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."
assigned
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.
Yes, under ICS, there is always an incident commander (or a unified command) to which the operations section chief reports.
In Incident Command System (ICS) applications, the position that is always staffed is the Incident Commander. This role is crucial as it provides overall leadership and direction during an incident, ensuring effective coordination among different teams and resources. The Incident Commander is responsible for establishing objectives, strategies, and the overall incident action plan. Other positions may vary depending on the incident's complexity and scale, but the Incident Commander is consistently present.
They are only renewable if managed properly.
Reacting to a security incident is pretty much always more expensive than preventing it in the first place. Realize that part of the expense of reacting to a security incident is doing what you should have done to begin with, so you will have to pay that expense whether you wait for the incident or not. On top of that you have the expenses of identifying the incident, documenting it, recovering from it, lost time, lost resources, lost reputation, and in some cases fines and penalties if you have failed to protect personal information belonging to customers.
A reportable incident is typically classified as any event that results in injury, significant property damage, or poses a risk to safety or health. This includes accidents, workplace injuries, environmental spills, and instances of harassment or discrimination. Additionally, incidents that involve theft, vandalism, or breaches of data security are also generally reportable. Organizations often have specific guidelines to determine the necessity of reporting based on severity and impact.
The Incident ray, falling on the glass slab, and the Emergent ray will always be parallel to each other.
The classified section?
Reacting to a security incident is pretty much always more expensive than preventing it in the first place. Realize that part of the expense of reacting to a security incident is doing what you should have done to begin with, so you will have to pay that expense whether you wait for the incident or not. On top of that you have the expenses of identifying the incident, documenting it, recovering from it, lost time, lost resources, lost reputation, and in some cases fines and penalties if you have failed to protect personal information belonging to customers.
FALSE