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Press Releases 2005
Department of
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge Announces Completion
of the National Response Plan
Washington DC., January 06, 2005
- The U. S. Department of Homeland Security, in partnership with
federal departments and agencies, state, local and tribal officials,
private sector and national and international associations, today
announced completion of the National Response Plan
"The National Response Plan embodies our nation's
commitment to the concept of one team, one goal -- a safer and more
secure America," said Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge.
"Completion of the National Response Plan has been one of my
department's highest priorities, and this achievement is a bold
step forward in bringing unity in our response to disasters and
terrorist threats and attacks."
The National Response Plan now establishes a unified and standardized
approach within the United States for protecting citizens and managing
homeland security incidents. All federal departments and agencies
that may be required to assist or support during a national incident
will use this Plan, whether from threats or acts of terrorism, major
natural disasters, or man-made emergencies. The National Response
Plan standardizes federal incident response actions by integrating
existing and ormerly disparate processes. The Plan uses the National
Incident Management System (NIMS) to establish standardized training,
organization, and communications procedures for multi-jurisdictional
interaction and clearly identifies authority and leadership responsibilities.
The Plan also provides a comprehensive framework for private and
non-profit institutions to plan and integrate their own preparedness
and response activities, nationally and within their own communities.
"With the National Response Plan our nation and its federal,
state, local, and tribal response communities now have a comprehensive,
all-hazards tool for domestic incident management across the spectrum
of prevention, preparedness, response, and recovery," said
Ridge. "The complex and emerging threats of the 21st century
demand this synchronized and coordinated plan in order to adequately
protect our nation and its citizens."
The National Response Plan was developed by teams of experts from
federal departments and agencies, state, local, and tribal officials,
incident response and private sector communities from around the
nation. Ridge said, "We brought together the best of the best
in our nation's incident management and first responder communities
for a singular but critical national endeavor, and I am honored
to recognize their achievement in
completing this landmark Plan and making America safer."
The National Response Plan fulfills a requirement in Homeland Security
Presidential Directive 5 and provides a core operational plan for
all national incident management. When fully implemented, it will
supersede the Initial National Response Plan (INRP), the Federal
Response Plan (FRP), the U. S. Government Interagency Domestic Terrorism
Concept of Operations Plan (CONPLAN), and the Federal Radiological
Emergency Response Plan (FRERP).
The National Response Plan and the supporting National Incident
Management System establish incident management processes to:
- Improve coordination and integration between federal,
state, local, tribal, regional, private sector, and non-governmental
organization partners;
- Integrate the federal response to catastrophic
events;
- Improve incident management communications and
increase cross-jurisdictional coordination and situational awareness;
- Improve federal to federal interaction and emergency
support;
- Maximize use and employment of incident management
resources; and
- Facilitate emergency mutual aid and federal emergency
support to state, local, and tribal governments.
The National Response Plan further recognizes the
potential magnitude of threats from weapons of mass destruction
and severe natural disasters by adoption of a new term, the Incident
of National Significance. An incident of national significance is
described as an incident with high impact requiring an extensive
and well-coordinated response by federal, state, local, tribal,
and nongovernmental authorities to save lives, minimize damage,
and provide the basis for long-term community and economic recovery.
To get more information about the National Response Plan:
- First responders and incident management authorities
may call 1-800-368-6498 [8 am to 7 pm EST Weekdays].
- Interested citizens may view and download a PDF
copy of the National Response Plan online at http://www.dhs.gov/nationalresponseplan
- Information on FEMA National Response Plan
training courses is available through links at the above website.
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