10 Steps for Developing An Emergency Response Plan

Bomb Threats and Suspicious Packages

The recent bombing incidents in and around Austin, Texas serve as an unfortunate reminder that those responsible for all properties and facilities must remain vigilant and be prepared to respond to any bomb threat and/or suspicious package quickly and responsibly. Having a comprehensive risk mitigation plan in place can help save lives, and reduce the impact such a disaster might have on your business continuity. Actions taken during the first minutes of an emergency are critical. Your property needs to have a clearly defined, well-practiced emergency response plan, which includes clearly defined actions for employees and security personnel regarding the recognition of, response to, and reporting policy in the case of a suspicious person, action, or item and any bomb threats received.

When conducting a review of your policies and procedures, you must assess whether these policies and procedures (1) coincide with your organization’s current security goals and posture, (2) meet your facility’s perceived risk levels, and (3) meet best practice standards of the industry and like properties. You should also conduct your review in coordination with your security team, police, and/or local law enforcement officials, which will ensure a unified approach to incident management and facilitate collaborative protection efforts.

Elements of An Emergency Plan

• Life Safety
• Direction & Control
• Communication
• Recovery & Restoration

Every facility should develop and implement a crisis plan for protecting employees, visitors, contractors and anyone else within the property. If you don’t have a current or active response plan, the first action should be to conduct a risk assessment to identify potential vulnerabilities of your property. Developing an emergency plan begins with an understanding of what can happen so when an crisis occurs, you and your team are well prepared and can minimize potential damage.

10 Steps for Developing the Emergency Response Plan

  1. Establish standards, goals and/or objectives for your emergency response plan.
  2. Conduct a risk assessment to identify hazard and possible threat scenarios.
  3. Identify the availability and capabilities of resources for incident stabilization, including security staff, engineering team members, systems, and equipment available within your facility and from external sources.
  4. Engage public emergency services (e.g. fire, police and emergency medical services) to determine their response time to your facility, knowledge of your facility and its hazards, and their capabilities to stabilize an emergency at your facility.
  5. Determine if there are any city or state regulations pertaining to emergency planning.
  6. Identify your facility’s abilities and any restrictions regarding evacuation, shelter, shelter-in-place, or lockdown during an event.
  7. Develop clear, concise emergency procedures to address all identified threats.
  8. Coordinate emergency planning with public emergency services to stabilize incidents involving the hazards at your facility.
  9. Train personnel so they will be able to fulfill their roles and responsibilities.
  10. Practice your plan.
    1. https://www.dhs.gov/what-to-do-bomb-threat
    2. https://www.ready.gov/business/implementation/emergency

You may also feel free to contact us; we are more than happy to assist you in reviewing your facility’s emergency response plan, assist with developing a plan, or conduct response assessment to evaluate the effectiveness of your current plan during a test scenario or red-teaming exercise.

How Can We Help?

Contact us today to discuss how Chesley Brown can help navigate your organization navigate around ever-evolving threats, and mitigate your risk.

Posted by:

Sign up!

For industry-leading guides and analysis sign up for our blog below.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Latest News

Account Protection with Password Manager

By Chesley Brown | April 22, 2019

Account Protection with a Password Manager What good is a password if anyone can read it? From Chesley Brown International Risk Management Password managers are not a universal remedy… but can add layers of protection…

Read More

Chesley Brown Announces Addition to Senior Team

By Chesley Brown | March 27, 2019

Dell Spry Joins Chesley Brown Team To support the ongoing growth and demand Chesley Brown is pleased to announce Marvin O. “Dell” Spry has joined the Senior team as a Managing Director. From Chesley Brown…

Read More
Happy kids with rucksacks walking leaving school

Federal Commission on School Safety Releases Comprehensive Report

By Chesley Brown | January 2, 2019

  Federal Commission on School Safety Comprehensive Report Released From Chesley Brown International Risk Management President’s Federal Commission on School Safety Releases Comprehensive Report After 9 months of research, visiting successful programs around the nation,…

Read More
risk management

Fighting Terrorism with Strong Private Sector Relationships

By Chesley Brown | October 14, 2018

Fighting Terrorism with Strong Private Sector Relationships From Chesley Brown International Risk Management “Threat mitigation is a team effort; it’s this relationship and collaboration which is critical to the counterterrorism fight.” We face the same…

Read More
face recognition, automatic face recognition biometric identification; biometric authentication; identity verification

Facial Recognition: the First Catch

By Chesley Brown | September 11, 2018

Facial Recognition Makes its Grand Entry The new technology, deployed in airports across the country, makes its first catch. From Chesley Brown International Risk Management On its third day of testing, facial recognition technology caught…

Read More
The 7 Step Guide for Building Business Continuity Plans that Work