Portland Bureau of Emergency Management: Difference between revisions

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| style="background:#72452d; color:white; text-align: center; border:2px solid white;"| '''<big>The Portland Bureau of Emergency Management</big>'''
| style="background:#7C4DA1; color:white; text-align: center; border:2px solid white;"| '''<big>General PBEM Volunteer Program Information</big>'''
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| style="background:#ddd2cd; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| [[Basic Earthquake Emergency Communications Nodes (BEECN)|Introduction]]
| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| [[CPT Guidelines Creation and NETwiki Management]]
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<small>[[Purpose of Portland NETwiki]]</small>
 
<small>[[Guidelines for NETwiki Content Creation and Editing]]</small>
 
<small>Placeholder</small>
 
<small>[[Wiki Code Cookbook]]</small>
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| style="background:#ddd2cd; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| PBEM Community Resilience Team (CPT)
| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| [[Portland Bureau of Emergency Management]]
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| style="background:#ddd2cd; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Community Resilience Flagship Programs
| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| General Volunteer Policies and Information
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| style="background:#ddd2cd; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| CPT Trainers
| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Volunteer Candidacy
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| style="background:#ddd2cd; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| CPRT Funding
| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Volunteer Standing and Badging
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| style="background:#ddd2cd; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Programming Governing Laws and Codes
| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Volunteer Training Policies and Information
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| style="background:#e9ae97; text-align: center; border:2px solid white;"|'''<big>[[Main_Page#SECTION 800: Basic Earthquake Emergency Communication_Nodes (BEECN)|Back to Main Guidelines ↱]]</big>'''
| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Volunteer Leadership
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| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Volunteer Recognition Information
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| style="background:#f2e9fc; text-align:left; padding-left:20px; border:4px solid white;"| Supportive Information
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| style="background:gainsboro; text-align: center; border:2px solid white;"|'''<big>[[Main_Page|Back to Main Guidelines ↱]]</big>'''
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The [https://www.portland.gov/pbem Portland Bureau of Emergency Management] (PBEM) is the City of Portland's enterprise emergency management agency. It was established as a City bureau in 2004, and the Portland NET program was included as part of PBEM's portfolio.<br/>
The [https://www.portland.gov/pbem Portland Bureau of Emergency Management] (PBEM) is the City of Portland's enterprise emergency management agency. It was [[Media:2004.07.21.78616 Establish Portland Office of Emergency Management.pdf|established as a City bureau in 2004]]<ref>However, in the FY 03-/04 adopted budget, City Council also transferred emergency management and Emergency Operations Center functions and funding from the Bureau of Fire & Rescue to the Portland Office of Emergency Management and approved the assignment of two positions from the Bureau of Fire & Rescue and two positions from the Police Bureau.</ref>, and the Portland NET program was included as part of PBEM's portfolio.  
<br/>
:''See also: [https://www.portland.gov/pbem PBEM's official webpage]''
 
'''<big>Subpages</big>'''
 
:'''↳''' ''[[Portland Bureau of Emergency Management/Historic Disasters in the Portland Metro Area|Historic Disasters in the Portland Metro Area]]''
 
:'''↳''' ''[[Community Preparedness Library#Portland Emergency Management Archives - Products|Work Published by Portland Emergency Management]]''
 
:'''↳''' ''[[Community Preparedness Library#Portland Emergency Management Archives - Administrative|Governing Laws and Codes for PBEM]]''
<br />
__TOC__
__TOC__
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<br />
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City Code 3.124.030 establishes that PBEM’s purpose is to “centralize leadership and coordination of emergency management.”<ref>Portland City Code Chapter 3.124: https://www.portland.gov/code/3/124</ref> Former Mayor Sam Adams stated that the intent of PBEM was “to support timely and effective decision-making on issues of critical importance to the life, health, and welfare of Portlanders.”<ref>May 17, 2010, Memo from Sam Adams, Mayor to LaVonne Griffin-Valade, City Auditor re: Response to Auditor’s Report #389: [https://efiles.portlandoregon.gov/record/16281704 “Emergency Management: Coordination limited and essential functions incomplete”]</ref>


== PBEM's Work and Organization ==
Over the years, PBEM has invested time and resources in three primary mission areas:
Over the years, PBEM has invested time and resources in three primary mission areas:


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PBEM is led by a Director who reports to the [https://www.portland.gov/service-areas/public-safety Public Safety Service Area] (PSSA) Deputy City Administrator. PBEM's mission is supported by a small in-house administrative team and administrators in the PSSA.
PBEM is led by a Director who reports to the [https://www.portland.gov/service-areas/public-safety Public Safety Service Area] (PSSA) Deputy City Administrator. PBEM's mission is supported by a small in-house administrative team and administrators in the PSSA.


