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Techniques for planing; preparation; and training; of corporate management, employees, family members and members of the community for a calm and coordinated response to a disater situation. Includes issues on communication, "what to do checklists" and training and role play and scripted drill concepts and methods.
Previous corporate offices facilities manager for a major California headquarteded computer company. Responsible for disaster planning and coordinated response activities after the 1989 California earthquake. Worked with development teams and tested an earthquake event prealarm system in the mid 1990's
Proceedings of International Conference for Earthquake Preparedness Tokyo, Japan 1991
BS Electrical Engineering, Washington State University;
Certified Incident Commander for Corporate Emergency Response Teams
| User | Date | K | C | P | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joanna Wynne | 09/29/04 | 10 | 10 | 10 | Dear Mike My wife and I would ..... |
Hello: I am so glad you are confused... as so am I confused. Wow, what a question, only a professor might ask. First, I would start by looking up the detailed definations of the two key words
In the United States there is a technique called Incident Command System. This technique was created by the Forestry Service to coordinate complex issues with forest fires. It has been adopted my most
I do believe the interior closet is more safe than a room close to an exterior wall. My concern is that the bathtub being somewhat heavy might fall either out a hole in the wall due to wind damage
my email is: mike@sosinfo.net Greetings and thank you for your question. It sure is an important issue and it is nice to see that you are starting to think about how to prepare. So, take a deep
Disaster communications plan - "the silence is deafening" ! Copyright (c) 2005, Mike Johnson, Disaster Response Planning Consultant What's Happening in a Disaster Communication Plan The old adage

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