[HISTORY: Adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Village of Akron 12-27-1993. Amendments noted where applicable.]
GENERAL REFERENCES
Hazardous materials response plan  See Ch. 21.
This disaster preparedness plan is intended to set forth all necessary information pertaining to operating procedures, material and human resource availability and political organization and responsibility for the Village of Akron for use by the village officials during a declared emergency.
A. 
Disaster planning is based on the New York State Defense Emergency Act, the regulations and orders of the State Defense Council and the State Civil Defense Commission, the Emergency Plan for the Natural Disaster of the State of New York and the National Plan for Natural Disaster Mobilization.
B. 
Section 23 of Article 2B of the State Executive Law authorizes town and village governments to prepare disaster preparedness plans. Pursuant to § 23 of Article 2B, the Village Board has adopted the following disaster preparedness measures, designed to prevent or mitigate disasters and their effects, to provide for effective response and to facilitate recovery. The comprehensive emergency management concept that is adopted in New York State prepares local governments to effectively utilize all of its resources before, during and after disasters to minimize their impact.
C. 
Minimization of the effects of disaster is the primary motive of effective disaster planning. The Village Board acknowledges that planning and preparatory actions are required before a disaster strikes. Coordinated disaster planning permits town and village citizens to more adequately respond to emergency situations, saving lives and minimizing the loss of property. The Village Board shall have the primary responsibility to see that everything possible is done to prepare for disasters and to provide for the safety and security of the community during a disaster.
A. 
Upon finding by the Mayor (Disaster Coordinator and/or Assistant Disaster Coordinator), with the advice and counsel of the various departments, that the public safety is imperiled, the Mayor is authorized by Article 2B of the Executive Law to proclaim a state of emergency within any part or all of the territorial limits of the Village of Akron.[1]
[1]
Editor's Note: See the Declaration of State of Emergency form included at the end of this chapter.
B. 
Following the proclamation of an emergency order, the Mayor may issue any orders or directives, where required, to protect life and property or to mitigate the destructive impact of the disaster. Section 24 of Article 2B permits the Mayor to issue orders providing for the:
(1) 
Prohibition and control of pedestrian and vehicular traffic throughout the territorial limits of the Village of Akron.
(2) 
Designation of certain areas of the village as unsafe for occupancy or passage.
(3) 
Imposition of curfews.
(4) 
Closing or restricted use of places of amusement and assembly (barrooms, casinos, recreation facilities, etc.).
(5) 
Suspension or limitation of the sale, use or transportation of alcoholic beverages, firearms, explosives and flammable materials and liquids.
(6) 
Suspension of local laws, ordinances or regulations subject to any constitutional and statutory limitations as set forth in Subdivision 1g of § 24 of the Executive Law.[2]
[2]
Editor's Note: Amended at time of adoption of Code (see Ch. 1, General Provisions, Art. I).
The emergency operations center for the Village of Akron will be designated by the Mayor at the time of declaration of a state of emergency. Once the Mayor declares a state of emergency, the operations center will be staffed on a twenty-four-hour basis until the emergency expires. The Mayor, as chief executive, pursuant to the mandates of Article 2B, shall make all necessary decisions and shall issue all necessary directives during the course of the disaster on matters pertaining to the coordination of disaster relief measures and to the discharge of responsibilities of the department chiefs. Consequently, all warnings, directives and information, etc., shall be forwarded to department chiefs from the emergency operations center. This information will be circulated through the use of the services of the Village Board members and other designated village officials and representatives, the various department radios located in trucks and other vehicles and the telephone and radios located in the Village Administration Buildings.
The general duties of staff operating disaster control center shall be as follows:
A. 
Mayor. The Mayor, as chief executive officer of the village, with counsel from the Board of Trustees and such other advisors as he shall deem necessary, shall have the authority under existing statutes to declare a state of emergency in the village and shall render the final decision on all matters pertaining to the safety and security of the village and the citizens therein, as well as the deployment of all persons in the field assisting in the effort to control the emergency.
B. 
Disaster Coordinator. The Disaster Coordinator directs the implementation of the Village of Akron Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan for the emergency operations center (EOC), under the direction of the Mayor. Also, under the direction of the Mayor, the Disaster Coordinator will coordinate the emergency operations of the EOC, prepare operational priorities and recommend requests for assistance from the Erie County Office of Disaster Preparedness.
C. 
Appointed Trustee. The Mayor shall appoint one Trustee, who, in the absence of the Mayor, shall assume all duties and responsibilities of the Mayor and any other functions and assignments conferred upon him by the Mayor.
D. 
Village Clerk-Treasurer. The Village Clerk-Treasurer shall inform the Mayor and the Board of Trustees as to necessary expenditures incurred by the village and shall maintain records of hours worked by all village employees and any outside contractors hired by the village to assist in the effort to control the emergency.
E. 
Village Board. The Village Board shall be an advisory board to the coordinator of the operations of their regularly assigned duties and such other special duties as may be assigned to them by the Mayor.
F. 
Village Attorney. The Village Attorney shall act as an advisory assistant to the Village Mayor. He shall act in any capacity that is deemed necessary by the Village Mayor to assure an effective operation of the EOC.
G. 
Police (State, Village of Akron, Erie County Sheriff's Department). The police shall be responsible for the security of the homes, schools, mercantile establishments, government installations, as well as all other private and municipally owned properties within the village. They, or their delegated liaison, shall be in constant communication with the control center for the purpose of receiving calls from persons needing assistance of the department and shall assign patrol officers in the field to render such assistance. They shall assign as many men as shall be considered necessary to effect the duties of the Police Department. They shall assign the officers, if possible, so that each man shall have four hours rest after each 16 hours in the field. They shall maintain a record of the man-hours worked by the department and submit a copy to the Village Clerk-Treasurer for village records.
H. 
Department of Highways. Under the direction of the Superintendent, the Department of Highways shall use such tools and equipment that may have to be rented or borrowed to keep the village streets open for the free and unobstructed movement of emergency equipment. The department shall also, at the scene of the emergency, exert all necessary actions to relieve the emergency and minimize any danger to citizens or property. The Superintendent or his delegate shall be in constant communications with the control center to receive and dispatch men and material to work areas in the area of emergency. He shall assign as many men as he shall deem necessary to effect the safe operation of his workers at the scene of the emergency. The portable water and wastewater facilities shall be maintained in serviceable condition as long as it is within the boundaries of human endeavor. The Superintendent shall maintain a record of man-hours worked by the men in the department and shall submit a copy to the Village Clerk-Treasurer for village records.
I. 
Fire Department. The Fire Department is charged with the duty of preventing or extinguishing fires within the village, as well as rendering emergency treatment and transportation to professional facilities, if possible, of injured or sick persons in the village. The Chief, or his delegate, shall be in constant communication with the control center to assign equipment and personnel to any emergency as he deems necessary. The Captain of the Fire Police shall deploy his men at the scene of the emergency in cooperation with orders from the Fire Department Chief and sheriff's deputies, and those assigned by the Fire Chief should report to and be under the direction of the Sheriff's Department. The Fire Chief should submit a copy of all man-hours worked, along with expenditures, to the Village Clerk-Treasurer for village records.
J. 
Telephone, electric, gas and cable companies. If installations of any of these public utilities are involved in any emergency within the village, it would help ensure regulated directions of their operations if the Mayor would request of the affected or endangered companies to have a representative in the communication center to establish necessary priorities so that all departments involved work in coordination with each other.
K. 
American Red Cross and Salvation Army. If the Mayor should request assistance from the American Red Cross, they should have a delegate assigned to the disaster control center and direct operations of their volunteers in whatever duties assigned to them by the Mayor.
L. 
Erie County Sheriff and State Police. The Mayor shall, in the event that it is impossible to maintain law and order with the forces within the village government, request assistance from the Erie County Sheriff or State Police.
M. 
Erie County Health Department. In the event of the danger of an epidemic of any communicable disease, the Mayor shall request a representative from the Health Department to be in communication with the control center to assist and advise him in all health matters affecting the village and its residents.
N. 
Erie County Disaster Coordinator. The Erie County Disaster Coordinator should be contacted and requested to respond to the communication center when this plan is activated.
O. 
Code Enforcement Officer. The Code Enforcement Officer of the village will be responsible for all safety inspections of damaged homes and businesses before evacuees are allowed to reoccupy such buildings and to begin damage assessment and evaluation process with the assistance of the Village Assessor.
P. 
Akron Central School System. The Akron Central School System will play an important part in the evacuation of the Village of Akron. If an emergency would happen during school time, all students will be transported to the Alden Central Schools. The Superintendent of the Akron Schools shall contact the Alden School and ask that their students be released at once, so that the Akron students may be housed. If an emergency occurs after school time, the disaster control center may request buses to evacuate residents of the village at a greater rate if necessary.
[1]
Editor's Note: See also the Disaster Preparedness Plan diagram included at the end of this chapter.
A. 
The EOC staff will be contacted by the Disaster Coordinator or his designated representative after the situation has been evaluated and a state of emergency has been declared by the Village Mayor. The EOC will be staffed 24 hours a day while the emergency is in effect, and it will be staffed by an administrative member from the following departments:
Department
Representative
Time Contacted
Mayor (CEO)1
___________________
Disaster Coordinator2
___________________
Deputy Mayor
___________________
Trustee
___________________
Trustee
___________________
Trustee
___________________
Fire Chief-Akron
___________________
Fire Chief-Newstead
___________________
Village Attorney
___________________
Village Clerk-Treasurer
___________________
Police Department
___________________
Highway Department
___________________
Building Department
___________________
Secretary (CEO)
___________________
NOTES:
1 Director of the emergency operations center (EOC).
2 Assistant to the Director of the emergency operations center.
B. 
Other departments may be contacted for additional assistance, and at that time they will be instructed where to deploy their resources.
A. 
The disaster response team will include the following individuals:
(1) 
Emergency Disaster Coordinator.
(2) 
Police agency.
(3) 
Superintendent of Public Works or his designee.
(4) 
Village Engineer or his designee.
(5) 
Code Enforcement Officer.
(6) 
Fire Chiefs.
B. 
The primary responsibility of the disaster response team is to evaluate the extent of the emergency and make recommendations to the Village Mayor as to the need to declare a formal disaster.
C. 
This information may be obtained on a firsthand basis or by having an assigned individual from each department make a recommendation to the department's supervisor.
D. 
After each department has received its information, the disaster response team will meet at the EOC and be ready to make a formal recommendation to the Village Mayor.
E. 
With the information that will be provided to the Village Mayor and his advisory council, they will then be able to make an informed decision as to the need for a formal state of emergency declaration.
A. 
It is imperative that the public be kept informed of the developments during an emergency or disaster. In the event of a major disaster incident, the Village of Akron Emergency Disaster Coordinator shall request the assistance of the Police Department in the establishment of a command area. He shall also appoint a Media Supervisor to act as the representative from the Village of Akron to keep the media appraised of the information regarding the incident. Factual information (casualties, damages, locations) that shall be given out shall be cleared through the Chief Executive Officer before it is given. This will prevent conflicts and inaccuracies.
B. 
It shall be the responsibility of the Disaster Coordinator to assign an Information Clerk in the EOC for the purpose of keeping records of the following:
(1) 
Notification of press personnel as to the location of the press area. Press agencies to be notified shall include but not be limited to television stations, radio stations and newspapers.
(2) 
Log of events.
(a) 
A log of the events, which shall be a chronological listing of all actions taken by the Media Relations Officer. This shall include:
[1] 
All information received and from whom the information was received.
[2] 
Names of all press agencies and persons contacted.
[3] 
Names of all of the press agencies and their people that are checked into the press area.
[4] 
Casualty lists and, if possible, the medical status of victims, not specific to the types of injuries.
[5] 
The locations of persons receiving medical treatment.
(b) 
This log shall also contain the times and dates of all of the occurrences.
C. 
If the police do not have anyone available to act as the Media Relations Officer, the Chief Executive Officer shall appoint a Media Relations Officer. Below are some guidelines to follow when speaking with the media:
(1) 
The media is going to report some type of a story. It is better that they report the correct version rather than speculating. Do not ignore the media. They have a job to do. Utilize them to your advantage.
