The
Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) Program was created in 1987 by the Los
Angeles City Fire Department. Los Angeles officials were asked to help Mexico
City with a critique following an 8.1 earthquake that killed more than 10,000
people. It was noted that many “spontaneous volunteers” (people with no
training who pitched in to try and help others) had saved over 800 trapped
victims, but at least 100 volunteers were killed in the effort. They died
because of a lack of knowledge and training that would have kept them safe.
LA
officials knew they would have a similar situation happen after a big
earthquake and decided to offer training to help protect would- be rescuers. It
was very successful and taken nation-wide by FEMA in 1993.
CERT
groups are essentially local volunteers that have enough basic training to keep
themselves out of trouble when helping out after a disaster. They can do the
less technical activities that free the professional up to do the really
dangerous stuff.
CERT
provides free training to teach interested individuals and groups about
disaster preparedness and trains them in basic disaster response skills. We
have taught church groups, Scouts, Civil Air Patrol, and other interested
people in our community. If I had my way, everyone in the county would take the
training, whether they join the group or not. A CERT graduate can use that
knowledge at home or work in everyday life and assist the professionals in an
actual disaster response, even if they are not a member of the team.
Our
program was started in 2003. Currently our group has three trailers equipped
for disaster response. We have responded to assist with sandbagging and
evacuations from a gas leak and from wildfire. We have done traffic control
during emergencies and even responded to assist with a murder investigation.
(They needed some of our equipment!)
In
between disasters, our group provides traffic control for community events–
races, parades, et cetera, which is good practice and gets us noticed. Our
group also attends various events to provide disaster handouts and to promote
CERT, and we make presentations to various groups about disaster preparedness.
We are always looking for opportunities for training, as well. As the CERT
Coordinator in our community, I am also gradually introducing the prepper
mindset into the group and my community under the guise of, “You can’t help if
you aren’t prepared”.
CERT
provides a variety of continuing education material that is made available to
the public at no charge. Studying the publications discussed below will provide
you with a basic foundation in emergency communications, leadership, disaster
psychology, traffic and crowd safety, first aid, incident management, and other
facets of disaster response. This info is easily adapted for use by the average
everyday prepper.
I
highly recommend that everyone take the CERT course, which generally takes
18-20 hours to complete. It includes both classroom time and hands-on practice
with a mock disaster drill at the end of the class. Various speakers present
different parts of the class, such as Fire Suppression, which is conducted by
our local fire department. You are not required to join a CERT group after
completing the course. The curriculum is designed to teach basic skills to the
average, non-professional, potential volunteer. Students are constantly
reminded that personal safety is the first priority; if the rescuer is hurt, he
can no longer help! Below are some of the sessions:
Disaster
Preparedness.
This is a basic introduction to basic prepping and includes why people should
be prepared and how to start. I have actually scared people to tears with this
presentation, because they suddenly realized how vulnerable they really are.
Disaster
Medical Operations.
This includes setting up treatment areas, recognizing life-threatening
problems, triage, and basic first aid. (It is amazing to me how many of our
adult students don’t know anything about first aid!) We do both classroom
sessions and hands-on practice.
Fire
Suppression.
This is usually the most popular class session, since most folks are closet
firebugs, though we have had students cut and run during the actual drill.
Students learn about fire chemistry and the fire triangle, types of
combustibles, and hazardous materials. Fire prevention, size up, and fire
extinguisher drills end the session.
Light
Search and Rescue.
The first thing students learn is how to assess a damaged building to determine
if it is safe for a CERT volunteer to enter. The student learns how to safely
locate, rescue, and apply initial first aid to people trapped in buildings and
other confined spaces. We also learn to recognize when a rescue operation is
beyond our training and should be left to the professionals.
Disaster
Psychology.
Here we discuss how people react during and after a disaster; we learn what to
expect from survivors and how to help them in their initial recovery. Working a
disaster also effects the rescuers in a lot of ways. We present information on
what stresses volunteers (both during and after an event) and how to mitigate
the effects and work with a Critical Incident Stress Debriefing Team.
CERT
Organization.
This includes CERT structure and National Incident Management System (NIMS),
decision making, and documentation (if it isn’t written down, it didn’t
happen). CERT members are required to take a NIMS class after joining a group.
