTICIPATED RFAS TO GA DOD


evacuation routes (GA ARNG Infantry, Armor, Military Police, Artillery units;
GA ANG security forces)
BPT provide physical security at critical facilities within an affected area
during response and recovery phase of operations (GA ARNG Infantry,
Armor, Military Police, Artillery units; SDF; GA ANG security forces)
BPT augment State and local authorities with crowd control and/or curfew
enforcement operations (GA ARNG NGRF)
ESF-15 (Public Safety and Security)
 BPT provide linguist support (78 TC)
 BPT provide public information support (PAO / MPAD)
PAR 6
FEBRUARY 2015