PBEM also shares office space with the [https://rdpo.net/ Regional Disaster Policy Organization] (RDPO). However, RDPO is considered a separate regional organization.
PBEM also shares office space with the [https://rdpo.net/ Regional Disaster Policy Organization] (RDPO). However, RDPO is a separate regional organization.
 
<br />
=== Governing Codes and Rules ===
<br />
 
=== PBEM Community Preparedness Team ===
 
== History of the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management ==
== History of the Portland Bureau of Emergency Management ==


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* Fat Pencil Studio, [https://fatpencilstudio.com/blog/reconstructing-the-kelly-butte-bunker/ Reconstructing the Kelly Butte Bunker];
* Fat Pencil Studio, [https://fatpencilstudio.com/blog/reconstructing-the-kelly-butte-bunker/ Reconstructing the Kelly Butte Bunker];
*Portland historian Jeff Felker's blog, [https://kellybuttebunker.blogspot.com/ The Kelly Butte 911 Call Center].
*Portland historian Jeff Felker's blog, [https://kellybuttebunker.blogspot.com/ The Kelly Butte 911 Call Center].
=== Portland Office of Emergency Management (POEM) ===
{| class="wikitable"
|+
! scope="col" width="150px" style="background-color: darkkhaki;color:white;"|Relevant Documents
! style="background-color: darkkhaki;color:white;"|Date
! scope="col" width="250px" style="background-color: darkkhaki;color:white;" |Notes
|-
|[[Media:2004.07.21.POEM.pdf|Ordinance 178616]]
|2004.07.21
|Established the Portland Office of Emergency Management
|-
|[[Media:2004 Natural Hazards Mitigation Plan.PDF|2004 Natural Hazards Mitigation Plan]]
|2004.11.14
|First major plan produced from POEM.
|-
|[[Media:2007.10.10.POEM.pdf|Ordinance 181352]]
|2007.10.10
|Significant updates to code governing POEM.
|}
<br/>
The Portland Bureau of Emergency Management originated in July 2003 as a special unit in Portland Fire & Rescue. Funds from the Department of Homeland Security helped establish local emergency management offices, nationwide. Portland City Council consolidated all emergency management functions into a single bureau, the Portland Office of Emergency Management, by ordinance on July 21, 2004. The first Director was Miguel Ascarrunz, appointed in November 2003.<ref>You can view a C-Span video where Director Ascarrunz appears at about the 2:55 mark here: https://www.c-span.org/program/public-affairs-event/democratic-national-committee-platform-hearing/128854</ref>
== Historic Disasters in the Portland Metro Area ==
[[File:1964 Storm.jpg|alt=News clipping following the 1964 Columbus Day Storm in the Portland area.|thumb|float|314x314px|News clipping following the 1964 Columbus Day Storm in the Portland area.]]
[[File:2014.12.11.StandardInsurance.jpg|alt=View from Jeremy Van Keuren's office on December 11, 2014 during the windstorm. Metal sheeting broke off the PacWest building and struck the side of the Standard Insurance building.|thumb|''View from Jeremy Van Keuren's office on December 11, 2014 during the windstorm. Metal sheeting [https://www.kgw.com/article/news/local/willamette-valley/thousands-lose-power-in-metro-area-after-storm/283-318089226 broke off the PacWest building] and struck the side of the Standard Insurance building.''|333x333px]]The following table lists historic disasters in Portland.
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|+
!Day 1 Date
!Event
!Notes
|-
|1700.01.26
|[[wikipedia:1700_Cascadia_earthquake|1700 Cascadia Earthquake]]
|
|-
|1861.12.05
|[[wikipedia:Great_Flood_of_1862#Oregon|Great Flood of 1861-1862]]
|
|-
|1873.08.02
