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D MUNICIPALITY OF SAN MIGUEL – STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURES & GUIDELINES
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PRELIMINARY PAGES
1. Table of Contents --------------------------------------------------------pp. 1-3
2. Abbreviations and Acronyms------------------------------------------pp. 3-5
3. Definition of Terms ------------------------------------------------------pp. 6-14
CHAPTER I – RATIONALE
1. Background p.15
2. Goal p.16
3. Objectives p.16
CHAPTER II – ORGANIZATION
1. Office of Civil Defense pp.17-18
2. Regional DRRM Council-------------------------------------------------p.19
2.1. Composition of the MDRRMC--------------------------------- p.19
3. MDRRMOC / EOC p.20
a. 24/7 Operations Center----------------------------------------- p.20
b. Emergency Operations Center------------------------------- pp.21-22
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ANNEXES
A. ANNEX A – Report Format------------------------------------------p. 51
B. ANNEX B – Organization--------------------------------------------p. 52-54
C. ANNEX C – Worst-Case Scenarios per Hazard--------------pp. 55-58
D. ANNEX D – Highway in the Seas----------------------------------p. 59
REFERENCES--------------------------------------------------------------------------p. 60
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DEFINITION OF TERMS
Basic Services – Activities undertaken in the course of disaster relief and recovery,
rehabilitation or reconstruction such as, but not limited to, health and social welfare
services, shelter, agricultural services, environmental protection and financial
assistance to calamity victims and such other activities essential to disaster control
and management.
Casualty – A victim of disaster, who died, got injured and was missing and who was
physically injured or killed by a destructive event.
Civil Society Organizations or CSOs – Non-state actors whose aims are neither to
generate profits nor to seek governing power. CSOs unite people to advance shared
goals and interests. They have a presence in public life, expressing the interests and
values of their members or others, and are based on ethical, cultural, scientific,
religious or philanthropic considerations. CSOs include non-government
organizations (NGOs),professional associations, foundations, independent
research institutes,
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Disaster Risk – The potential disaster losses in lives, health status, livelihood,
assets and services, which could occur to a particular community or a Society over
some specified future time period.
Disaster Risk Reduction – The concept and practice of reducing disaster risks
through systematic efforts to analyze and manage the causal factors of disasters,
including through reduced exposures to hazards, lessened vulnerability of people
and property, wise management of land and the environment, and improved
preparedness for adverse events.
Disaster Victim – Person/s or group of persons who have been adversely affected
by a natural or human-induced hazard who have to leave their habitual places of
residence due to existing or impending threats, damaged shelter units, with casualty
among immediate family members or those who remained in their habitual places of
origin when still habitable but whose main source of income or livelihood had been
damaged and are experiencing hopelessness and difficulty in coping or responding
to the onslaught of the hazardous events on their own resources.
Displaced Persons – Are persons who have involuntarily moved from their places
of origin as a result of war, armed conflict, generalized situation of violence, violation
of human rights and natural disasters to a safer ground, hence the change in
environment and a need to adjust thereto.
Displaced Population– They are part of the affected population who are uprooted
from their original place of residence and employment due to a disaster.
Early Warning System – The set of capacities needed to generate and disseminate
timely and meaningful warning information to enable individuals, communities and
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Flood– A condition that occurs when water overflows the natural or artificial confines
of a stream or body of water, or when run-off from heavy rainfall accumulates over
low-lying areas.
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Initial Report - A report issued to confirm whether the incident has actually occurred.
It includes information on what, when, where, why and how the incident happened,
and actions initially taken.
Management of the Dead and Missing - Standard process of handling dead bodies
and body parts (retrieval, human identification and final disposal), together with
missing persons and bereaved families, ensuring that legal norms are followed, and
the dignity of the deceased and their families is respected, in accordance with their
cultural and religious beliefs.
Missing Person - Refers to an absent person whose whereabouts, safety and well-
being cannot be established after 24 hours from his/her perceived disappearance.
The law also tasked OCD to “develop and ensure the implementation of national
standards in carrying-out disaster risk reduction programs including preparedness,
mitigation, prevention, response, and rehabilitation works, from data collection and
analysis, planning, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation”.