(2) 
Assign a calm and knowledgeable spokesperson to interact with the media.
(3) 
Gather factual information. The people should receive factual information, even if it is bad news.
(4) 
Do not be afraid to talk to the media. Provide to them information from a written statement only. This will relax you so that you will not have to remember everything that you should tell them.
(5) 
Rehearse what you will say to the media.
(6) 
Talk in simple terms, not firemanic language.
(7) 
Be direct. The media and public are smarter than you think.
(8) 
Consider making statements such as:
(a) 
"We are taking precautions..."
(b) 
"It is your best interest that..."
(c) 
"In some cases..."
(d) 
"It is possible that..."
(e) 
"It is believed..."
(9) 
You do not have to answer all of their questions. If you are not sure, tell them so. Do not fabricate answers without the facts to back that answer up.
(10) 
Having good news is certainly a plus.
(11) 
Consider providing the news media with access to the site if it can be done safely and without a disturbance.
(12) 
Inform the media when a press release will be given, and make sure you keep that appointment.
A. 
The Village of Akron has several different ways to alert the public, in an emergency, for the purpose of evacuations. Listed below are the methods that will be followed for notifying the public of evacuation procedures. All warnings that will be issued will come from the Media Relations Officer.
(1) 
Police and Fire Department vehicles, using their loudspeakers and public address systems, will patrol, if safe, down the areas that have been determined to be in need of evacuation and will pass on the necessary directions and information.
(2) 
In addition to patrolling the streets, police and. fire personnel will conduct a door-to-door notification. This procedure will only be followed if the area is determined as being safe for pedestrian travel by the incident commander.
(3) 
Announcements that will be released to the media will be specific as to the routes to take and the areas to evacuate to. These announcements will be made to the media by the Media Relations Officer.
B. 
Public warnings shall include the following information:
(1) 
A description of the emergency situation.
(2) 
What specific actions residents should take.
(3) 
How they can obtain additional information for assistance.
C. 
Instructions shall be given in a calm manner, along with the instructions being thorough and complete. The following section has specific information on:
(1) 
What to take with you.
(2) 
What not to take with you.
(3) 
What to do before you leave for the emergency evacuation.
D. 
Protective measures for the purpose of a hazardous materials release may differ from this plan. For procedures to follow for a hazardous materials release, see Chapter 21, Hazardous Materials Response Plan, of the Code of the Village of Akron.
A. 
It is essential that you plan ahead for the most expeditious evacuation. Know where you are going, how you will get there and what you will need. Each family member, as well as your prospective host family, should be familiar with your plans.
B. 
Where to go.
(1) 
It you have a vacation cabin, relatives or friends outside the risk area, go there as soon as possible. Your destination should be within reasonable distance, as it may be necessary to commute to work.
(2) 
If you do not have a definite location, you should proceed to the nearest reception area indicated by officials.
(3) 
Campers or recreation vehicles could also provide comfortable shelter. Be sure you park your vehicle outside the designated risk area.
C. 
How to get there.
(1) 
If you have your own transportation, drive to your destination using the route given by your local officials. Use of personal vehicles or prearranged car pools are preferable, as it may be necessary to commute to work or shopping areas.
(2) 
If you have no private means of transportation, public transportation will be provided.
(3) 
If you are physically unable to get to transportation, make arrangements to be picked up and transported to your reception area.
D. 
What to take with you.
(1) 
Useful clothing and bedding (sleeping bags, blankets, air mattresses).
(2) 
Drinkable water, food, especially food requiring little preparation, utensils, can opener, matches.
(3) 
Safety, sanitation and medical supplies; include a flashlight and battery-operated radio with extra batteries.
(4) 
Baby supplies, if applicable.
(5) 
Important papers, including deeds, insurance policies, credit cards and currency.
E. 
What not to take.
(1) 
Firearms.
(2) 
Narcotics.
(3) 
Alcoholic beverages.
(4) 
Pets.
F. 
What to do before you leave.
(1) 
Get ample supply of any prescription medicines and special foods.