|[[wikipedia:Great_Fire_of_1873|Great Fire of 1873]]
|
|-
|1874.06.24
|[https://portland.daveknows.org/2011/06/24/june-24-1876-flood-waters-reach-second-street-in-portland/ Portland Flood of 1876]
|
|-
|1880.01.09
|[[wikipedia:Great_Gale_of_1880|Great Gale of 1880]]
|
|-
|1894.06.05
|[https://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/willamette_flood_1894_/ Willamette River Flood of 1894] <ref>'''See also''' from OPB: ''[https://www.opb.org/article/2024/05/30/oregon-experience-130-years-ago-great-flood-1894-portland/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery 130 years ago, the Great Flood of 1894 left Portland waterlogged for weeks]''</ref>
|
|-
|1931.04.21
|[https://www.jstor.org/stable/40490945 1931 Dust Storm]
|
|-
|1948.05.30
|[[wikipedia:Vanport,_Oregon#Flood|1948 Columbia River flood (Vanport)]]
|
|-
|1962.10.12
|[[wikipedia:Columbus_Day_Storm_of_1962|Columbus Day Storm of 1962]]
|
|-
|1964.12.18
|[[wikipedia:Christmas_flood_of_1964|Christmas Flood of 1964]]
|
|-
|1972.04.05
|[[wikipedia:1972_Portland–Vancouver_tornadoes|1972 Vancouver Tornado]]
|
|-
|1978.12.28
|[[wikipedia:United_Airlines_Flight_173|United Airlines Flight 173]]
|
|-
|1980.03.27
|[[wikipedia:1980_eruption_of_Mount_St._Helens|Eruption of Mount St. Helens]]
|
|-
|1981.11.13
|[https://kcby.com/news/local/deadly-storm-hit-oregon-on-friday-the-13th-in-november-1981 Friday the 13<sup>th</sup> Windstorm]
|
|-
|1993.03.25
|[[wikipedia:1993_Scotts_Mills_earthquake|1993 Scotts Mills earthquake]]
|
|-
|1995.12.12
|[https://portlandweather.com/weather-headlines/130 1995 Windstorm]<ref>'''See also:''' Oregonian/OregonLive, S. T. |. (2015, December 12). 20 years later: Dec. 12, 1995, windstorm ranks second only to Columbus Day Storm of 1962. ''Oregonlive''. https://www.oregonlive.com/weather/2015/12/20_years_later_december_12_199.html</ref><ref>'''See also:''' ''Classic windstorm of December 11, 2014''. (n.d.). https://climate.washington.edu/stormking/December2014.html</ref>
|
|-
|1996.02.05
|[[wikipedia:Willamette_Valley_flood_of_1996|Willamette Valley Flood of 1996]]
|
|-
|2008.12.14
|[https://www.oregonlive.com/news/erry-2018/12/0e131ca88d8678/10-years-later-the-2008-blizza.html 2008 Major Snowstorm]
|
|-
|2009.06.06
|[[wikipedia:2009_swine_flu_pandemic_in_the_United_States_by_state#Oregon|Influenza A-H1N1 Pandemic in Portland]]
|1,833 confirmed cases; 1,419 hospitalizations; 79 deaths.
|-
|2014.12.11
|[[Media:2014.12.11.Portland Windstorm Analysis.pdf|December 2014 Windstorm]]
|
|-
|2020.02.28
|[[wikipedia:COVID-19_pandemic_in_Portland,_Oregon|COVID-19 Pandemic in Portland]]
|967,156 confirmed cases; 35,030 hospitalizations; 8,415 deaths.
|-
|2020.05.28
|[[wikipedia:George_Floyd_protests_in_Portland,_Oregon|George Floyd Demonstrations]]
|
|-
|2021.06.26
|[https://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/heat-dome-2021/#:~:text=During%20the%202021%20event%2C%20Portland,%C2%B0F%20on%20June%2028. 2021 Heat Dome]
|Extreme heat with high temperatures reaching 108°, 112°, and 116° on three consecutive days. 72 deaths attributable to the heat in Portland, and 257 ER or urgent care visits.
|}
=== Major emergency events in Portland ===
The table below lists major emergency incidents in Portland's history that are notable but do not rise to the designation of "disaster".
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Day 1
Date
!Event
!Notes
|-
|1905.06.01
|[https://www.opb.org/article/2025/06/01/oregon-experience-120th-anniversary-lewis-and-clark-exposition-portland-fair/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery Lewis and Clark Exposition]
