[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
This Part shall be known and may be citied and referred to as
the "Emergency Management Ordinance of East Pennsboro Township."
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
1.Â
The purpose of this Part is to set forth the authority and responsibility
of East Pennsboro Township in the prevention of, preparation for,
response to, and the recovery from natural or man-made emergencies
or hostile military or paramilitary action and do the following:
A.Â
Reduce vulnerability of people and property of this Township to damage,
injury, and loss of life and property.
B.Â
Prepare for prompt and efficient rescue and care, and treatment of
threatened or affected persons.
C.Â
Coordinate with county, state and federal agencies for the orderly
rehabilitation of persons and restoration of property.
D.Â
Provide for cooperation and coordination of activities relating to
emergency mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery among agencies
and officials of this Township and with the similar agencies and officials
of other municipalities, counties, with the state and federal governments,
with interstate organizations, and with other private and quasi-official
organizations.
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
The following words and phrases, when used in this Part, shall
have the meanings given to them in this section, unless the context
clearly indicates otherwise:
The Pennsylvanian Emergency Management Agency.
The Pennsylvania Emergency Management Council.
A man-made disaster, natural disaster, or war-caused or paramilitary
action.
Conditions which may, by investigation made, be found actually
or likely, to
Affect seriously the safety, health or welfare of a substantial
number of residents of this Township or preclude the operation or
use of essential public facilities;
Be of such magnitude or severity as to render essential state
supplementation of county and local efforts or resources exerted or
utilized in alleviating the danger, damage, suffering or hardship
faced; and
Have been caused by forces beyond the control of man, by reason
of civil disorder, riot or disturbance, or by factors not foreseen
and not known to exist when appropriation bills were enacted.
The preparation for and carrying out of functions, other
than functions for which military forces are primarily responsible,
to prevent, minimize and provide emergency repair of injury and damage
resulting from disasters, together with all other activities necessary
or incidental to the preparation for and carrying out of those functions.
The functions include, without limitation, firefighting services,
police services, medical and health services, rescue, engineering,
disaster warning services, communications, radiological, shelter,
chemical and other special weapons defense, evacuation of persons
from stricken areas, emergency welfare services, emergency transportation,
emergency resource management, existing or properly assigned functions
of plant protection, temporary restoration of public utility services
and other functions related to civilian protection.
The condition declared by the Board of Commissioners when,
in its judgment, the threat or actual occurrence of a disaster is
or threatens to be of sufficient severity and magnitude to warrant
coordinated local government action to prevent or alleviate the damage,
loss, hardship or suffering threatened or caused thereby. A local
emergency arising wholly or substantially out of a resource shortage
may be declared only by the Governor upon petition of the Board of
Commissioners, when he or she deems the threat or actual occurrence
of a disaster to be of sufficient severity and magnitude to warrant
coordinated local government action to prevent or alleviate the damage,
loss, hardship or suffering threatened or caused thereby.
Any industrial, nuclear or transportation accident, explosion,
conflagration, power failure, natural resource shortage or other condition,
except enemy action, resulting from man-made causes, such as oil spills
and other injurious environmental contamination, which threatens or
causes substantial damage to property, human suffering, hardship or
loss of life.
Any hurricane, tornado, storm, flood, high water, wind-driven
water, tidal wave, earthquake, landslide, mudslide, snowstorm, drought,
fire, explosion or other catastrophe which results in substantial
damage to property, hardship, suffering or possible loss of life.
Any county, city, borough, incorporated town or township,
including the Township of East Pennsboro.
The absence, unavailability or reduced supply of any raw
or processed natural resource, or any commodities, goods or services
of any kind which bear a substantial relationship to the health, safety,
welfare and economic well-being of the citizens of this commonwealth.
The Township of East Pennsboro, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania.
Any condition following an attack upon the United States
resulting in substantial damage to property or injury to persons in
the United States caused by use of bombs, missiles, shellfire, nuclear,
radiological, chemical or biological means, or other weapons or overt
paramilitary actions, or other conditions such as sabotage.
