Mutual Aid and Assistance in the Water Sector WARN is one of three possible mutual aid/assistance mechanisms Water Emergency Occurs WATER UTILITY: - Assesses impact of emergency - Determines if resources are sufficient - Deploys available resources - Identifies need for mutual aid/assistance Mutual Response Agreements with local/neighbor utilities (access to other local utility resources, per agreement) Water/Wastewater Agency Response Network (WARN) (access to public and private signatory utilities) Organized and facilitated at county, state's regions and statewide levels. Statewide Mutual Aid Agreement for all resources (law, fire, medical, public works, etc.) Organized and managed at county, state's regions and statewide levels. WARN does not require a declaration and includes both public and private utilities. Mutual Aid and Assistance Alternatives During an emergency, a utility needs to determine the best alternatives to address its response needs. Alternatives could include three possible mutual aid or assistance mecha- nisms: contacting neighboring utilities with whom they have pre-written and established agreements; using public agency statewide mutual aid and assistance programs; or accessing the water/wastewater mutual aid and assistance program formally known as WARN. ------- Water/Wastewater Agency Response Networks (WARN): Utilities Helping Utilities Floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, terrorist threats. Drinking water and wastewater utilities are taking action to ensure continuity of operations and fast response when disaster strikes. Water/Wastewater Agency Response Networks are being formed in states across the U.S., enabling public and private utilities to share personnel, resources, and equipment during emergencies. Emergency Timeline and Mutual Aid WARN Mutual Aid Statewide Local M * i A-J ... .... Mutual Aid Initial Pe-oon-e Mutual Aid /\ (^ "\ ( ^ ^^^^^^B ^ Emergency Response Recovery Occurs WARN reduces the response "gap" between local and statewide mutual aid. Why WARN Works - Expedites arrival of aid and access to specialized resources - Improves planning and coordination - Can be activated prior to an emergency declaration - A single agreement links all statewide utilities together - Agreement addresses member indemnification, workers'compensation, and reimbursement - Membership includes private and public utilities - Member utilities can recall their resources as needed - Participation is voluntary, there is no cost to participate - Meets federal reimbursement requirements to have a pre-disaster agreement in place - Consistent with National Incident Management System (NIMS) ------- 10 Steps to Develop a WARN Follow these broad steps to establish a WARN in your state. 1. Identify interest in starting a program 2. Form an Initial Leadership Team 3. Prepare a kickoff session 4. Establish a Steering Committee 5. Identify a mission for the program and goals for the Steering Committee 6. Determine need to use state's regions 7. Identify mutual aid and assistance activation criteria 8. Draft an agreement (includes information on steps 4,6, and 7) 9. Create facilitation tools 10. Maintain the program Full Support from Water Sector Groups supporting WARN include: American Waterworks Association (AWWA) Association of Metropolitan Water Agencies (AMWA) Association of State Drinking Water Administrators (ASDWA) Association of State and Interstate Water Pollution Control Administrators (ASIWPCA) National Association of Clean Water Agencies (NACWA) National Association of Water Companies (NAWC) National Rural Water Association (NRWA) Rural Community Assistance Partnership (RCAP) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Water Environment Federation (WEF) This poster was developed by EPA in cooperation with water sector stakeholders. For more information, contact: JOHN WHITLER, USEPA, whitler.john@epa.gov www.NationalWARN.org Office of Water (4608-T) | EPA817-H-08-001 I March 2009 I www.epa.gov/watersecurity ------- |