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Private Sector – The key actor in the realm of the economy where the central social
concern and process are the mutually beneficial production and distribution of goods
and services to meet the physical needs of human beings. The private sector
comprises private corporations, households and nonprofit institutions serving
households.
Recovery – The restoration of all vital support systems such as electricity, potable
water system, transport system, communication system, educational, cultural and
medical facilities.
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Response – Any concerted effort by two (2) or more agencies, public or private, to
provide assistance or intervention during or immediately after a disaster to meet the
life preservation and basic subsistence needs of those people affected and in the
restoration of essential public activities and facilities.
Risk – The combination of the probability of an event and its negative consequences.
Self-Inflicted Incident - An incident caused to one’s self through one’s own action.
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Slow-Onset Disaster - Is defined as one that emerges gradually over time. Slow-
onset disasters could be associated with, e.g., drought, desertification, sea-level rise,
epidemic disease.
Small-Scale Disaster - Disasters that have impacts limited to relatively small local
areas.
Storm Surge– A rise of sea water above normal level on the coast, generated by the
action of elements such as wind atmospheric pressure.
Survivor – A person who has survived the effects of disaster and a victim who is
either dead or missing.
Tropical Cyclones– A generic term for warm core, non-frontal synoptic scale
cyclone originating from tropical or subtropical waters with organized deep
convection and a closed surface wind circulation about a well-defined center.
Typhoon – A tropical cyclone with a maximum sustained wind of 118 to 222 km/h (64
- 120 knots or 32.7 to 61.7 m/s).
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Volcanic Eruption – The ejection of volcanic materials such as lava, ashes, rock
fragments steam and other gases through a fissure brought about by tremendous
pressure which forces open the rock formation overlying pockets of molten rocks or
steam reservoirs found under the earth’s crust.
Weather forecast – A forecast of the future state of the atmosphere with specific
reference to one or more associated weather elements.
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CHAPTER I – RATIONALE
1. BACKGROUND
Lessons learned from these events would show a need to further intensify DRR
community-based approach to adequately enhance the coping capacities of LGUs
in all levels such as formulation of contingency preparedness measures/ plan,
sufficiently trained and equipped emergency responder groups, and effective
early warning system.
Recent experience has shown that hundreds of families were affected by great
magnitude of disaster besetting the municipality, thus a tall order is needed on
immediate deployment of search and rescue, medical and relief assistance
however, resources are inadequate. As monitored from the national scene,
scores of dead, injured and missing, displaced families and huge damage to
properties enfolding the news due to the absence of warning.
With these in mind, the MDRRMC should prioritize the establishment its facilities,
equipment, communications, procedures and personnel to be able to prepare and
properly manage effectively and efficiently the resources, information and
consequences of the disasters. Thus, this Standard Operating Procedures and
Guidelines is crafted.
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2. GOAL
3. OBJECTIVES
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CHAPTER II – ORGANIZATION
It is indeed essential for the MDRRMC to organize its disaster operations and
personnel according to the needs of the situation. The key elements that enable the
council to organize and reorganize include command and control systems and the
various command and support relationships that establish the appropriate
organization.
Command and control are the processes through which the activities are directed,
coordinated, and controlled to accomplish the mission. Effective leadership is the
main factor in achieving the objectives of the operation. In disaster operations,
leadership must be s supported by a reliable, flexible, secure, fast, and durable
command and control system. This system must communicate orders, coordinate
support, and provide direction even during adverse conditions.
Section 8 of the Republic Act 10121 provides that OCD shall have
the primary mission of administering a comprehensive national civil
defense and disaster risk reduction and management program by
providing leadership in the continuous development of strategic and
systematic approaches as well as measures to reduce the
vulnerabilities and risks to hazards and manage the consequences
of disasters.
OCD, being the Chairperson and Secretariat of the Regional Disaster Risk
Reduction and Management Council (RDRRMC), is gearing toward the
enhancement of structures and mechanisms of the Regional Disaster Risk Reduction
and Management Council Emergency Operations Center (RDRRMC-EOC) with the
crafting of this Standard Operating Procedures and Guidelines (SOPG) to be able to
improve the existing system and to meet the demands of the provision of RA 10121
during emergency operations.
