Disaster
Response and Disability: Approaches for Citizen Responders
Please join FEMA�s Individual and Community Preparedness Division
on Wednesday, November 17, 2021 from
1:00pm - 2:00pm ET for a webinar on disaster response actions
that support people with access and functional needs, as well as those with
disabilities.
The Disaster Response and Disability: Approaches for Citizen
Responders webinar features federal, state and academic subject matter experts
who will present approaches to increase inclusivity for people with access and
functional needs, and those with disabilities, in disaster response. Topics
include Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) and You Are the Help Until Help
Arrives. A Q&A session will follow the presentations.
For more information and to register for this webinar, visit Disaster
Response and Disability: Approaches for Citizen Responders. Closed
captioning and an American Sign Language interpreter will be provided. For
reasonable accommodations or questions, please email FEMA-prepare@fema.dhs.gov.� | | | |
|
|
Aaron
Levy, Director, FEMA Individual and Community Preparedness
Division
Aaron Levy is the Director of FEMA�s Individual and Community
Preparedness Division where he leads the agency�s efforts to help people prepare
for disasters. Aaron oversees programs that partner at all levels of government,
the private sector and community organizations to increase citizen and community
preparedness and encourage disaster resilience across the
nation. |
Linda
Mastandrea, Director, FEMA Office of Disability Integration and Coordination
Linda Mastandrea is the Director of FEMA�s Office of Disability
Integration (ODIC) and Coordination. She will present on the office�s role
within FEMA, emergency response and preparedness, and communities.�
ODIC advises the FEMA Administrator and helps the agency�s offices
proactively design programs, services, policies and procedures that integrate
the needs of people with disabilities into the whole spectrum of emergency and
disaster preparedness, response and recovery.
ODIC also helps people with disabilities and their families
prepare for and respond to disaster, while working with state, local, tribal and
territorial stakeholders to build resilient, inclusive communities for people
with disabilities. |
Samantha
Royster, CERT Program Manager, North Carolina Department of Public Safety
Samantha Royster is the CERT Program Manager for North Carolina
Emergency Management. She will present the state�s efforts to include acces and
functional needs in many aspects of emergency management, specifically CERT
training.�
Samantha will share how to incorporate the whole community into
CERT Basic Training and full-scale exercises; as well as awareness training for
inclusive positive interactions. During the 2018 National CERT Conference,
Samanthat presented on disability awareness, and educated attendees on the daily
challenges people with disabilities face and how these challenges compound in a
disaster situation. In this webinar, she will describe how she conducted this
exercise and how participants planned to change their behavior in the future as
a result. |
Pattijean
Hooper, Ph.D., CEM, Trident University International
Dr. Pattijean Hooper will present on the concept that all
emergency management programs should be both useful and universally accessible �
including planning, preparedness, response, recovery, mitigation and
policies.
Unlike many field planning models that often have people with
disabilities positioned as waiting to be rescued, her presentation will approach
emergency management with the assumption that if the program is designed to be
inclusive, the results will be inclusive.
Two specific programs will be highlighted:
- The
Accessible Community Emergency Response Team (Accessible CERT)
training, followed by the Accessible CERT Train-the-Trainer course,
were the first CERT class in the State of Washington taught�by deaf people
to�deaf people, using American Sign Language.
- The
Accessible�Stop the Bleed�training was a tactile and auditory
presentation to a group of 20 blind individuals interested in community response
operations should they encounter an active shooter incident.�
| | | | |
If
you would like to register for this webinar, please visit the following link: Disaster
Response and Disability: Approaches for Citizen Responders.
Please
note there is limited capacity for this session. If you have any questions or
require any assistance, please contact us at FEMA-prepare@fema.dhs.gov.�
Disclaimer: The reader recognizes that the federal government
provides links and informational data on various disaster preparedness resources
and events and does not endorse any non-federal events, entities, organizations,
services, or products. Please let us know about other events and services for
individual and community preparedness that could be included in future
newsletters by contacting�
FEMA-prepare@fema.dhs.gov. | | | | |
| |
|
| |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment