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FEMA continues to place emphasis on capabilities that address the greatest risks to the security and <br />resilience of the United States. When applicable, funding should support deployable assets that can be used <br />anywhere in the Nation through automatic assistance and mutual aid agreements, including, but not limited <br />to, the Emergency Management Assistance Compact. The EMPG Program supports investments that <br />improve the ability of jurisdictions nationwide to: <br />• Prevent a threatened or an actual act of terrorism; <br />• Protect our citizens, residents, visitors, and assets against the greatest threats and hazards; <br />• Mitigate the loss of life and property by lessening the impact of future disasters; <br />• Respond quickly to save lives, protect property and the environment, and meet basic human needs <br />in the aftermath of a catastrophic incident; or <br />• Recover through a focus on the timely restoration, strengthening, and revitalization of <br />infrastructure, housing, and a sustainable economy, as well as the health, social, cultural, historic, <br />and environmental fabric of communities affected by a catastrophic incident. <br />The core capabilities contained in the Goal are highly interdependent and require the use of existing <br />preparedness networks and activities to improve training and exercise programs, innovation, and <br />appropriate administrative, finance, and logistics systems. <br />Implementation of the National Preparedness System <br />Identifying and Assessing Risk and Estimating Capability Requirements <br />By December 31, 2022, recipients were required to complete a THIRA/SPR that addresses all 32 core <br />capabilities and is compliant with Comprehensive Preparedness Guide (CPG) 201, Third Edition. <br />Recipients are required to submit a THIRA every three (3) years to establish a consistent baseline for <br />assessment. 2022 is the start of the new 3-year THIRA/SPR cycle and baseline assessment year for existing <br />recipients. Any new grant recipients during calendar year 2023, for which the THIRA/SPR requirement <br />applies, will start their new 3-year THIRA/SPR cycle and baseline assessment year in 2023. Specific <br />guidance on the requirements for each core capability is provided through program implementation support <br />and supplemental guidance, as some core capabilities have fewer reporting requirements than others. <br />Recipients must continue to respond to a series of planning -related questions as part of the THIRA/SPR <br />process. <br />While the THIRA is only required every three years, jurisdictions are required to submit an SPR annually. <br />The submission deadline is December 31St each year (as applicable). For additional guidance on the <br />THIRA/SPR, please refer to Comprehensive Preparedness Guide (CPG) 201, Third Edition. Recipients are <br />also encouraged to refer to the Preparedness Toolkit, which is an online portal that provides the whole <br />community with tools to aid in implementing all six areas of the National Preparedness System. <br />Reporting: <br />• All EMPG Program recipients are required to submit a Biannual Strategy Implementation Report <br />(BSIR) no later than 30 days after the end of each semi-annual reporting period. The BSIR is <br />submitted via the Grants Reporting Tool (GRT). <br />o For the reporting period January 1-June 30, the BSIR is due no later than July 30 <br />o For the reporting period July 1-December 31, the BSIR is due no later than January 30 <br />• In each EMPG Program recipient's Performance Progress Report (PPR), submitted via ND Grants <br />on a quarterly basis, the recipient must describe how expenditures support building capability, <br />closing capability gaps, or sustaining capabilities identified in the THIRA/SPR process. EMPG <br />Program recipients will, on a project -by -project basis, check one of the following: <br />FEMA <br />EMPG Program Appendix 12023 Page H-2 <br />