National Emergency Communications Plan
Abstract
Congress and the Administration have recognized that a successful response to a future major incident - either a terrorist attack or natural disaster - requires a coordinated, "interoperable" response by the Nation's public safety, public health, and emergency management community, both public and private, at the Federal, State, tribal, Territorial, regional, and local levels. Recognizing the need for an overarching strategy to help coordinate and guide such efforts, Congress directed the Department of Homeland Security to develop the first National Emergency Communications Plan (NECP). The purpose of the NECP is to promote the ability of emergency response providers and relevant government officials to continue to communicate in the event of natural disasters, acts of terrorism, and other man-made disasters and to ensure, accelerate, and attain interoperable emergency communications nationwide. To strengthen emergency communications capabilities nationwide, the Plan focuses on technology, coordination, governance, planning, usage, training and exercises at all levels of government. This approach recognizes that communications operability is a critical building block for interoperability; emergency response officials first must be able to establish communications within their own agency before they can interoperate with neighboring jurisdictions and other agencies.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jul 01, 2008
- Accession Number
- ADA506785
Entities
Organizations
- United States Department of Homeland Security