• Resource: resource utilization management and
dependencies;
• Information: task-critical information collection,
analysis, and distribution;
• Decision: decision roles, rules, and structures; and
• Responder: relationships, team-think, group
dynamics (such as culture), organizational
dynamics, and so forth.
This framework conceptualizes the “
during-incident” response stage
as comprising two dis-
Decision
tinct coordination patterns: On-site response Responder
coordination (
Mini-Second Cycle) and Remote
response coordination (Many-Second Cycle).
Task Flow Resource
Information
COORDINATION LIFE CYCLE
Here, we discuss coordination patterns along the
entire coordination life cycle, based on our proposed
framework.
Coordination in Pre-Incident Response. Pre-event
coordination establishes the level of operational capacity and overall readiness for resilience during emergency response. A typical
disaster includes several
invariants, defined as Managerial
those factors that remain Interactions
unaffected by the changing conditions of the
emergency, such as: cre- Operational
ating emergency shelters
in appropriate places;
dealing with a surge in
hospital admissions;
working with degraded
capacities; maintaining law and order; arranging evacuation across geographic boundaries; and other factors. These issues are addressed during coordinated
planning and training exercises involving the stakeholders and results in the development of Standard
Operating Procedures (SOP). Planning also addresses
issues such as setting up contractual agreements with
business entities for providing supplies during an incident and creating infrastructure to deal with first and
second responder issues (including effect and behavior). During major emergencies, the limits of local
capability are soon reached and multiple agencies are
involved in supporting additional response efforts.
This typically requires both spatial and temporal
coordination with organizations and personnel who
follow different norms and practices. Training and
exercise help in establishing necessary understanding
between different players (whether from the same
agency or from different ones) and catalyzes smoother
interaction between them during an actual incident.
Setting up such training activities and table–top exer-
cises also requires coordination. Therefore, coordina-
tion is a key issue in pre-incident activities. Table 2
includes the application of the framework to pre-inci-
dent activities.
Coordination During
Incident Response.
During Incident Coordination
(Mini- and Many-Second Coordination during an
Coordination Cycles)
incident impacts both
Post-Incident short-term and long-term
Coordination
outcomes. A plan-based
approach to emergency
Figure 1. Emergency response response relies heavily on
coordination life cycle. pre-incident preparedness
and this sometimes leads
to response inflexibility in the face of unexpected events.
Variants in a disaster originate from hazard uncertainty;
uncertainty as to the course of incident development;
informational uncertainty; task flow uncertainty
(whether sequential, consequential, or cascading); organizational structure uncertainty; and environmental
uncertainty. Uncertainties are managed by improvisations, prioritization, and
dynamic sourcing of capacities from other communities and external agencies,
such as neighboring counties, state and federal agencies [ 5]. The variant or
situation-dependent layers
of knowledge create a context from which one can
then understand the Incident Commander’s intent.
These layers may indeed
serve as temporal agents
during mitigation.
To support fast response during complex incidents,
responders must make rapid coordination decisions,
which pose constraints on their capabilities to analyze
coordination problems and explore the solution
domain. Response to disasters can be viewed as consisting of an onsite response coordinating entity and a
remote management entity such as an emergency operations center (EOC). Onsite response is usually reactive
and the time window for coordination is small. We
characterize this as the “Mini-Second Coordination
Cycle.” It is typically characterized by working with the
local picture stemming from the local scenario.
Without a proper understanding of the global pic-
Pre-Incident
Coordination
Facilitation
Large Time Window (Many-Second)
Higher Coordination Capacity
Small Time Window (Mini-Second)
Lower Coordination Capacity
Figure 2. Mini-second and
many-second coordination
cycles.