Office of Emergency Management

Readiness and Response

Readiness and Response
The severity of an event will determine the Emergency Operations Center activation level. OEM operates under eight condition levels that determine the city’s readiness and response to a community emergency.

OEM Readiness Levels

The first four conditions are readiness levels that are used to gauge the severity of a threat to the city:

Operation Condition

Definition

Primary Action

Examples

OP-CON 1

Day-to-day

  • Monitor, routine resources requests
  • Barricades, debris, water main, traffic lights, power outage, etc…

OP-CON 2

Potential threat

  • Assessment initiated
  • Special weather statements

OP-CON 3

Likely threat

  • Notifications initiated, assessment continues
  • Severe weather watch, etc…
  • Emergency conditions may develop

OP-CON 4

Imminent threat

  • Selected resources on standby
  • Intensive assessment
  • Severe weather warning, etc…
  • Emergency conditions developing
 
OEM Response Levels

There are also four response levels, or conditions that determine the type and severity of an event, and how the city responds to an emergency:

Operation Condition

Definition

Primary Action

Examples

OP-CON 5

Limited emergency

  • Limited resource coordination
  • Minor Community Impact
  • Damaging winds, minor snow storms

OP-CON 6

Significant emergency

  • Partial activation of the Emergency Operations Center
  • Multi-department coordination
  • Isolated Community Impact

OP-CON 7

Major emergency

  • Full activation of the EOC
  • Major response and recovery coordination
  • Substantial Community Impact
  • Wide spread damaging storms

OP-CON 8

Catastrophic Emergency

  • State and Federal Response Plan Activated
  • Major Community Impact

The severity of an incident in this category of Operations Conditions will determine the level of the Emergency Operations Center activation.