VISION - By 2022, OCD is a fully capacitated agency that leads the implementation
of an integrated civil defense and DRRM program
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Section 11 of the same law provides that the Municipal Disaster Risk Reduction and
Management Councils (MDRRMCs) shall be responsible in ensuring disaster
sensitive regional development plans, and in case of emergencies shall convene the
different line agencies and concerned institutions and authorities.
The same council shall establish an operating facility to be known as the Municipal
Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Operations Center (MDRRMOC)
whenever necessary.
Chairperson
Municipal Mayor
Vice Chairperson
Secretariat
Municipal Vice
LDRRMO Mayor
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The facility known as the MDRRMOC shall serve as the Operating Facility of the
MDRRMC. It shall be operated and maintained on a 24-hour basis by MDRRM
personnel during normal situation. This also serves as the nerve center for alert and
monitoring, multi-agency and inter-office operational coordination, response and
resource mobilization, and information management.
Municipal
Mayor
LDRRMO
Operations
Chief
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During emergency condition (blue and red alert), MDRRM personnel will be
complemented by the Detailed Duty Officers (DDOs) from MDRRMC member-
agencies.
The MDRRMC-EOC shall utilize support systems such as early warning and
emergency broadcast system, geographic information system and other space-
based technologies, incident command system, rapid damage assessment and
needs analysis, emergency logistics management, public-private partnerships for
emergency response, and humanitarian assistance coordination mechanism.
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Municipal Mayor
EOC Manager
(EOC Manager shall depend
upon the type of emergency)
Logistics Engineering
Documenter
Coordinator Manager Utility
Security
Driver
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Info Dissemination
through Text Blast /
Two-Way Radio
FLOW OF WARNING
(EWS) IN THE
MUNICIPALITY Siren Blast
Ringing of
Bells
“Recoreda”
(for RED Alert)
AWARENESS LEVEL
(CODE YELLOW) : ONE LONG BLAST
` One blast lasting about four seconds.
PREPAREDNESS LEVEL
(CODE BLUE) : 2 LONG BLASTS
Two blasts lasting about four seconds each with an interval of about a
second.
FORCED EVACUATION LEVEL
(CODE RED) : LONG CONTINUOUS BLAST
One blast lasting more than 4 seconds.
CURFEW
(CURFEW) : ONE LONG BLAST
`One blast lasting about four seconds
4. The municipal siren shall be located and shall continue to be located in the most
prominent location within the municipality and shall be manned on a round-the-clock
basis.
5. In no case shall be siren be used for any purpose other than what is provided for in
these guidelines for the Standard Operating Procedure of the end-to-end use of the
Early Warning System.
6. TEXT MESSAGING
The municipality shall take full advantage of all the telecommunication services
available in the municipality as an EWS tool.
Upon receipt of a verified information regarding the possible upcoming disaster,
the Communications Department of the Office of the MDRRMO shall immediately send
communication/warning message via text blast to all the chairmen of the BDRRMCs all
throughout the municipality.
Text messages shall precede the siren blasts.
Another important part of the early warning system is the use of the
MDRRM vehicles installed with public address system. These vehicles, together
with the vehicles of the Philippine National Police (PNP) and the Bureau of Fire
Protection (BFP), shall visit all barangays of the municipality, especially the high
risk and highly susceptible areas.
1.Create a Communication and Helpline Desk which shall be located within the
Office of the MDRRMO;
2. Designate personnel that shall man the Desk on a 24/7 basis;
3. Channel official information from the Office to the BDRRMO; and
4. Receive all communications from the BDRRMO including reports, requests
for assistance, feedbacks and suggestions from the constituents.
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3. Administrative Procedures
4.1. Personnel who will prepare the advisories and disaster reports
shall develop a file naming document files (doc/docx), PDF files.
4.2. There shall be a separate folder for operations.
4.3. Inside the operations folder, following sub-folders shall be
created according to the following:
Natural Hazards
Incidents Monitored
Weather Advisory
Tropical Cyclone Advisory
Flood Bulletin
Flood Advisory
Rainfall Advisory
Dam Discharge
Human-Induced Hazards
Incidents Monitored
4.4. Inside the above sub-folders, there shall be sub-folders named
per date based on when the messages were received and sent.
