National Academies Press: OpenBook

Public Transportation Emergency Mobilization and Emergency Operations Guide (2005)

Chapter: Appendix D - Useful Mobilization Resources

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Page 125
Suggested Citation:"Appendix D - Useful Mobilization Resources." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2005. Public Transportation Emergency Mobilization and Emergency Operations Guide. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/23305.
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Page 125
Page 126
Suggested Citation:"Appendix D - Useful Mobilization Resources." National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2005. Public Transportation Emergency Mobilization and Emergency Operations Guide. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/23305.
×
Page 126

Below is the uncorrected machine-read text of this chapter, intended to provide our own search engines and external engines with highly rich, chapter-representative searchable text of each book. Because it is UNCORRECTED material, please consider the following text as a useful but insufficient proxy for the authoritative book pages.

D-1 APPENDIX D USEFUL MOBILIZATION RESOURCES Balog, John N. Safety Planning Information Directed to Emer- gency Response (S.P.I.D.E.R.), West Virginia Department of Transportation, Charleston, West Virginia; published by the Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, US Department of Transportation, October 13, 1994. Balog, J. N., Boyd, M. A., Caton, J. E., Strongin, J. B., and Bromley, P. N. The Public Transportation System Security and Emergency Preparedness Planning Guide, Report Number DOT-FTA-MA-26-5019-03-01. Washington, DC: US Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Admin- istration, January 2003. Balog, J. N., Bromley, P. B., Strongin, J. B., Boyd, A., Caton, J., and Mitchell, D. C. K9 Units in Public Transportation: A Guide for Decision Makers, Public Transportation Secu- rity: Volume 2, Transit Cooperative Research Report 86. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2002. Balog, J. N., Devost, M., and Sullivan J. P. Communication of Threats: A Guide, Public Transportation Security: Vol- ume 1, Transit Cooperative Research Program Report 86. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2002. Balog, John N. et al. Evacuation and Rescue of Elderly and Handicapped Passengers from Public Transportation Vehi- cles and Structures, Transportation Systems Center, Urban Mass Transportation Administration, US Department of Transportation, Cambridge, MA, November 1982. Balog, John N., and Hathaway, William T. Guidelines for the Development of Passenger, Vehicle, and Facility Sys- tem Security Program Plans, Paper Presented at the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board, National Research Council, Washington, DC, January 1993. Balog, John N., and Hathaway, William T. “Maximization of Transit Security Through Effective Use of Proce- dures,” Transportation Research Record, No. 1433: Pub- lic Transportation—Bus, Rail, Ridesharing, Paratransit Services and Transit Security, Transportation Research Board, National Research Council, Washington, DC, 1994. Balog, J. N. and Strongin, J. B. A Guide to Public Transpor- tation Security Resources, Transit Cooperative Research Program Research Results Digest, Number 59, Trans- portation Research Board, National Research Council, May 2003. Balog, John N., Schwarz, Anne N., and Doyle, Bernard C. Transit Security Procedures Guide, Volpe National Trans- portation Systems Center; US Department of Transporta- tion; Cambridge, MA, December 1994. Balog, John N., Schwarz, Anne N.; and Doyle, Bernard C. Transit System Security Program Planning Guide, Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, US Department of Transportation, Cambridge, Massachu- setts, January 1994. Boyd, M. A., Maier, M. P, and Caton, J. E. Critical Incident Management Guidelines, Report number FTA-MA-26- 7009-98-1. Washington, DC: US Department of Trans- portation, Federal Transit Administration, 1998. Boyd, M. A. and Sullivan, J. P. Emergency Preparedness for Transit Terrorism, Synthesis Number 27. Washington, DC: Transportation Research Board, 1997. City of Dallas. Downtown Dallas Emergency Response Resource Manual. Dallas, Texas, 2002. Available at www. dallasalert.com. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Integrating Human- Caused Hazards into Mitigation Planning, State and Local Mitigation Planning How-To Guide. Washington, DC, Sep- tember 2002. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Tool Kit for Man- aging the Emergency Consequences of Terrorist Incidents. Washington, DC, July 2002. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Multi-Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment Methodology. Wash- ington, DC 1993. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Guide for All- Hazard Emergency Operations Planning: State and Local Guide (101). Washington, DC, September 1996. Federal Emergency Management Agency. Guide for All- Hazard Emergency Operations Planning: State and Local Guide (101) Chapter 6, Attachment G – Terrorism. Wash- ington, DC, 1999. Hathaway, W. T. Recommended Emergency Preparedness Guidelines for Rail Transit Systems, Report Number DOT- TSC-UMTA-84-26, US Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Agency, Washington, DC, March 1985 Final Report, Reprint November 1997. Hathaway, William T., Markos, Stephanie H., and Balog, John N. Recommended Emergency Preparedness Guide- lines for Elderly and Disabled Rail Transit Passengers, Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, Federal Transit Administration, US Department of Transportation, Cambridge, MA, August 1989. Hathaway, W. T. and Markos, S. H. Recommended Emer- gency Preparedness Guidelines for Urban, Rural, and Specialized Transit Systems, Report number UMTA-MA- 06-0196-91-1. Washington, DC: Federal Transit Admin- istration, 1991.

