Workshop on Lessons Learned from Hurricane Katrina and the Role for Standards and Conformity Assessment Programs
The final
Workshop report contains recommendations aimed at bolstering national
preparedness, response, and recovery efforts in the event of a natural
disaster. A key resource identified in the document is the American National
Standard for Disaster/Emergency Management and Business Continuity
Programs (ANSI/NFPA
1600), which was developed by the National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA). The standard defines a common set of criteria for preparedness,
disaster management, emergency management, and business continuity programs.
The report was developed
during a series of ANSI-HSSP Workshop meetings that examined congressional,
agency and White House reports citing federal, state, and local failures
during and following Hurricane Katrina. The goal was to define a set of
recommendations and resources that could be used to mitigate the impact of
similar disasters in the future. Suggestions ranged from methods for ensuring
the continuity of operations, to the coordination of communications, to
standards for strengthening mitigation practices.
The central outcomes of
the ANSI-HSSP Workshop report serve to:
- Highlight the value of
compliance with NFPA 1600 – a standard that was specifically endorsed by
the 9/11 Commission in its 2004 report to Congress and the President –
for both public and private sector disaster/emergency management and
business continuity programs.
- Provide a set of targeted
recommendations to the technical committee responsible for maintaining
and updating the standard to be considered during the next review cycle.
- Identify gap areas where
further standards are needed to supplement the usage of the NFPA 1600
standard for future disasters.
NFPA 1600
was identified as a proposed solution early in the Workshop process;
participants then assessed and confirmed the standard’s applicability to the
nearly 90 assembled recommendations identified from the aftermath reports.
“The conclusions from our
analysis are clear-cut and consistent with needed policy and legislative changes
regarding preparedness,” said Dr. Joseph S. Broz, vice president of strategic
initiatives at the Midwest Research Institute and co-leader of the ANSI-HSSP
workshop series. “This report identifies criteria critical for the resiliency
of our society to prepare for, respond to and recover from disasters and will
serve as a useful tool for policy makers and all public and private entities
that utilize NFPA 1600.” More than 100 experts from dozens of public and
private sector stakeholder organizations and the professional preparedness
and business continuity community were involved in the eight-month effort.
Dr. Sharon Caudle, assistant director of the Homeland
Security and Justice Team at the U.S. Government Accountability Office and
also workshop co-leader, added, “We are indebted to all the individual
workshop attendees for their active participation and expertise on this
subject matter. The leading organizations from this Workshop will monitor the
progress of the report recommendations and will continue to support standards
efforts that relate to strengthening national preparedness.”
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