On
February 28, 2003, the President issued Homeland Security Presidential
Directive (HSPD)–5, Management of Domestic Incidents,
which directs the Secretary of Homeland Security to develop
and administer a National Incident Management System (NIMS).
This system provides a consistent nationwide template to enable
Federal, State, local, and tribal governments and private-sector
and nongovernmental organizations to work together effectively
and efficiently to prepare for, prevent, respond to, and recover
from domestic incidents, regardless of cause, size, or complexity,
including acts of catastrophic terrorism. This document establishes
the basic elements of the NIMS and provides mechanisms for
the further development and refinement of supporting national
standards, guidelines, protocols, systems, and technologies.
Building on the
foundation provided by existing incident management and emergency
response systems used by jurisdictions and functional disciplines
at all levels, this document integrates best practices that
have proven effective over the years into a comprehensive
framework for use by incident management organizations in
an all- hazards context (terrorist attacks, natural disasters,
and other emergencies) nationwide. It also sets in motion
the mechanisms necessary to leverage new technologies and
adopt new approaches that will enable continuous refinement
of the NIMS over time. This document was developed through
a collaborative, intergovernmental partnership with significant
input from the incident management functional disciplines,
the private sector, and nongovernmental organizations.
The NIMS represents
a core set of doctrine, concepts, principles, terminology,
and organizational processes to enable effective, efficient,
and collaborative incident management at all levels. It is
not an operational incident management or resource allocation
plan. To this end, HSPD-5 requires the Secretary of Homeland
Security to develop a National Response Plan (NRP) that integrates
Federal government domestic prevention, preparedness, response,
and recovery plans into a single, all-disciplines, all- hazards
plan. The NRP, using the comprehensive framework provided
by the NIMS, will provide the structure and mechanisms for
national-level policy and operational direction for Federal
support to State, local, and tribal incident managers and
for exercising direct Federal authorities and responsibilities
as appropriate under the law.
HSPD-5 requires
all Federal departments and agencies to adopt the NIMS and
to use it in their individual domestic incident management
and emergency prevention, preparedness, response, recovery,
and mitigation programs and activities, as well as in support
of all actions taken to assist State, local, or tribal entities.
The directive also requires Federal departments and agencies
to make adoption of the NIMS by State and local organizations
a condition for Federal preparedness assistance (through
grants, contracts, and other activities) beginning in FY
2005. Jurisdictional compliance with certain aspects of the
NIMS will be possible in the short term, such as adopting
the basic tenets of the Incident Command System (ICS) identified
in this document. Other aspects of the NIMS, however, will
require additional development and refinement to enable compliance
at a future date (e.g., data and communications systems interoperability).
The Secretary of Homeland Security, through the NIMS Integration
Center discussed in Chapter VII, will publish separately
the standards, guidelines, and compliance protocols for determining
whether a Federal, State, local, or tribal entity has adopted
the aspects of the NIMS that are in place by October 1, 2004.
The Secretary, through the NIMS Integration Center, will
also publish, on an ongoing basis, additional standards,
guidelines, and compliance protocols for the aspects of the
NIMS not yet fully developed.
Chapter
I - INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW >>
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