My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
Snohomish County Dept of Emergency Management 4/2/2020
>
Contracts
>
6 Years Then Destroy
>
2020
>
Snohomish County Dept of Emergency Management 4/2/2020
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
8/19/2020 11:12:38 AM
Creation date
5/13/2020 12:47:04 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Contracts
Contractor's Name
Snohomish County Dept of Emergency Management
Approval Date
4/2/2020
Council Approval Date
3/18/2020
End Date
12/31/2020
Department
Police
Department Project Manager
Tracey Landry
Subject / Project Title
FBI Hazardous Devices School E19-089 Grant
Tracking Number
0002308
Total Compensation
$0.00
Contract Type
Agreement
Contract Subtype
Interlocal
Retention Period
6 Years Then Destroy
Document Relationships
Snohomish County Dept of Emergency Mangement 7/22/2020 Amendment
(Contract)
Path:
\Records\City Clerk\Contracts\6 Years Then Destroy\2020
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
38
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
ATTACHMENT 2 <br /> 18SHSP Investment and Regional Project <br /> Investment Justification <br /> Washington is comprised of 39 counties with geography including forests,mountains, islands,rainforests,rivers,lakes, <br /> and plains.The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis ranked Washington 13 of 50 states for gross domestic product in <br /> 2017;several world-class organizations headquarter their operations within the state.Washington has marine, <br /> aviation,rail,and road transportation infrastructure to support its position as a bustling trade center. <br /> Approximately half of Washington's 7.5 million population lives in the Seattle metropolitan area located along the <br /> Puget Sound.This area is the center of transportation, business,and industry and is the fastest growing region in the <br /> state. Over three-fourths of the state's population lives in densely settled urbanized areas. Understanding <br /> Washington's population is critical in order to mitigate vulnerabilities, respond to incidents,and effectively concentrate <br /> recovery efforts. <br /> Washington is subject to ten natural hazards and seven human-caused hazards.The THIRA focuses on eight of those <br /> risks: earthquake,tsunami,flood,biological [communicable disease],wildfire, radiological,cyber incident, and <br /> terrorism. Planning,training,and exercise efforts are being restructured to encompass the entire spectrum of <br /> catastrophic incidents within this context. <br /> Washington saw few significant changes in the 2017 Capabilities Assessment. <br /> - Public Information and Warning,which had been consistently among the state's highest-rated capabilities since the <br /> beginning of core capability-based SPR reporting,no longer is present as a top-rated capability. <br /> -The lowest rated capabilities were Economic Recovery, Health and Social Services,Community Resilience, and <br /> Housing—all essential during a catastrophic incident. <br /> -The strongest capabilities lie in Response and lowest rated capabilities lie in Recovery. <br /> The 2017 SPR results repeated the overarching theme of prior years:Stakeholders at every level struggle to sustain <br /> emergency response capabilities with dwindling resources and are significantly challenged to prepare for catastrophic <br /> disasters.Since the early 2000's,emergency management funding at the state and local levels have reduced <br /> significantly causing an increased dependence on federal grants to meet necessary emergency management <br /> requirements. As a result, many areas are in a sustainment mode when it comes to emergency management capability <br /> and capacity. <br /> Investment#3-Regional Homeland Security Projects <br /> The State is divided into 9 Homeland Security Regions, made up of 39 counties,which differ in many respects including <br /> geography(from marine to desert), major industry(from large business to agricultural),and population (from dense <br /> urban settings to rural areas). Each Region develops projects to address their specific risks and hazards which sustain <br /> previously built capabilities or close identified gaps. <br /> While the communities may differ,emergency management priorities are similar across the state and most initiatives <br /> can be tied back to building regional capability to respond and recover,and be in"a state of readiness"through <br /> planning,training,equipping,or exercising,should a natural or human-caused catastrophic incident occur. As <br /> communicated in the 2017 THIRA,Capabilities Estimation, &SPR, gaps have been identified in the following core <br /> capabilities. <br /> DHS-EMD-SnoCo.-SHSP-FFY18 Page 34 of 38 E19-089—Everett PD <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.