What is NIMS?
"...a comprehensive nationwide framework
for incident management that will enable responders at all levels to work
together more effectively to manage incidents no matter what the cause,
size or complexity. The National Incident Management System (NIMS)
incorporates best practices currently in use by incident managers at all
levels. It was developed through extensive outreach to state, local and
tribal officials, the emergency response community and the private sector.
It is the national standard for incident management across the various
jurisdictions nationwide."
National Response Plan March
2004
>> NIMS is a
core set of Doctrine, Concepts, Principles, Terminology, and organizational
processes.
>>NIMS is applicable
to all hazards.
NIMS is NOT :
- An operational incident management plan
- A resource allocation plan
- A terrorism or WMD specific plan
- Designed to address international events
Most important, NIMS is NOT just the Incident Command System!
NIMS establishes standardized
incident management processes, protocols, and procedures that all responders
-- Federal, state, tribal, and local -- will use to coordinate and conduct
response actions. With responders using the same standardized procedures,
they will all share a common focus, and will be able to place full emphasis
on incident management when a homeland security incident occurs -- whether
terrorism or natural disaster. In addition, national preparedness and
readiness in responding to and recovering from an incident is enhanced since
all of the Nation's emergency teams and authorities are using a common language
and set of procedures.
Advantages of NIMS:
NIMS incorporates incident management
best practices developed and proven by thousands of responders and authorities
across America. These practices, coupled with consistency and national standardization,
will now be carried forward throughout all incident management processes:
exercises, qualification and certification, communications interoperability,
doctrinal changes, training, and publications, public affairs, equipping,
evaluating, and incident management. All of these measures unify the response
community as never before.
NIMS was created and vetted by representatives across America including:
- Federal government,
- States,
- Territories,
- Cities, counties, and townships,
- Tribal officials,
- First responders.
South Carolina Counties that have adopted NIMS:
Key features of NIMS:
- Incident Command System (ICS). NIMS establishes
ICS as a standard incident management organization with five functional
areas -- command, operations, planning, logistics, and finance/administration
-- for management of all major incidents. To ensure further coordination,
and during incidents involving multiple jurisdictions or agencies, the
principle of unified command has been universally incorporated into NIMS.
This unified command not only coordinates the efforts of many jurisdictions,
but provides for and assures joint decisions on objectives, strategies,
plans, priorities, and public communications.
- Communications and Information Management. Standardized
communications during an incident are essential and NIMS prescribes interoperable
communications systems for both incident and information management. Responders
and managers across all agencies and jurisdictions must have a common
operating picture for a more efficient and effective incident response.
- Preparedness. Preparedness incorporates a range
of measures, actions, and processes accomplished before an incident happens. NIMS
preparedness measures including planning, training, exercises, qualification
and certification, equipment acquisition and certification, and publication
management. All of these serve to ensure that pre-incident actions
are standardized and consistent with mutually-agreed doctrine. NIMS
further places emphasis on mitigation activities to enhance preparedness. Mitigation
includes public education and outreach, structural modifications to lessen
the loss of life or destruction of property, code enforcement in support
of zoning rules, land management, and building codes, and flood insurance
and property buy-out for frequently flooded areas.
- Joint Information System (JIS). NIMS organizational measures
enhance the public communication effort. The Joint Information
System provides the public with timely and accurate incident information
and unified public messages. This system employs Joint Information
Centers (JIC) and brings incident communicators together during an incident
to develop, coordinate, and deliver a unified message. This will
ensure that Federal, state, and local levels of government are releasing
the same information during an incident.
- NIMS Integration Center (NIC). To ensure that NIMS remains
an accurate and effective management tool, the NIMS NIC will be established
by the Secretary of Homeland Security to assess proposed changes to NIMS,
capture, and evaluate lessons learned, and employ best practices. The
NIC will provide strategic direction and oversight of the NIMS, supporting
both routine maintenance and continuous refinement of the system and
its components over the long term. The NIC will develop and facilitate
national standards for NIMS education and training, first responder communications
and equipment, typing of resources, qualification and credentialing of
incident management and responder personnel, and standardization of equipment
maintenance and resources. The NIC will continue to use the collaborative
process of Federal, state, tribal, local, multi-discipline and private
authorities to assess prospective changes and assure continuity and accuracy.