Community Preparedness Team Strategic Plan: Difference between revisions

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=== Basic Earthquake Emergency Communications Nodes (BEECN) ===
=== Basic Earthquake Emergency Communications Nodes (BEECN) ===
:''For background on the BEECN program, please visit the [[Basic Earthquake Emergency Communications Nodes (BEECN)#BEECN Program Introduction|BEECN Program Introduction article]].''
:''For background on the BEECN program, please visit the [[Basic Earthquake Emergency Communications Nodes (BEECN)#BEECN Program Introduction|BEECN Program Introduction article]].''
==== Goal #1: Pull the BEECN Readiness Score to a consistent 50% quarterly average ====
'''Background:''' The [https://app.smartsheet.com/b/publish?EQBCT=9094103decb2475885daa0b03ac13496 BEECN Readiness Score] is an aggregate score reflecting key deployment readiness factors for each individual BEECN resource and the program as a whole. The Readiness Score in and of itself is not important, but it assesses the viability of elements that make a BEECN resource work, such as volunteers assigned, radio signal strength, deployment status, and more. A low score for a BEECN resource indicates that deploying it in the aftermath of an earthquake is less likely to be successful as there are more points of prospective failure.
PBEM began tracking the overall BEECN readiness score in October 2023. From then to November 2025, the overall BEECN Readiness Score has maintained an average of 27% and has not climbed past 36%. This is important because individual BEECN resources depend on an integrated network of collaborative BEECN resources. Therefore, a low overall score represents a higher risk of the BEECN system failing to perform in the aftermath of an earthquake.
The PBEM Community Preparedness Team proposes the following objectives in order to bring the overall BEECN Readiness Score to a consistent average at or exceeding 50%:
* '''1a.) Evaluate, and move the BEECN District Coordinator program out of its pilot phase.''' [https://volunteerpdx.net/index.php/VSF_14.01.03:_BEECN_District_Coordinator District BEECN Coordinators] are a new volunteer position position currently piloted in Districts 2 and 4. With PBEM no longer employing 1 FTE to manage the BEECN program, BEECN maintenance and monitoring has fallen to the remaining PBEM CPT team. Absorbing that additional workload in-house has dragged down BEECN Readiness Scores, as testing, maintenance, and restocking caches has been deferred. The purpose of a District Coordinator is, for each resource in their District, solve simple maintenance fixes, request inventory refills, coordinate BEECN radio tests, and provide leadership. The program only began in the Fall of 2025 with District 2 and 4, and it is too soon to say if a District Coordinator can help pull up scores. But if the program is successful in the pilot Districts, PBEM will expand it to Districts 1 and 3.
* X


=== Community Organizations Active in Disaster (COAD) ===
=== Community Organizations Active in Disaster (COAD) ===

Revision as of 19:18, 19 January 2026

DRAFT DRAFT DRAFT The following article is a working draft of the strategic plan for the community preparedness team. DRAFT DRAFT DRAFT



2025 Community Preparedness Team Strategic Planning Group members
Name Organization
Joshua Baker Outreach Program Manager, Lloyd Ecodistrict
Glenn Devitt Community Preparedness Coordinator, Portland Bureau of Emergency Management
Michael Genuine Emergency Preparedness and Safety Manager, Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization
Regina Ingabire Community Resilience Outreach Manager, Portland Bureau of Emergency Management
Ernie Jones BEECN Coordinator (retired), Portland Bureau of Emergency Management
Lydia Ledgerwood-Eberlein Senior Analyst, Community Capacity Building and Grant Coordination, Multnomah County Emergency Management
Marisol Lozano-Peralta Community Engagement Specialist, Portland Bureau of Emergency Management
Angelique Nomie Administrative Specialist, Portland Bureau of Emergency Management
Jim Quinn Board Member, Friends of Portland NET
Jeremy Van Keuren Community Preparedness Manager, Portland Bureau of Emergency Management


PBEM Community Preparedness Team Vision, Mission, and Values

Vision
Portlanders lead, support, and collaborate with one another to prepare for, adapt to, and thrive after disasters, with a focus on ensuring that no community is left behind in our city's resilience future.
Mission
To strengthen community resilience by fostering inclusive networks, co-creating accessible preparedness programming, and building long-term partnerships that empower everyone who lives, works, plays, and worships in Portland.
Values
  1. Safety and Well-Being: The physical safety and emotional well-being of volunteers, staff, and community members are paramount. We provide trauma-informed training, resources, and care to support all participants in Community Preparedness Team activities.
  2. Equity and Historical Acknowledgement: We recognize the importance of understanding our city's and region's history and work to ensure that our programs are inclusive, accessible, and responsive to all Portlanders, especially those most affected by disasters.
  3. Community-Centered Collaboration: We meet communities as partners. We support community-driven solutions through action, collaboration and co-creation of programs and resources.
  4. Preparedness Through Co-Creation: We see preparedness as the foundation of resilience. We co-create policies, trainings and resources that provide communities with the knowledge, skills, and support they need to act independently and collectively before, during, and after emergencies.
  5. Inclusive Design and Accessibility: We use inclusive design principles and lead with accessibility to ensure that our policies, resources, trainings, and programs are practical and meaningful for all.
  6. Building Trust Through Transparency and Accountability: We believe trust must be earned through honest communication, clear intentions, and follow-through. We hold ourselves and our partners accountable to the communities we serve.
  7. Prioritizing Impact Over Scale: We favor meaningful and intentional engagement over quantity. We believe this builds stronger, more sustainable networks of resilience.
  8. Agents of Positive Change: As emergency responders, we advocate for a more resilient and thriving community for all. We are facilitators of and partners in positive change with the communities we serve.