5. FEEDBACK MECHANISM
The MDRRMO Communication and Helpline Desk shall have duty to:
A. CHARACTERISTICS OF DISASTERS
Aside from the classification of disasters based on the hazards (i.e. natural or
human-induced) causing the disaster, it may also be classified based on the
speed of onset (i.e. slow onset or sudden onset). Speed of onset refers on
how quickly the peak of hazard occurs. It has an effect on the actions to be
undertaken by the MDRRMOC and the MDRRMC as a whole.
1. Normal Condition
2. Emergency Condition
1.1. Raising the alert status of the MDRRMOC (i.e. from WHITE ALERT
to BLUE ALERT or WHITE ALERT to RED ALERT) is determined
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1.3. Other agencies may recommend raising the alert status e.g.
PAGASA for weather disturbances, PHIVOLCS for volcano
activities and earthquake, and response agencies for human-
induced hazards.
2.1. Downgrading the MDRRMOC’s Alert Status shall be made upon the
recommendation of Chief/Chairman of the MDRRMC with the
concurrence of the Manager/s.
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A. MEETINGS
The PDRA Core Group members are directed to organize and may wish to
call on other MDRRMC Member-Agencies and organizations to facilitate
the immediate execution of needed assessment and dissemination of
results, as deemed necessary.
During the PDRA meetings, the Operations Section shall facilitate the
processing of all administrative requirements needed, as well as the
release of the minutes of the meeting.
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B. MEDIA MANAGEMENT
prohibited.
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1. Social media (Facebook, Twitter, etc.) are utilized for alert, monitoring, and
information management purposes. The official accounts shall be
managed by MDRRMO – Communication and Helpline Desk. This
includes posting of advisories and situational reports and addressing
queries of the public.
3. The MDRRMO – Communication and Helpline Desk shall promote the use
of UNIFIED HASHTAGS to coordinate and disseminate information, relief,
and rescue efforts with the public and concerned government agencies.
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Criteria
o At least 10 people died in the incident, with or without
report of injuries and missing.
o At least 10 injured / ill and/or 10 missing without report
of deaths.
o At least 50 families or 250 persons are affected and/or
displaced.
o At least 50 houses damaged (partially / totally).
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1.2. Information relayed thru SMS and/or phone calls are discouraged.
However, in instances where significant update / report needs to be
relayed to or required by the Chairperson, MDRRMC, immediate
inclusion of such to the next Situational Report should be upon the
discretion of the latter.
1.3. BDRRMOs are required to obtain a copy of the official resolution of
the Declaration of State Calamity prior to its inclusion in the
Situational Report. The MDRRMOC shall be provided with a copy
of the resolution.
1.4. BDRRMOs are responsible for the validation of all information prior
to its submission to the MDRRMOC:
Incidents that lack information
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Large-Scale Disasters
o There is a declaration of State of Calamity on the National or
Regional level.
o There is a call for international humanitarian assistance and /
or intervention from international partners.
o There is a need to conduct National Post-Disaster Needs
Assessment (PDNA) or Post-Conflict Needs Assessment
(PCNA)
Medium-Scale Disasters
o There is a local declaration of State of Calamity.
o At least two (2) barangays are affected.
o There is a need for augmentation from the national to the
regional level.
o There is a need for intervention / assistance from in-country
liaison team (e.g. ASEAN, UN)
o There is a need to conduct Regional PDNA or PCNA
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Small-Scale Disasters
o Local incidents (e.g. local fire incidents, isolated
thunderstorms)
Situation Overview
Effects
Actions Taken
1.3. The designated approving authority shall review and approve the
pending reports.
1.4. For Armed Conflicts, the report shall focus on the consequence
management for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), hence, no
information on military or police movement or operations shall be
reflected in the report. Names and other details on casualties shall
not be reflected as well.
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1.5. Duty Personnel shall translate the received reports into RDRRMC
Report signed by the approving authority and a file copy must be
maintained for record-keeping.