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
Under the authority granted by 35 Pa.C.S.A. § 7101,
a disaster emergency may be declared by the Board of Commissioners
upon finding a disaster has occurred or is imminent. The President
of the Board of Commissioners may declare a disaster emergency subject
to ratification by the Board. The declaration shall not be continued
or renewed for a period in excess of seven days except by or with
the consent of the Board. Any order or resolution declaring, continuing
or terminating a disaster emergency shall be given prompt and general
publicity and shall be filed promptly with Cumberland County and the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agencies. The effect
of a declaration of a disaster emergency is to activate the response
and recovery aspects of any and all applicable local emergency management
plans and to authorize the furnishing of aid and assistance thereunder.
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
1.Â
In the event of declaration of a disaster emergency by the Governor or as provided in § 28-104, the Board of Commissioners, or the President of the Board, subject to ratification by the Board, may direct and authorize the Emergency Management Coordinator or Assistant Coordinators to do the following:
B.Â
To authorize the Emergency Management Coordinator, or Assistant Coordinators,
Chief of Police or any police officer, any employee of the Township,
any person temporarily authorized to so act, any member of the Pennsylvania
State Police, or any member of the Armed Forces of the United States
or of the Pennsylvania National Guard to open or close any street,
whether public or private, to establish one-way streets, to regulate
traffic, to prohibit or regulate stopping, standing or parking of
vehicles, to establish speed limits, to prohibit or restrict use of
any street, to designate any street as a through street, to prohibit
or regulate the turning of vehicles, to prohibit or regulate use of
a designated street, to remove any vehicle parked in violation of
such order, to prohibit and regulate movement of vehicles or persons
on any street, and to adopt such other traffic regulations as the
circumstances may reasonably require.
C.Â
To establish a curfew from 9:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m., prevailing time,
or at any time to control movement on streets. During such curfew,
no person shall be or remain upon any street or alley or other public
place in the Township, unless such person is going to or from a place
of lawful employment, a hospital, a physician or other health care
provider, or performing a lawful duty directly related to the disaster
emergency.
D.Â
To enter into mutual aid agreements with adjacent political subdivisions
for reciprocal emergency assistance consistent with plans and programs
of the agency.
E.Â
To render assistance in accordance with the provisions of the mutual
aid agreements.
F.Â
Where the Governor declares a disaster emergency, to acquire temporary
or permanent sites, by purchase, lease or otherwise, required for
installation of temporary housing units for disaster victims and to
enter into whatever arrangements are necessary to prepare or equip
the sites to utilize the housing units.
G.Â
To perform public work, to enter into contracts, to incur obligations,
to employ temporary workers, to rent equipment, to purchase supplies
and materials and to appropriate and expend public funds.
H.Â
To require personnel essential to police, fire, security, public
utilities and other governmental functions to perform such functions
as required to provide for the health, welfare and safety of the community
after evacuation.
I.Â
To regulate and control agricultural, commercial and industrial functions
related to the security, health, welfare and safety of the community.
J.Â
To continue to participate in the Intergovernmental Cooperation Act
for a joint emergency operations plan in accordance with Ordinance
766-10.
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
The provisions of this Part, as far as they are the same as
those of ordinances in force immediately prior to the enactment of
this Part, are intended as a continuation of such ordinances and not
as new enactments. The provisions of this Part shall not affect any
such suit or prosecution pending or to be instituted to enforce any
right or penalty or to punish any offense under the authority of any
ordinance repealed by this Part.
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
The provisions of this Part are severable, and if any of its
provisions shall be held to be unconstitutional, illegal, or invalid,
such decision shall not affect the validity of any of the remaining
provisions of this Part. It is hereby declared as a legislative intent
that this Part would have been adopted had such unconstitutional,
illegal or invalid provision not been included herein.
[Ord. 794-16, 10/5/2016]
This Part shall become effective upon enactment.