Developing an integrated emergency response programme for facilities: The experience of Public Works and Government Services Canada

Journal of Facilities Management - Tập 1 Số 4 - Trang 347-364 - 2002
RichardRenaud1, SarahPhillips2
1Manager, Infrastructure Continuity Unit, Public Works and Government Services Canada, Sir Charles Tupper Building, 2720 Riverside Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; Tel: +1 613 736 2045; Fax: +1 613 736 2211; E‐mail: [email protected]
2Tel: +1 613 736 3235; Fax: +1 613 736 2211; E‐mail: [email protected]

Tóm tắt

Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC) is the federal department responsible for housing over 190,000 Canadian federal public servants. During Y2K preparations, it became apparent that a single source or form of integrated, emergency response information at the infrastructure level did not exist. A process had to be created and developed that would serve as a single vehicle and source for building‐based emergency response. These preparations for Y2K saw the creation of the Infrastructure Continuity Unit (ICU) and a system for the creation, validation, and maintenance of Infrastructure Continuity Plans (ICPs). An ICP is an event‐management document that contains a series of procedures and protocols to be used during a building‐based incident or disruption of services. The ICU is supported nationally by a network of Regional Coordinators who oversee the gathering of information needed to create ICPs for their own parts of the country. This paper demonstrates how this system, along with the ICU’s recent certification by the Canadian General Standards Board (CGSB) to the ISO 9000 standard, have contributed to the ICU’s success. This paper takes the reader through an in‐depth exploration of the ICU’s processes, methodologies and procedures and demonstrates why, in a post‐September 11th world, the ICU has begun to attract international attention.

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