During an incident, tactical resources are classified as those assets and personnel that are essential for operational response and management. These resources include specialized teams, equipment, and technology needed to effectively address the situation at hand. They are crucial for executing strategies, mitigating risks, and ensuring the safety of individuals involved. Ultimately, tactical resources help coordinate and implement the response plan efficiently.
Assigned
* Assigned: Assigned resources are working on an assignment under the direction of a Supervisor. * Available:Available resources are assembled, have been issued their equipment, and are ready for immediate assignment. * Out-Of-Service: Out-of-service resources are not ready for available or assigned status.
the Operations Section
I have no idea what type of incident you are referring to. In a prison riot, any one of us regardless of our ordinary task, even a secretary, immediately became deputized. We were all trained and took over. We were trained in what to say and what orders to give to try to calm down the situation as fast as possible. If that did not work, the warden took over. We knew what options he had. We had no idea what options he would use. We followed the instructions we had been trained to do. That was automatic. Since we had no idea what would happen but only what we should do, we awaited orders. Tactical resources are classified because only one man knows what they will be this time. Everybody else says, "Yes Sir."
The term was originated by the Homeland Security department.l It is a designated position for the Officer in Charge of a specific incident, say a Pipe Line explosion, co-ordinating fire, medical services, damage control personnel, etc during the incident. Managing these resources is the direct task of the Incident Commander. It is not a regular rank like say, Deputy, Inspector, etc.
a set of guidelines and protocols for sharing sensitive and classified information during an incident response
The first step in coordinating resource needs is a thorough assessment or "sizeup" of the current incident situation and future incident potential
The first step in coordinating resource needs is a thorough assessment or "sizeup" of the current incident situation and future incident potential
Check-in officially notifies incident responders of your presence at the incident location. It helps in tracking who is on-site and ensures accountability during incident response operations. It is a critical step in managing personnel and resources effectively during emergencies.
"Natural resources" was a strategic objective for the whole war. The Midway battle was simply a part of the that war. A "tactical" portion of the bigger picture.
Incident Command System
the first step in managing resources during an incident is to identify requirements. to do so, an incident commander should