Community Preparedness Team Service Areas

Portland Neighborhood Emergency Teams (Portland NET)

UNIDOS NET

Basic Earthquake Emergency Communications Nodes (BEECN)

For background on the BEECN program, please visit the BEECN Program Introduction article.

Goal #1: Pull the BEECN Readiness Score to a consistent 50% quarterly average

Background: The BEECN Readiness Score is an aggregate score reflecting key deployment readiness factors for each individual BEECN resource and the program as a whole. The Readiness Score in and of itself is not important, but it assesses the viability of elements that make a BEECN resource work, such as volunteers assigned, radio signal strength, deployment status, and more. A low score for a BEECN resource indicates that deploying it in the aftermath of an earthquake is less likely to be successful as there are more points of prospective failure.

PBEM began tracking the overall BEECN readiness score in October 2023. From then to November 2025, the overall BEECN Readiness Score has maintained an average of 27% and has not climbed past 36%. This is important because individual BEECN resources depend on an integrated network of collaborative BEECN resources. Therefore, a low overall score represents a higher risk of the BEECN system failing to perform in the aftermath of an earthquake.

The PBEM Community Preparedness Team proposes the following objectives in order to bring the overall BEECN Readiness Score to a consistent average at or exceeding 50%:

  • 1a.) Evaluate, and move the BEECN District Coordinator program out of its pilot phase. District BEECN Coordinators are a new volunteer position position currently piloted in Districts 2 and 4. With PBEM no longer employing 1 FTE to manage the BEECN program, BEECN maintenance and monitoring has fallen to the remaining PBEM CPT team. Absorbing that additional workload in-house has dragged down BEECN Readiness Scores, as testing, maintenance, and restocking caches has been deferred. The purpose of a District Coordinator is, for each resource in their District, solve simple maintenance fixes, request inventory refills, coordinate BEECN radio tests, and provide leadership. The program only began in the Fall of 2025 with District 2 and 4, and it is too soon to say if a District Coordinator can help pull up scores. But if the program is successful in the pilot Districts, PBEM will expand it to Districts 1 and 3.
  • X

Community Organizations Active in Disaster (COAD)

COAD Response Network

Community Trainings

PBEM Speakers' Bureau

Small Business Preparedness

Background and Notes

CPT Strategic Planning Group Meeting Notes

Appreciation to Angelique Nomie for being the group note-taker.

Meeting Date w/ link to notes Meeting Topics
2025.12.19.CPT Strategic Planning Meeting COAD program
2025.12.05.CPT Strategic Planning Meeting BEECN goals/objectives
2025.10.24.CPT Strategic Planning Meeting BEECN program
2025.10.10.CPT Strategic Planning Meeting Refining Values
Strategic planning process suspended, June to October
2025.04.04.CRT Strategic Planning Meeting CPT Values
2025.03.21.CPT Strategic Planning Meeting CPT Mission and Vision
2024.12.08.Strategic Planning Intro Email Background materials

Background Documents

The following documents were provided to group members as background review and (in some cases) later in the process as topics and ideas emerged in meetings.

Pub date Document Author(s)
2025.12.10 Wikipedia article: Structural violence
2025.01.31 Portland Public Safety Service Area Strategic Plan
2025.__.__ 2025-2029 MCEM Strategic Plan
2025.__.__ West Street Recovery website
2019.05.__ Targeted Universalism Primer: Policy & Practice john a. powell, Stephen Menendian, Wendy Ake (UC Berkeley)
2019.01.__ Building Cultures of Preparedness FEMA
2019.__.__ The Spectrum of Community Engagement to Ownership Rosa González, Facilitating Power
2018.10.17 Memo: Key Performance Indicators for PBEM Jeremy Van Keuren (PBEM)
2014.01.__ The Big Lie of Strategic Planning Roger L. Martin (Harvard Business Review)
2012.01.01 Public Participation in Emergency Management Jason Alexander Rood (PSU)
1996.09.__ Building Your Company's Vision Jim Collins and Jerry I. Porras (Harvard Business Review)