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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
Appendixes
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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
Appendix A
Workshop Agenda6
WORKSHOP ON USING INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY TO ENHANCE DISASTER MANAGEMENT
June 22-23, 2005
Washington, D.C.
Wednesday, June 22
9:00–10:00 a.m.
Continental Breakfast
10:00–10:30
Welcome to the Workshop
Jon Eisenberg, Study Director and Senior Program Officer, Computer Science and Telecommunications Board/National Research Council (NRC)
Charles Brownstein, Director, Computer Science and Telecommunications Board/NRC
Ramesh Rao, Chair, NRC Committee on Enhancement of Crisis Management—Improving the Use of Information Technology in Disaster Preparedness, Response, and Recovery and Professor, University of California, San Diego
Barry West, Chief Information Officer/Director Information Technology Services Division, Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
6
NOTE: Copies of the slides used in the presentations and made available by the panelists to CSTB for public distribution can be viewed at CSTB’s Web site at www.cstb.org. The slides have not been viewed or edited by the National Research Council, and opinions expressed and statements made in them are solely those of the individual panelists and have not been endorsed or verified as accurate by the National Academies.
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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
Topic 1: The Critical and Evolving Role of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) in Disaster Management
Questions Posed in Advance to Panelists: How might we better manage future crises? What impact will major technology trends have on how disaster management is handled in the future? How can we leverage commercial technology cost-performance curves yet meet special requirements? What new technologies, approaches, and policies would help, and what research directions are promising?
10:30–12:00 noon
Context for and Visions of the Future, Grand Challenges for ICTs in Disaster Management
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
John Harrald, Director, Institute for Crisis, Disaster, and Risk Management, George Washington University (Moderator)
David G. Boyd, Director, Office for Interoperability and Compatibility, Science and Technology Directorate, U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Helen Wood, Senior Advisor, NOAA Satellites and Information Service and Chair, National Science and Technology Council’s Subcommittee on Disaster Reduction
Jack Potter, Director, Emergency Medical Services, Valley Health and Vice Chair, COMCARE Board of Directors
Peter Miller, Program Manager, Mission Support Office, HSARPA, Science and Technology Directorate, U.S. Department of Homeland Security
12:00–12:45 p.m.
Lunch
Questions Posed in Advance to Panelists: What lessons have been learned from past crises and exercises? What gaps in IT capabilities are evident, and how might they be addressed? Where is the state of the art not sufficient to meet our needs?
12:45–2:00
Perspectives on the Current State of the Art: ICTs in Disaster Management Practice
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Ellis Stanley, General Manager, Emergency Preparedness Department, City of Los Angeles, California (Moderator)
Mark Deputy, Senior IT Specialist and Urban Search and Rescue Team Assistant Task Force Leader, Montgomery County, Maryland
William Maheu, Executive Assistant Chief of Police, San Diego Police Department
Robert Roth, Fire Technology Specialist, U.S. Forest Service, USDA
2:00–2:15
Break
Questions Posed in Advance to Panelists: What are especially demanding aspects of disaster management? What initiatives are under way to address them? What specific requirements are there from specific groups or application areas? What general lessons can be learned?
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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
2:15–3:30
Emerging Applications and Other Drivers for ICTs in Disaster Management
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
William Maheu, Executive Assistant Chief of Police, San Diego Police Department (Moderator)
William Metz, Director, Center for Integrated Emergency Preparedness, Argonne National Laboratory
Jaime Gomezjurado, Project Manager and VP, Business Development, Medical Emergency Response Network Research Project, Semandex Networks, Inc.
Lois Clark McCoy, President, National Institute for Urban Search and Rescue
Peter Brooks, Institute for Defense Analyses
3:30–3:45
Break
Topic 2: Research Directions for ICTs in Disaster Management
Questions Posed in Advance to Panelists: What research areas have application to disaster management? How might leading-edge research be applied to disaster management? How should the research agenda be established and evolved? How can research results best be transitioned into deployed capabilities? What are the commonalities between commercial, civilian, and military capabilities and research and development activities, and how can technology advances and knowledge be transferred from one to the other?
