HISTORY:
BACKGROUND:
As part of the City’s Comprehensive Emergency Management Plan (CEMP), originally compiled in 2007, a Re-entry Annex had been developed and written by emergency management staff and then recomposed by the Department of Emergency Management (DEM) as a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP). This plan was designed to establish a procedure facilitating re-entry of response and recovery personnel, government officials, critical healthcare staff, businesses, property owners, media and others in order to speed the recovery of the City and its economy following a citywide evacuation.
Although the stated purpose of the document was to “provide uniform guidance to law enforcement who direct access and to ensure safe re-entry for all entering the City after and emergency event,” the plan was not reviewed nor adopted by the departments tasked with carrying out the procedures. When the time came to implement the program following Hurricane Irma, the task proved to be unmanageable and inconsistently enforced, and information was not sufficiently communicated to the public.
NEIGHBORHOODS AND COMMUNITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE DIRECTION:
At the July 18, 2018 meeting of the Neighborhoods meeting, a discussion was held regarding registering and providing special identification to all residents and employees of the city of Miami Beach so that in the event of a hurricane, or other disaster requiring evacuation, there is a way to easily identify residents and employees so they can return to their homes and their jobs expeditiously. This discussion was sponsored by Committee Chair Kristen Rosen Gonzalez and was addressed by Chief Juan Mestas, who was serving as interim director of the Department of Emergency Management.
DEM was directed to develop a program, utilizing vehicle decals to identify permitted entrants for re-entry. The department was asked to bring back information to the next Neighborhoods meeting. As this meeting would not be held until September, 2018, DEM moved forward as quickly as possible to follow through and report via LTC during the August recess.
Emergency Management had begun to re-address the concept of re-entry procedures following Hurricane Irma, but the discussion at Neighborhoods was the impetus to accelerate the process. On July 23, the Department convened a meeting with other departments and community representatives. In attendance at the meeting were the Police and Fire Chiefs and members of their staff, representatives from Transportation, Marketing & Communications, Parking, and Finance. DEM also invited representatives from the public to provide important feedback in the conversation. This included executives from Mount Sinai Medical Center, the Greater Miami Convention and Visitors Bureau, and the Greater Miami and the Beaches Hotel Association. Adrian Gonzalez of David’s Café and the Miami Beach CERT leader Jeff Gordon were also part of the discussion, providing the perspective of businesses and residents.
The consensus at the meeting was to establish a phased plan that would include operating procedures, distribution of tier-identified decals, and a communications plan.
PROGRESS:
The partnering departments have researched similar programs in coastal cities of comparable size and population, prepared a preliminary cost analysis and re-written a draft of the re-entry plan. DEM now seeks review of the decal program and guidance from the Committee for next steps.
Input received from the various departments who are involved in the implementation includes:
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Police – overall enforcement, feasibility of plan execution, roadblock coordination
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Fire – safety concerns
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Transportation – coordination with regulatory agencies and traffic flow into the City
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Finance – administration of decal program (fee collection, distribution)
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Communications & Marketing – development of messaging