The City of Chicago’s keys to preparation and recovery (#44)
Chicago Fire Commissioner Jose Santiago will detail how Chicago uses a unique system for preparing for and reacting to manmade and natural disasters. Chicago has the potential for a wide variety of disasters, from tornadoes to blizzards and emergencies on Lake Michigan, as well as a host of manmade potential disasters due to its position as a major transportation hub for rail, air and shipping. Chicago is not only a high value terror target, it also serves as the home of a sitting U.S. President with related security concerns and precautions. Chicago bases its response on the U.S National Disaster Recovery framework, but with a few added twists. The presentation will show how spending correctly on the "before" side, can have a much more predictable and positive outcome on the "after"side.
We as fire responders tend to think of our commitment to a scene in hours, not days or weeks. We also tend to suffer from the pitfalls of large egos and jurisdictional protection. The presentation will show how such issues can cost not only recovery time but in the worst case, lives.
In times of large scale disaster operations, one of the biggest problems is young decision makers with too little historical knowledge, and a lack of resources, both human and archival, that relate to previous efforts in similar situations. The presentation will show how planning and precision beat speed and brute force every time when it comes to response, mitigation and recovery.