The National Incident Management System (NIMS) is emergency management doctrine used across the United States to coordinate emergency preparedness and incident management and response among the public (Federal, Tribal, state, and local government agencies) and private sectors.
NIMS is a comprehensive, national approach to incident management that is applicable at all jurisdictional levels and across functional disciplines. NIMS enables us to work together to prevent, protect against, respond to, recover from, and mitigate the effects of incidents, regardless of cause, size, location, or complexity, in order to reduce the loss of life and property and harm to the environment.
NIMS works hand in hand with the National Response Framework (NRF) - NIMS provides the template for the management of incidents, while the NRF provides the structure and mechanisms for national-level policy for incident management.
The benefits of NIMS include:
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Homeland Security Presidential Directive 5 (HSPD-5), “Management of Domestic Incidents,” directed the Secretary of Homeland Security to develop and administer a National Incident Management System (NIMS).
The 2003 presidential directive required all federal agencies to adopt the NIMS and to use it in their individual domestic incident management and emergency prevention, preparedness, response, recovery and mitigation programs and activities. The directive also required Federal Departments and agencies to make adoption of NIMS by state, tribal, and local organizations a condition for federal preparedness awards beginning in federal fiscal year (FY) 2005. Federal Preparedness Awards can include grants, contracts, equipment, supplies, and other activities. It is not limited to financial aid.
NIMS is based on a balance of flexibility and standardization:
NIMS is flexible because it is applicable to any incident regardless of cause, size, location, or complexity and its components can also be utilized to develop all-hazards plans, processes, procedures, agreements, and roles.
NIMS provides an organized set of scalable and standardized operational structures, which is critical for allowing various organizations and agencies to work together in a predictable, coordinated manner. NIMS provides standardized terminology, organizational structures, processes, and procedures designed to improve operability among jurisdictions and disciplines in various areas.
Preparedness is essential for effective incident and emergency management. Achieving national preparedness requires partnership among all levels of government, the private sector, and nongovernmental organizations. NIMS preparedness encompasses a continuous cycle of planning, organizing, training, equipping, exercising, evaluating, and taking corrective action. Ongoing preparedness provides for better coordination during times of crisis. Moreover, NIMS aid in the understanding how best to respond to both domestic incidents and terrorist attacks. Local, state and federal officials have the ability analyze the efficacy of prevention, response and preparedness capabilities and procedures within their outfit.
NIMS prompts the use of flexible communications and information systems that allow all emergency management and response partners to establish and maintain a common operating picture of the incident. This NIMS component builds on the key concepts of interoperability, reliability, scalability, and portability to ensure that personnel from different disciplines, jurisdictions, organizations, and agencies are able to communicate, using plain language, with each other.
Efficient incident management requires a system for identifying available resources at all jurisdictional levels to enable timely and unimpeded access to resources needed to prepare for, respond to, or recover from an incident. Resource management under the NIMS includes mutual-aid agreements; the use of special Federal, State, local, and tribal teams; and resource mobilization protocols.
The Command and Management component NIMS outlines the systems and processes the form the basis for standardizes response operations and information sharing. This is accomplished through the use of consistent terminology and established organization structure. These tool, applied consistently, provide the framework for effective and efficient incident command and management via the following systems:
The Secretary of Homeland Security, through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) National Integration Center (NIC), is responsible for:
NIMS is applicable to all levels of government, the private sector, and nongovernmental organizations who have an active role in emergency management and incident response. Below is a summary of key roles and responsibilities.
Incident Responders or Stakeholders include: Law Enforcement: Patrol, Supervisors, Accident Investigators/Reconstructionists Fire Department: Fire personnel, Officers, Rescue/Extrication crews, HazMat teams Emergency Medical: Duty personnel, Supervisors, Air Medical crews Tow & Recovery Operators: Light-, Medium-, & Heavy-duty Operators, Supervisors Highway Department: Municipal, County, State DOT, Courtesy Patrol, Tollway Communication: 911 Centers, Traffic Operations Centers, Transportation Management Centers (TMC)
Recognizing the need to keep NIMS current and relevant within the emergency management and homeland security communities, the Secretary of Homeland Security established the NIMS Integration Center, now National Integration Center, in June 2004. The National Integration Center is a division with FEMA's National Preparedness Directorate and is the primary government office responsible for the maintenance and management of NIMS. The National Integration Center collaborates with Federal, State, Tribal, and local communities and the private sector to provide strategic direction for, and oversight of, NIMS:
For more information on NIMS and NIMS implementation, contact the National Integration Center - 500 C Street, SW Washington, DC 20472
The NIMS Resource Center (www.fema.gov/nims) provides online resources to implement and maintain NIMS concepts and principles, including:
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