Current through Register No. 40, October 3, 2024
(a) Each facility
shall have an individual or group, known as an emergency management committee,
with the authority for developing, implementing, exercising, and evaluating the
emergency management program.
(b)
The emergency management committee shall include the facility administrator and
others who have knowledge of the facility and the capability to identify
resources from key functional areas within the facility and shall solicit
applicable external representation, as appropriate.
(c) An emergency management program shall
include, at a minimum, the following elements:
(1) The emergency management plan, as
described in (d) and (e) below;
(2)
The roles and responsibilities of the committee members; and
(3) How the plan is implemented, exercised,
and maintained;
(d) The
emergency management committee shall develop and institute a written emergency
preparedness plan (plan) to respond to a disaster or an emergency.
(e) The plan in (d) above shall:
(1) Include site-specific plans for the
protection of all persons on-site in the event of fire, natural disaster, or
severe weather and human-caused emergency to include, but not be limited to,
bomb threat;
(2) Be approved by the
local emergency management director and reviewed and approved, as appropriate,
by the local fire department;
(3)
Be available to all personnel;
(4)
Be based on realistic conceptual events;
(5) Be modeled on the Incident Command System
(ICS) in coordination with local emergency response agencies;
(6) Provide that all personnel designated or
involved in the emergency operations plan of the facility shall be supplied
with a means of identification, such as vests, baseball caps, or hard hats,
which shall be worn at all times in a visible location during the
emergency;
(7) Develop and
implement a strategy to prevent an incident that threatens life, property, and
the environment of the facility;
(8) Develop and implement a mitigation
strategy that includes measures to be taken to limit or control the
consequences, extent, or severity of an incident that cannot be
prevented;
(9) Develop and
implement a protection strategy to protect life, property, and the environment
from human caused incidents and events and from natural disasters;
(10) For (7) -(9) above, incorporate the
findings of a hazard vulnerability assessment, the results of an analysis of
impact, program constraints, operational experience, and cost-benefit analysis
to provide strategies that can realistically be implemented without requiring
undue expenses to the facility;
(11) Conduct a facility-wide inventory and
review, to include the property that the facility is located on, to determine
the status of hazards that may be incorporated into the prevention, protection,
and mitigation strategies and to determine the outcome of prior strategies at
least an annually;
(12) Include the
facility's response to both short-term and long-term interruptions in the
availability of utility service in the disaster or emergency, including
establishing contingency plans for continuity of essential building systems or
evacuation to include the following, as applicable:
a. Electricity;
b. Potable water;
c. Non-potable water;
d. HVAC;
e. Fire protection systems;
f. Fuel required for building operations to
include fuel loss, fuel spill, and fuel exposure that creates a hazardous
incident;
g. Fuel for essential
transportation to include fuel loss, fuel spill, and fuel exposure that creates
a hazardous incident;
h. Medical
gas and vacuum systems, if applicable;
i. Communications systems; and
j. Essential services, such as kitchen and
laundry services;
(13)
Include a plan for alerting and managing staff in a disaster, and accessing
Critical Incident Stress Management (CISM), if necessary;
(14) Identify a designated media spokesperson
to issue news releases and an area where the media can be assembled, where they
will not interfere with the operations of the facility;
(15) Reflect measures needed to restore
operational capability with consideration of fiscal aspects because of
restoration costs and possible cash flow losses associated with the
disruption;
(16) Include an
educational, competency-based program for the staff, to provide an overview of
the components of the emergency management program and concepts of the ICS and
the staff's specific duties and responsibilities; and
(17) If the facility is located within 10
miles of a nuclear power plant and is part of the New Hampshire Radiological
Emergency Response Plan (RERP), include the required elements of the
RERP.