3:45–5:00
Current ICT Research Programs Related to Disaster Management
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Peter Steenkiste, Professor, Carnegie Mellon University (Moderator)
Larry Brandt, Program Manager, Digital Government, National Science Foundation
Gary Ham, Senior Research Scientist, Battelle Memorial Institute
Earnest Paylor, Program Director, Pacific Disaster Center (PDC) and Senior Advisor for Interagency Programs, Office of the Special Assistant and NASA Liaison to the Assistant Secretary of Defense–Networks and Information Integration (NII)
Pamela Sydelko, Leader–Modeling, Simulation and Visualization Group, Decision and Information Sciences Division, Argonne National Laboratory
5:00–6:00
ICT Everywhere: Ubiquitous and Pervasive Mobile (ad hoc) Communications and Networking
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Timothy Brown, Associate Professor, University of Colorado Boulder (Moderator)
Richard Howard, Research Professor, WINLAB, Rutgers University
Scott Midkiff, Professor, Virginia Tech
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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
Mani Chandy, Simon Ramo Professor of Computer Science, California Institute of Technology
Thursday, June 23
Topic 2: Research Directions for ICTs in Disaster Management (continued)
8:00–8:30 a.m.
Continental Breakfast
8:30–9:45
Identifying and Aggregating Useful Data—Information Integration and Fusion
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Gio Wiederhold, Professor (Emeritus), Stanford University (Moderator)
Yigal Arens, Director, Intelligent Systems Division, Information Sciences Institute, University of Southern California
Craig Knoblock, Research Associate Professor, University of Southern California
Peter Scott, Associate Professor, University of Buffalo
Zachary Ives, Assistant Professor, University of Pennsylvania
9:45–10:45
Information Overload: Making Useful Data Actionable—Decision Support, Collaboration, Situational Awareness
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Robert Neches, Director, Distributed Scalable Systems Division, Information Sciences Institute, University of Southern California (Moderator)
David Mendonça, Assistant Professor, New Jersey Institute of Technology
William Wallace, Professor, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
10:45–11:00
Break
11:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m.
Sensor Networks, Autonomous Devices, and GIS
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Robin Murphy, Professor, University of South Florida and Director, Industry/University Cooperative Research Center on Safety Security Rescue (Moderator)
Ayman Mosallam, Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Irvine
Susan McGrath, Associate Research Professor of Engineering, Dartmouth College
David Kehrlein, Senior Consultant, Environmental Science Research Institute (ESRI), formerly GIS Manager, California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services
12:15–1:00
Lunch
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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
Topic 3: Collaboration, Coordination, and Interoperability: Pressing Issues in a Need-to-Share World
Questions Posed in Advance to Panelists: What policy and technical initiatives are currently under way to improve wireless interoperability across federal, state, and local levels? What results are anticipated, and over what time frames? How is data (including voice) generated, used, and shared across organizational boundaries today? What can be learned in terms of technology and practice from efforts to forge more interoperable systems? How are standards helping/not helping? What kinds of interoperability are desired in the future? What technical, operational, economic, and policy challenges are likely to be unresolved, and merit further research? How do communication systems relate to other information management systems related to disaster management? What obstacles to technology transition must be overcome?
1:00–3:00
Current Initiatives, Technical and Organizational Obstacles and Opportunities in ICT Interoperability
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Art Botterell, Associate Director, Emergency Information Systems Consultant, incident.com (Moderator)
Ellis Kitchen, Chief Information Officer, Maryland Office of Information Technology and Member, Interoperability and Integration Committee, National Association of State Chief Information Officers (NASCIO)
Steve Cooper, Senior Vice President and Chief Information Officer, Red Cross
Lloyd (Gene) Krase, Administrator, Kansas Division of Emergency Management
Otto Doll, Commissioner, Bureau of Information and Telecommunications, South Dakota
Dave Smith, Implementation Director, Indiana Integrated Public Safety Commission
Robert Fletcher, President, Readiness Consulting Services LLC and Member, National Fire Protection Association NFPA 1600 Technical Committee
3:00–3:15
Break
Questions Posed in Advance to Panelists: What should communications and other IT capabilities look like in the future? How do wireless communications systems relate to the emerging broader architecture for public safety, national security, and Disaster response? What are the implications of major information and communications technology trends for how we respond to crises? How can these opportunities better be exploited? What kinds of research, experimentation, and pilot programs would help?
3:15–4:30
Envisioning, Enabling, and Building Networks of the Future
15 minute presentation by each panelist, followed by 15 minute Q&A
Nancy Jesuale, President, NetCity Engineering (Moderator)
Nader Moayeri, Manager, Wireless Communications Technologies Group, National Institute of Standards and Technology
James Morentz, VP, Homeland Security Technology and Director, Public Safety Integration Center, Science Applications International
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Summary of a Workshop on Using Information Technology to Enhance Disaster Management
Corporation
Chip Hines, Program Manager, Disaster Management eGov Initiative, Office of the CIO, Emergency Preparedness and Response/FEMA, Department of Homeland Security
4:30–4:45
Concluding Remarks
Ramesh Rao, Chair, NRC Committee on Enhancement of Crisis Management—Improving the Use of Information Technology in Disaster Preparedness, Response, and Recovery
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