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Community Emergency Response
Like other localities across the country,
the September 11 attacks were a wake-up call
for Howard County, Maryland. Located about 25
miles from Washington, D.C., and 20 miles from
Baltimore, county residents could be affected
by a terrorist incident in either of these
municipalities, as well as in its own
community.
In order to meet the health consequences of
such a disaster, The Community Emergency Response
Network (CERN) was formed by the Foundation in
close coordination with Howard County
government and key community agencies in Howard
County.
CERN's mission is to spearhead the
development of a community-wide disaster
response plan to ensure optimum preparedness in
the event of a terrorist attack or major
natural emergency. The effort supports
government disaster planning through
coordination of the emergency plans and
resources of participating members. CERN
functions include planning, a high level of
inter-agency coordination, the development of
tabletop exercises, disaster plan review,
shelter planning and communications
enhancement.
The Department of Homeland Security has
given national recognition to CERN, citing it
as a "Smart
Practice" (PDF) in its national
publications and outlining its community-wide
model to thousands of cities and communities
across the U.S. And in a major editorial, the
Baltimore Sun said that CERN is "a local model
worth wide study and emulation." CERN is
composed of over 80 members including front
line responders and representatives of numerous
community organizations. Chaired
by Mary Lasky, new safeguards are being
developed to support the county's first line
responders. They include upgraded planning
capabilities by local institutions, enhanced
communications, tabletop exercises to test
local readiness, volunteer training and
deployment and expanded shelter capacity.
Special attention has been paid to the
provision of information on disaster response,
the needs of public schools, the roles of
nonprofit providers and working with private
organizations such as the Columbia
Association. CERN activities fall under and are
functionally integrated with the county's
Emergency Operations Center.
"Although now officially designated
by FEMA as a Citizens Corps," says Richard
Krieg, President & CEO of The Horizon
Foundation, "CERN also functions as an
organization corps. The intent is to bring
relevant organizations to optimal readiness
and resiliency levels."
For more information, visit the Foundation's
suite of emergency preparedness websites at BePreparedBeReady.org. Here
you'll find information on emergency
preparedness for individuals, neighborhoods and
businesses.