Terrorism. We learn what
it is; how to recognize an event in progress; and what to do before, during,
and after an incident. We also encourage our students to take a weather
watcher’s class and a CPR Class. Note: CPR is not performed in a mass-casualty
incident, so we do not teach it during our classes.
CERT
Publications.
There are many continuing education training manuals available to CERT groups
that are equally applicable to preppers. Most are offered in both MS Word and
PDF format. Some of the manuals offer PowerPoint slide shows, as well. Unlike
EMI, most of the CERT material is aimed at the average person. Instructor
guides are also available for some of the following courses. An instructor is
supposed to have had the CERT Train-the-Trainer course before teaching this
material, but the rules say nothing about self-study. All of the CERT material
can be downloaded free from www.fema.gov/community-emergency-response-teams/training-materials.
·
CERT
Participant Manual. This is the manual that is used in CERT classes. It is a
treasure trove of basic disaster response and preparedness information. The
current version has 344 pages. (We give this book to class participants- hint,
hint.)
·
Hazard
Annexes. These are appendixes that supplement the Participant Manual. You will
find specific information on natural hazards, such as earthquake, flood,
tornado, et cetera. Included is an explanation of what the hazard is, how to
prepare for it and what to do before, during, and after. The idea is to
download the chapters dealing with hazards most likely to occur in your area.
There is an annex on pandemics that everyone should grab.
·
CERT
Animal Response I and II. (108 pages) These modules include disaster plans for
animals (both pets and livestock), general animal behavior and safety issues,
such as possible disease transmission, PPE (personal protective equipment), and
first-aid for animal-caused injuries. General animal care and handling, animal first
aid, dealing with owners, and animal ID are also covered. There is an appendix
in the second module that lists additional resources that are available
on-line.
·
CERT
Emergency Communication Manual. (52 pages) This CERT manual is a how-to
reference on communication plans, different communications devices, such as
phones and two-way radios, radio discipline, technique, and proper radio use.
·
CERT
Tools for Leadership Success. (49 pages) This publication reviews disaster
psychology, the ICS (Incident Command System), and scene size up, and how
leadership relates to these areas. Building a rapport with team members and
traits and responsibilities of successful leaders and team members and
leadership styles are discussed. There is a step-by-step-guide to effectively
and smoothly take charge of a group and role-play exercises. I did find the
information on leadership style particularly interesting in that an effective
leader must be able to change his style to fit the situation and the team.
·
Traffic
and Crowd Management. (60 pages) I wish this book had been available when I was
first learning how to manage traffic. How hard could it be, I thought? Silly
me. I found that efficiently dealing with traffic and crowd flow is as much art
as it is science. It took awhile to perfect my hand signals and body language
so that drivers knew what was expected and knew that I meant what I “said”. One
important skill is “reading a crowd” to determine if things are going south and
how to deal with such a situation. Coordinating efforts with other team members
can be difficult, as well. This little book lays all that out in a way that
makes it easy to understand and apply.
·
Flood
Response for CERT’s. (40 pages) This manual gives instruction in applying CERT
skills to flood response and safety concerns when working around flood waters.
There is a first aid section aimed at dealing with common flood-related
injuries and one on filling sandbags and building sandbag barricades. As
filling and moving wet sand is back-breaking work, attention is given to proper
lifting, stacking, and moving sandbags properly.
·
CERT
Firefight Rehab. (42 pages) Firefighter rehab is designed to ensure that the
physical and mental well-being of members operating at the scene of an
emergency (or a training exercise) don’t deteriorate to the point where it
affects the safety of the individual and team. Firefighting is inherently
dangerous in the best of circumstances, and any additional physical or mental
stress increases the danger. Firefighter Rehab is a process that provides first
responders on the scene of a fire with any necessary first aid for such things
as dehydration and smoke inhalation and monitoring for life-threatening
conditions as heatstroke and heart attack. This manual teaches you what to look
for, basic first aid, and how to set up a rehab area, and it offers a
step-by-step discussion of the process.
