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Archive for the ‘Disaster Planning’ Category

Disaster Recovery Info from Heritage Emergency

Thursday, September 11th, 2008

Heritage Emergency National Task Force, the folks who brought us the “Emergency Response and Salvage Wheel” and lots of other helpful advice and information, has a new page up on their site called Current Disaster Information , which gathers together many resources aimed specifically at dealing with damage from hurricanes and other powerful weather events and natural disasters.  The page also has a section where cultural institutions can submit damage reports and request assistance, along with the capability to view reports/requests already submitted.  Also, look for the free, downloadable “Guide to Navigating FEMA and SBA Disaster Aid for Cultural Institutions,” a little farther down the page.  This is a rich site, and deserves a close look at the many resources they have provided.  Thanks, Heritage Emergency TF!

Updated sample plan

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

I’ve just completed an update of our library’s Emergency Preparedness & Response Plan. (You can also find the plan, along with other sample plans, on the page above devoted to disaster plan templates and samples.) I think the organization is improved and more intuitive, there is clarification of the shelter-in-place procedures, and I added pictures, so that staff will readily recognize some of the places and features mentioned in the text. Some new sections: procedures for Active Shooter/Violent Incident, and a photo documentation of what our collection areas look like now, since we have just completed a major weeding/shifting project. I hope the new plan will be helpful, and please let me know if you have questions or comments about it.

Hospital sample plan available

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Heidi Sandstrom, Associate Director of the Pacific Southwest Region, facilitated availability of our first sample disaster plan for a hospital library.  Please look on the “Disaster Plan Templates/Samples” page (see link in menu above) for the contribution from Joy Graham at San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center.  Thanks, Heidi and Joy!

Additional help for Service Continuity Planning

Friday, July 25th, 2008

While most of us wouldn’t consider our libraries to be businesses in the traditional sense, we do have some similar features and some shared needs, especially when it comes to planning for business/service continuity.  The Homeland Security website has an excellent “Plan to Stay in Business” list for businesses, and if you click on the Continuity Planning link from that page, you will find a more detailed list of activities to help you prepare for an unplanned service disruption.  Also available from the Continuity Planning page is their Sample Emergency Plan.  It is available in PDF format, which you can quickly fill out right there and then print.  Network members will have to do some adapting to make it fit their needs, but it is certainly a great way to help us think through what we need to do.  Everyone who has been in any of the training sessions already for the NN/LM Emergency Preparedness & Response Plan will recognize most of what is presented on the Ready.gov site, so the site is helpful as a review, also. 

Update on dPlan “Lite”

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

At our training sessions, we have mentioned dPlan, which is hosted by the Northeast Document Conservation Center (NEDCC), as a template that is easy to use for creating a disaster plan.  It can be created in increments and saved on the NEDCC server, then printed as a PDF once the user has completed all, or whatever part is needed, of the plan.  We had heard that NEDCC is creating a “Lite” version of the plan, which might be even more accessible for network members who don’t have the staffing or time to spend creating an in-depth plan, but we hadn’t heard whether it was available yet.

I contacted Lori Foley, Director of Field Services at NEDCC, to find out what the current status is for dPlan “Lite,” and she responded that the Lite version is not yet ready for prime time, but they are hoping to be able to release it by the end of this summer.  She will send me a heads-up once it goes live, and we’ll pass along the word to the NN/LM constituency.

New Sample Plan from UT Memphis

Thursday, April 10th, 2008

Many thanks to Frank Singarella for sending us the Emergency and Disaster Response Plan for the University of Tennessee/Memphis HSL’s library.  Please use the link below to see an excellent example of a plan, helpful to everyone, and especially for resource libraries.  Great work, Richard Nollan and the emergency management committee at UT!

UT Emergency Response and Disaster Plan

SWVaHILI Meeting

Monday, March 10th, 2008

The Southwest Virginia Health Information Librarians met at the University of Virginia’s Health Sciences Library on Friday, March 7, 2008.  The focus of the meeting was the introduction of NN/LM’s National Emergency Preparedness and Response plan.  Participants had received the following questions in preparation for the meeting:

  • list any emergency situations that have or could disrupt patient care at your hospital
  • prioritize a list of three services that you feel are most important to your patrons
  • prioritize a list of five online resources that you feel are most important to your patrons
  • prioritize a list of five print resources that you feel are most important to your patrons
  • list any unique resources at your library that would be at risk if your building suffered a disaster
  • what information sources that you provide access to would likely be needed by patient care personnel in the event of a disaster?  What services?

The answers to the questionnaire created a lively discussion about the topic, and generated some helpful feedback.   

Heritage Preservation says “Do one thing…”

Wednesday, February 27th, 2008

Heritage Preservation is encouraging cultural institutions to observe May Day this year by reviewing our preparedness situations, starting with “Do one thing for emergency preparedness.” There are some good suggestions for all of us with regard to our disaster plans and preparedness activities, plus some information about classes and other resources available for use in planning. Check it out here: http://www.heritagepreservation.org/PROGRAMS/TFlessons/MayDayInfo.html

HealthVault: Secure, Online Storage for Health Info

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

Microsoft has released a new software and services platform, HealthVault, to help people store and manage their health information online, as well as search for health information.  This looks like an excellent resource for use by people in disaster-prone areas, such as hurricane and tornado alleys.  Keeping health-related records “off-site” through a service such as HealthVault would enable people who are suddenly displaced to retrieve information about prescriptions, medical records, etc. from anywhere.  We know, from the lessons learned courtesy of hurricanes Katrina and Rita, that many people who were forced to evacuate were not able to remember the names of their medications in many cases, recalling only the color and the number of pills they usually took.

Could promoting this be a role for librarians, especially in hospital settings?

Seasonal Update Time

Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

For those of us who update our emergency preparedness plans with the change in seasons, we need to be thinking about the end-of-year/winter update. Probably the most significant event to consider is severe winter storms. As well as updating our work-related information, such as phone numbers and service continuity procedures in case staff don’t make it into work, we should all take a look at our own personal preparedness at home, so we don’t become casualties ourselves!

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