The agency representatives within the Unified Command make joint decisions and speak as one voice. There is no individual who is the "Incident Commander" in a Unified Command, however, there is a single General Staff, administered by the joint UC.
requires the establishment of separate Operations Sections comprised of responders from each jurisdiction or agency
Enables institutions and agencies with different legal, geographic, and functional responsibilities to coordinate, plan, and interact effectively
Enables institutions and agencies with different legal, geographic, and functional responsibilities to coordinate, plan, and interact effectively.
Enables agencies with different legal, geographic, and functional responsibilities to coordinate, plan, and interact effectively.
A "Unified Command" provides the structure for effective coordination among different jurisdictions or agencies participating in an incident. The unified planning process results in a single Incident Action Plan to be implemented by a single Operations Chief.
incident commanders must concur on the selection of general staff section cheifs
Enables agencies with different legal, geographic, and functional responsibilities to coordinate, plan, and interact effectively
A "Unified Command" provides the structure for effective coordination among different jurisdictions or agencies participating in an incident. The unified planning process results in a single Incident Action Plan to be implemented by a single Operations Chief.
A "Unified Command" provides the structure for effective coordination among different jurisdictions or agencies participating in an incident. The unified planning process results in a single Incident Action Plan to be implemented by a single Operations Chief.
Unified Command- Multi-Agency/Multi-Jurisdiction
A "Unified Command" provides the structure for effective coordination among different jurisdictions or agencies participating in an incident. The unified planning process results in a single Incident Action Plan to be implemented by a single Operations Chief.
A "Unified Command" provides the structure for effective coordination among different jurisdictions or agencies participating in an incident. The unified planning process results in a single Incident Action Plan to be implemented by a single Operations Chief.
A "Unified Command" provides the structure for effective coordination among different jurisdictions or agencies participating in an incident. The unified planning process results in a single Incident Action Plan to be implemented by a single Operations Chief.