Volunteer Capacity Building Workshop - June 2011

Registration for the 3rd Annual Volunteer Capacity Building Workshop on June 3, 2011 in Breckenridge, CO is now open.  Advance Registration is required through CO.Train at https://www.co.train.org/DesktopShell.aspx.  The Course ID number is 1027034.

This FREE one day volunteer capacity building workshop is for Community Emergency Response Team (CERT); Citizen Corps Council volunteers; VOAD's; Medical Reserve Corp (MRC); Colorado Volunteer Mobilizer (CVM); and Red Cross volunteers.  The day long workshop includes more than 25 one-hour training/educational sessions and an opportunity to participate in an exercise.  Breakfast and lunch are provided to volunteers participating in the workshop.

If you have any questions, contact Kristen Campos at kristen.c.campos@gmail.com or Koral O'Brien at koral.obrien@gmail.com.

This workshop is sponsored by the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, the Colorado Citizen Corps Program, and Denver Paramedics.

A special hotel rate is available for attendees (no direct funding is available) at the Beaver Run Resort and Conference Center.  Reservations can be made online at www.beaverrun.com and the password is VCW5SK.

Topics to be offered during the workshop include:

  • Training on 800 MHz radios (like our law enforcement and some other emergency services use) 
  • CPR and AED training 
  • CERT Animal Response I 
  • CERT Animal Response II 
  • Lessons Learned - CSU Meningitis Outbreak 
  • ICS 100 & 700 
  • Information Sharing and Social Media 
  • Citizen's terrorism awareness training 
  • Lessons Learned - Grand County Hepatitis A Outbreak 
  • Volunteer Affiliation 
  • Psychological First Aid 
  • Boulder County Public Health and Medical Reserve Corps Response to the Fourmile Fire 
  • Public Information 
  • Disaster Survival Skills 
  • Incident Management Teams 
  • Preparing for Workplace Disasters 
  • Triage Training 
  • How to Promote Your Organization
  • and more 

Hazard Mitigation Program Grant Application Period OPEN

DEM Mitigation Team Announces Open Application Period for State Hazard Mitigation Program Grants

The DEM Mitigation Team has opened the application period for 2011 State Hazard Mitigation Program (SHMP) grants.  Awards are subject to the availability of funds through the Colorado Division of Emergency Management.

We encourage jurisdictions without a local hazard mitigation plan or those needing to update a plan to use this opportunity to assist in plan development.  All local entities applying for pre- or post-disaster FEMA Hazard Mitigation Assistance program grants must have a FEMA approved local hazard mitigation plan to be eligible.

Activities that will be considered for this grant program include:

  • Local hazard mitigation plans
  • Mitigation studies
  • Purchase of NOAA weather radios
  • Mitigation training materials
  • Printing mitigation information and brochures
  • Mitigation planning activities
  • Risk assessments
  • Hazard mapping projects

Activities that are not within the scope of this grant program:

  • Structural projects (projects requiring environmental or historical assessments)
  • Response-oriented equipment

The Mitigation Team is soliciting Grant Applications for this program until close of business on Friday, June 3, 2011.  Grant applications must be filled out by the local emergency manager.  Please take a look at the 2011 State Hazard Mitigation Program Announcement Letter for more details on how to apply. For questions or comments, contact Scott Baldwin, Mitigation Assistant, at scott.baldwin@state.co.us or 720-852-6696.

Deep Snowpack = Potential for Powerful Avalanches

The following is a Press Release from our partners at the Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC) and urges caution and awareness regarding the potential for powerful, larger and stronger avalanches is uncommon locations due to Colorado's unusually heavy snowpack this Spring.  For questions regarding the CAIC, this release or activities, contact the Center's Director, Ethan Greene, at (303) 204-6027.


Public, fieldworkers, recreationalists cautioned that unusually heavy snowpack could spark larger, stronger avalanches in uncommon locations 

Unusually deep  snowpack in parts of Colorado’s northern and central mountains has the potential to produce dangerous avalanches in pathways that may not have run in decades, and that may run farther than they have in recent memory, according to the Colorado Avalanche Information Center and the Colorado Geological Survey.