Kentucky League of Cities. City Response to Terrorism and Disaster. Lexington, Kentucky, September 6, 2002. Avail- able at www.klc.org/terrorism2.htm. Levitin, Howard. Preparing for Terrorism: What Every Man- ager Needs to Know. Washington, DC: International City/ County Management Association, December 1998. McEntire, David A. and Robinson, Robie Jack. Managing the Threat of Terrorism. Washington, DC: International City/County Management Association, ICMA IQ Report, Volume 33/Number 12, December 2001. National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Science and Technology for Countering Terrorism, Panel on Transpor- tation. Deterrence, Protection and Preparation: The New Transportation Security Imperative, Special Report 270. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2002. National Academies, Institute of Medicine, National Research Council, Committee on Science and Technology for Coun- tering Terrorism, Panel on Biological Issues. Countering Bioterrorism: The Role of Science and Technology. Wash- ington, DC: National Academies Press, 2002. National League of Cities. Homeland Security: Practical Tools for Local Governments. Washington, DC, Novem- ber 2002. Oklahoma City National Memorial Institute for the Preven- tion of Terrorism. Oklahoma City Seven Years Later: Lessons for Communities. Oklahoma City, April 19, 2002. Parsons Brinckerhoff – PB Farradyne. A Guide to Updating Highway Emergency Response Plans for Terrorist Inci- dents, National Cooperative Highway Research Program Project 20-07/Task 151A. Transportation Research Board, Washington, DC, 2002. D-2 Sidell, Frederick R., M.D., Patrick, William C., III, and Dashiell, Thomas R. Jane’s Chem-Bio Handbook: Second Edition. Alexandria, VA: Jane’s Information Group, 2002. Sullivan, John P., Bunker, Robert J., Lorelli, Ernest J., Seguine, Howard, and Begert, Matt. Jane’s Unconventional Weapons Response Handbook: First Edition. Alexandria, VA: Jane’s Information Group, 2002. Transportation Research Board, Panel On Transportation, Committee on Science and Technology for Countering Terrorism. Deterrence, Protection, and Preparation: The New Transportation Security Imperative, Special Report 270. Washington, DC, 2002. U.S. Department of Justice, Office for Domestic Prepared- ness. Emergency Responder Guidelines. Washington, DC, August 1, 2002. US Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Adminis- tration, National Transit Institute. Employee Guide to Sys- tem Security. Washington, DC, March 2003. US Department of Transportation, Federal Transit Adminis- tration. Standard Protocols for Managing Security Inci- dents Involving Surface Transit Vehicles. Washington, DC, August 2002. US Environmental Protection Agency. Local Emergency Planning Committees and Deliberate Releases: Addressing Terrorist Activities in the Local Emergency Plan. Washing- ton, DC, August 2001. Venzke, Ben. First Responder Chem-Bio Handbook: Practi- cal Manual for First Responders, Version 1.55. Alexan- dria, VA: Tempest Publishing, 2001. Viollis, Paul Michael, Sr. Jane’s Workplace Security Hand- book. Alexandria, VA: Jane’s Information Group, 2003.

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TRB's Transit Cooperative Research Program (TCRP) Report 86: Public Transportation Security, Volume 7 -- Public Transportation Emergency Mobilization and Emergency Operations Guide examines activities that may be taken by public transportation agencies working with their local communities to promote the early recognition of emergency events, expedite response to emergency events, establish multi-agency coordination, and ensure that public transportation resources are available to support the response to an emergency event.

TCRP Web Only Document 25, Public Transportation Emergency Mobilization Guide: Appendix B—Survey of U. S. Public Transportation Systems includes additional information on the survey used as input on TCRP Report 86.

The TCRP Report 86: Public Transportation Security series assembles relevant information into single, concise volumes, each pertaining to a specific security problem and closely related issues. These volumes focus on the concerns that transit agencies are addressing when developing programs in response to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and the anthrax attacks that followed. Future volumes of the report will be issued as they are completed.

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