(2) 
Collect important papers.
(3) 
Check home for security; see that locks are secure; store valuables left behind (silverware, etc.) in a safe place.
A. 
Mitigation (long-term).
(1) 
Definition. Mitigation includes any activities which actually eliminate or reduce the probability of occurrence of a disaster. It also includes long-term activities which reduce the effects of unavoidable disasters.
(2) 
General measures: building codes, vulnerability analysis updates, tax incentives, zoning and land use management, building use regulations/safety codes, compliance and enforcement, resource allocation/interstate sharing, preventive health care and public education.
(3) 
Specific measures: dam/dike construction, inspection, stream channelization, construct/protect retention basin, reforest/prevent deforestation, contour farming and floodproof buildings.
(4) 
Additional measures: establish EOC, establish communications systems, hazard vulnerability analysis, evaluate building standards, familiarize federal programs (insurance, grants, etc.), establish resource checklist, land use management.
B. 
Preparedness (to respond).
(1) 
Definition. Preparedness activities are necessary to the extent that mitigation measures have not or cannot, prevent disasters. In the preparedness phase, governments, organizations and individuals develop plans to save lives and minimize disaster damage. Preparedness measures also seek to enhance disaster response operations.
(2) 
General measures: preparedness plans, emergency exercises/training, warning systems, emergency communications system, evacuation plans and training, resource inventories, emergency personnel/contact lists, mutual aid agreements and public information/education.
(3) 
Specific measures: temporary levee construction, stream-flow monitoring, ice and debris removal, sandbagging and temporary floodproofing.
(4) 
Additional measures include: review and revise plans; brief local officials; establish mutual aid/adjoining jurisdictions; public information; review resources/forecasting, establish liaison on county and/or state; consider water, food, electric and gas shortages, ensure adequate fuel on hand for emergency equipment.
C. 
Response (to emergency).
(1) 
Definition. Response activities follow an emergency or disaster. Generally, they are designed to provide emergency assistance for casualties. They also seek to reduce the probability of secondary damage and to speed recovery operations.
(2) 
General measures: activate public warning, notify public authorities, mobilize emergency personnel/equipment, emergency medical assistance, man emergency operations centers, declare disaster/evacuate, mobilize security forces, search and rescue and emergency suspension of laws.
(3) 
Specific measures: helicopter search and boat rescue.
(4) 
Additional measures: disaster declaration, damage assessment, activate public warning and information, mobilize emergency personnel, mutual aid, if necessary, establish food service and sleeping arrangements for evacuees and emergency people.
D. 
Recovery (short- and long-term).
(1) 
Definition. Recovery continues until all systems return to normal or better. Short-term recovery returns vital life-support systems to minimum operating standards. Long-term recovery may continue for a number of years after a disaster. Their purpose is to return life to normal or improved levels.
(2) 
General measures: damage insurance/loans and grants, temporary housing, long-term medical care, disaster unemployment insurance, public information, health and safety education, reconstruction, counseling programs and economic impact studies.
(3) 
Specific measures: decontamination, replant crops, pump out flooded basements, remove temporary floodproofing and monitor.
(4) 
Additional measures: set up one-stop center, short-term medical care to include inoculations for waterborne disease and rodents, maintain a list of injured and dead, assist in expanding mortuary services.
Upon notification by initial response units (police, fire, medical, other) of a possible disaster/emergency situation, the designated official, after his immediate appraisal, will alert the local emergency operations staff and the Erie County Office of Disaster Preparedness (see attached Alerting Procedure) and have the following:
A. 
Title and name of official declaring disaster situation.
B. 
Municipality: city, town, village.
C. 
Type of disaster/emergency.
D. 
Area affected (limited or entire).
E. 
Initial damage/destruction.
F. 
Initial aid required beyond local capabilities: police, fire, medical, shelter, other.
G. 
Major access roads:
Blocked
Direction
__________________ from _______________________
__________________ from _______________________
__________________ from _______________________
H. 
Location of emergency operations center, if other than that designated in plan, phone number, radio call letters, CB channel.
I. 
Aid to report to emergency operations center.
J. 
Aid to report to command post.