Many of the federal government’s snow monitoring sites are recording snowpack levels of more than 160 percent of average, and include some areas with snowpack well over 200 percent of an average year. In many areas snow was still accumulating through the end of April. This may increase the likelihood for major avalanches during the melting season now underway.

The CAIC emphasizes that the public – including local governments and private companies that deploy fieldworkers to outdoor sites - need to be aware of this potential hazard and be prepared for very large events. This warning also applies after an avalanche, as it is important people do not enter debris zones until the area has been evaluated for further avalanche activity potential.

Photo by Terry Onslow - Westside Avalanche Network
An example of this hazard occurred April 30, when an unusually large and destructive avalanche struck the Peru Creek drainage near the town of Montezuma in Summit County. This avalanche destroyed large, 100-plus year-old trees as well as a high-voltage tower that was installed in the late 1970’s. This was an isolated event, but an indication of what is possible this spring. In addition, the Colorado Geological Survey warns that the heavy snowpack combined with a rapid warm-up could also lead to substantial mudslides and debris flows. For instance, similar conditions in 1984 led to more than 40 mudslides and debris-flows in the Vail Valley.

While rapid transition to above freezing temperatures, or a sustained period of warm temperatures could produce very large and destructive avalanches, large spring avalanches are not guaranteed. But the right weather conditions during May and early June could produce avalanches larger than we have seen in 30 to 100 years. Stands of timber, structures, and other assets in avalanche runout areas could be damaged or destroyed.

More information is available here, with a map showing federal Natural Resources Conservation Service SNOTEL data on snowpack levels and here, with photographs showing recent impacts of the Peru Creek drainage avalanche.

The CAIC also wants to remind rescue workers, demolition workers and other people that they should carry proper avalanche rescue equipment and use safe travel protocols. Staff from the Colorado Avalanche Information Center are available to advise on spring conditions and avalanche safety. Backcountry advisories are available at www.colorado.gov/avalanche through May 30th. In an emergency, staff can be reached at 303-204-6027.

Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) Train-the-Trainer Course

Don't just volunteer to help pitch in, help teach others "how to" by taking the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) Train-the-Trainer Course.  In a large scale emergency or disaster, often those first on the scene to render aid and organize response efforts are friends, family and neighbors.  The foundation of a strong community ability to respond to a disaster in an organized and prepared way is via a Community Emergency Response Team, or CERT, training.  You can learn more about CERT online at http://www.citizencorps.gov/cert.  To get in touch with your local CERT in Colorado, look their contact info online at http://www.citizencorps.gov/cc/CertIndex.do?reportsForState&cert=&state=CO.

To support CERT development at the local level, the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) Emergency Management Institute (EMI) is hosting a CERT Train-the-Trainer Course to prepare participants to deliver FEMA's CERT Basic Training Course.

There are a number of dates available for the training in 2011 and 2012 and each class will be hosted at the Emergency Management Institute in Emmitsburg, MD.  If you are interested in applying for the course, contact DEM's Training Officer, Robyn Knappe, at robyn.knappe@state.co.us or at (720) 852-6617.  Robyn can help walk you through the application process, will serve as your State contact to handle your application to EMI.

For more information on the course, dates for registration and application instructions see the CERT Train-the-Trainer Info Flyer.


Rapid Needs Assessment Course

Local Rapid Needs Assessment FEMA Workshop G250.7 is a required course in the Advanced Professional Series.  The course teaches the need and development of plans/procedures for rapidly and efficiently collecting disaster intelligence immediately following a disaster.  This intelligence can be used to develop response priorities as well as allocate and request resources to save and sustain lives.

When:  August 12, 2011 - 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM

Where: Carbondale & Rural Fire District Station 1, 300 Meadowood Drive, Carbondale, CO 81623

Register: Registration will be through http://www.co.train.org Course ID: 1024910.  This course is first come, first served. No charge.

Target Audience: Individuals who may assume a supervisory role in expanding emergency incidents.

For more information contact: Robyn Knappe, robyn.knappe@state.co.us - 720-852-6617