|Sometimes called the Portland "World's Fair". 1.8 million visitors arrived in Portland over four months. The emergency management nexus here is not just the crowd, but that the City filled [[wikipedia:Guild's_Lake|Guild's Lake]] in NW Portland shortly after the Expo (the Expo took place on an island in Guild's Lake). As a result, Portland's largest industrial neighborhood is built on fill.
|-
|1970.08.28
|[[wikipedia:Vortex_I|Vortex I]]
|A rock music festival held by Gov. Tom McCall to attract counterculture protesters away from downtown Portland, coinciding with a visit from President Richard Nixon. The gambit is credited with ensuring that Portland did not suffer demonstrations as experienced in Chicago, in 1968, during the Democratic National Convention.
|-
|2008.05.19
|[https://www.theguardian.com/world/deadlineusa/2008/may/19/72000rallyforobamainportl Barack Obama visit]
|Estimated 72,000 event attendees.
|-
|2008.10.09
|[https://www.oregonlive.com/news/2008/10/southwest_portland_home_swept.html Terwilliger Landslide]
|Six homes destroyed in major SW Portland landslide.
|-
|2009.11.11
|[https://katu.com/archive/one-year-later-a-look-back-at-the-marysville-school-fire Marysville Elementary School fire]
|3-alarm fire, two injuries, no deaths.
|-
|2010.10.20
|[https://www.oregonlive.com/politics/2010/10/obamas_portland_rally_for_kitz.html President Barack Obama visits Portland]
|Oregon Convention Center.
|-
|2010.12.12
|[https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna40630310 Johnson Creek flooding]
|
|-
|2011.06.06
|[https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2011/06/ammonia_leak_at_alpenrose_dair.html Alpenrose HAZMAT incident]
|Ammonia leak in SW Portland, nearby residents advised to shelter in place.
|-
|2011.10.06
|[[wikipedia:Occupy_Portland|Occupy Portland]]
|
|-
|2012.12.11
|[[wikipedia:Clackamas_Town_Center_shooting|Clackamas Town Center shooting]]
|Three people killed (including perpetrator) and one injured in mass shooting.
|-
|2017.05.14
|[https://response.epa.gov/site/site_profile.aspx?site_id=12205 River Street Warehouse Fire]
|Derelict warehouse with asbestos caught fire and spread pollutants.
|-
|2017.08.21
|[[wikipedia:Solar_eclipse_of_August_21,_2017|"Great American Eclipse"]]
|Total solar eclipse that was viewable in many Oregon municipalities, resulting in lots of viewing events and choked up travel routes.
|-
|
|
|
|}
<br />
<br />


== History of Community Emergency Response Teams (CERTs) ==
=== Portland Office of Emergency Management ===
{{#ev:vimeo|898835194|430|right|'''''Video: The History of CERT'''''|frame}}
The Portland Office of Emergency Management was a special unit in Portland Fire & Rescue until Portland City Council made it a stand-alone office in July of 2003. Funds from the Department of Homeland Security helped establish local emergency management offices, nationwide. Portland City Council consolidated all emergency management functions into the Portland Office of Emergency Management by ordinance on July 21, 2004. The first Director was Miguel Ascarrunz, appointed in November 2003.<ref>You can view a C-Span video where Director Ascarrunz appears at about the 2:55:25 mark here: https://www.c-span.org/program/public-affairs-event/democratic-national-committee-platform-hearing/128854</ref>
Portland Fire & Rescue staff contributed to the development of a national Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) program. The Portland version, Neighborhood Emergency Teams (NET), was the third CERT program in the country.


== Notes and References ==
== Notes and References ==
<references />
<references />