·
Cert
Exercise Swaps. (122 pages) One of the more useful practices in emergency
response is participating in a realistic mock disaster drill. This manual
explains how to design and conduct an effective, well thought-out tabletop or
operational (hands-on) disaster drill. It also provides guidelines for swapping
drills with other CERT groups. There are several activities included that
develop skills and an appendix consisting of documents to be used to set up,
run, and critique a drill.
·
CERT
Program Manager Course. (260 pages) While this particular book is written for
CERT Coordinators the information is easily adapted for use by any organized
group. Instruction includes setting up your organization, promotion, working
with volunteers (including termination of a group member-never pleasant but
sometimes necessary) and instructors, setting up training programs, policies
and procedures, evaluation and sustaining the group.
·
Wildland/Urban
Interface Modules A, B, and C. (58 pages) This manual was developed for
California, but the information is applicable anywhere. It defines the
Wildland/Urban Interface (where civilization and undeveloped lands meet), wildfire
behavior, defensible space, pre-planning, and evacuation. Part A is “Awareness
and Prevention”. Part B is titled “The Approaching Wildfire!”, and Part C is
“Citizen Wildland Fire Preparedness & Basic Concepts”. (There is no
instructor guide.)
·
Introduction
to CERT. This is an abbreviated version of the CERT Course that can be
completed online. It does not qualify you to join a CERT group, nor does it
offer hands-on practice, but it is a good basic introduction to the subject.
There
are other useful publications.
The
Emergency Management Institute (EMI) is based at the National Emergency
Training Center (NETC) in Emmitsburg, Maryland. Among other things, they
provide independent study courses to anyone who is interested. The course
material can be downloaded free. You can, if you want, officially enroll, read
the material, pass the online test, and receive Continuing Education (CE) and
sometimes college credits.
EMI
provides training materials for both professional responders and laymen, so not
all of their publications are applicable to John Q public. I would recommend
you start with the following:
·
Decision
Making and Problem Solving. (134 pages) It’s pretty self explanatory, I think.
I found this book very helpful in organizing my planning and being able to
prioritize. Topics covered include the decision making process and styles,
traits and ethics of good decision makers.
·
Effective
Communication. (156 pages) This covers accurate communication, both oral and
written, which is the single most important facet of operation and is always
the weakest link in any operation. Messages are often garbled, lost,
misunderstood, insulting, contradictory, mangled or badly presented (or all of
the above), sometimes with disastrous effects. This manual teaches communication
basics and ways to improve your communication and listening skills. Very easy
to read- putting it into practice is hard work!
·
Leadership
and Influence. (180 pages) This training manual starts with the concept
“leader, know thyself”; know your own strengths, weaknesses, thought processes,
and motivations. Topics include important leadership concepts, such as building
trust, introducing change, and negotiating. It includes self-assessments, case
studies, and activities. You should read the two manuals above before starting
this one.
·
ICS
100. (about 84 pages) The Incident Command System (ICS) is a flexible
organizational and operations framework that was developed by the United States
Navy and modified to manage wildfire and then expanded to include all disaster
management and Search and Rescue response. This has evolved into the National
Incident Management System (NIMS), which was developed after 9 /11 and is now
the national standard for disaster management. ICS can be modified to work for
any group– even your own household. For a general history go to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incident_Command_System.
These
manuals can all be downloaded from http://training.fema.gov/IS/ Click on the
course list and scroll down until you find the listings for the above manuals.
Another
useful resource can be found at http://www.cert-la.com/education/preparedness.htm. This is the
website for the Los Angeles CERT. They have many downloadable documents on
preparedness and disaster response. It is well worth your time to visit this
site.
I
would suggest you make hard copies. There are better than 1500 pages of
information available. I’d go to a local copy shop rather than use my home
printer. Request double-sided copies, since it reduces paper use, cost, and
bulk on the bookshelf. I watch for binders and folders at the thrift stores,
which are much cheaper than buying new, and label each one.
Now
that you’ve downloaded the files, printed everything out, and studied every
word, the hard part begins– putting it all into practice. Don’t be discouraged,
if things don’t immediately fall into place. Skills have to be developed by and
adapted to the individual. Results must be constantly sized-up and new habits
formed. It will come as you learn to recognize what theory or concept fits
where and how it applies to real life.
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