RDRRMC Update
o Email the scanned document to NDRRMOC, RDRRMC
Member-Agencies and concerned P/CDRRMCs
2.1. After drafting the report and reviewed by the Team Leader, it should be
submitted to MDRRMC Chairman for review and approval.
3.1. All directly related incidents which transpired during the period or
observance of the event shall be included in the Situational Report.
► What
► When
► Where
► Why
► How the incident happened
► What steps were initially undertaken
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3. Pre-emptive Evacuation
4. Cost of Damage
4.2. The MDRRMOC duty personnel may send the BDRRMC report to
concerned MDRRMC Member-Agencies and vice-versa, for vetting
and triangulation.
5.1. DOTr (PCG, MCIAA, CPA, PPA, MARINA, LTFRB, LTO, and other
sea/rail/land/airport authorities) - transportation (sea, air, land, and
rail)
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6. Actions Taken – This should be Per Cluster, Agency, and LGU which include
the following:
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1.1.5. Stay at the MDRRMOC during their entire tour of duty and shall
refrain from doing other unofficial business. In case of
emergency, they should secure approval from the MDRRMOC
Chief before leaving the office premises.
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Normal Condition
Emergency Condition
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Management
o Responsible Official - Sets the
priorities/objectives to be undertaken by the
MDRRMC EOC Management Team for the given
operational period.
o EOC Manager - Supervises all operational and
support functions being performed at the
MDRRMOC.
Operations
o Operations Manager - Supervises implementation
of instructions for coordination and consequence
management.
o Liaison - Monitors, receives, and processes
response requests that are received via phone
call, SMS, email and other means.
o Cluster Coordinator - Develops correspondences
and other documentary requirements for execution
of disaster response activities.
o Logistics Coordinator - Arranges logistical
requirements for response operations.
Planning
o Planning Manager - Supervises information
management and situational analysis functions of
the MDRRMOC.
o Report Coordinator - Gathers and validates
situation information obtained via phone call, SMS,
email and other means.
o Report Developer - Develops MDRRMOC
Situational Report with analysis and
recommendations.
o Documenter - Maintains all printed and electronic
reports of the MDRRMOC.
Logistics
o Logistics Manager - Supervises functionality and
maintenance of MDRRMOC, equipment, tools and
supplies used for coordination and communication.
o Communications Manager - Ensures functionality
of MDRRMOC communication tools and
equipment, and facilitate maintenance thereof.
o Network Manager - Ensures functionality of
MDRRMOC network connectivity, and facilitate
maintenance thereof.
o Engineering Manager - Ensures functionality of
the entire MDRRMOC facility.
2.2. These DDOs shall provide information and other related requirements
to MDRRMOC. They shall inform their respective agencies to send at
least a trusted and reliable representative/personnel to attend
emergency council meetings / press conferences at the MDRRMOC as
the need arises. Likewise, inform respective Head of Agencies on
relevant matters taken up during the meeting.
Name
Designation / Position
Office / Division
Contact Numbers (mobile numbers and office landline)
Duration of Duty: (e.g. 7:00 am to 3:00 pm the following day)
2.6. Certificate of Appearance will be issued after the tour of duty and/or
upon request.
3.2. Outgoing duty personnel shall not leave their posts until the incoming
duty personnel arrives and shall observe proper turn-over of
documents and responsibilities. Each member of the duty personnel
shall personally endorse / turn-over any unfinished task before leaving
the post to ensure continuity of the work assigned.
3.5. Personnel who will not be able to render duty due to personal reasons
shall look for replacement ahead of time, at least two (2) days before
his/her scheduled duty. A written agreement shall likewise be
submitted.
3.7. Duty personnel leaving the MDRRMOC premises during the tour of
duty without permission from the Team Leader shall be subjected to
corresponding disciplinary action.
3.8. For special cases (such as pandemic or any related cases) that would
require strict health protocols, limit physical contact, and observance of
social distancing, a work-from-home (WFH) arrangement or a
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4. Attire Decorum
4.1. All duty personnel shall wear appropriate attire and Identification Cards
(IDs) during office hours: Office uniform during normal condition and
prescribed MDRRMC shirt and pants during emergency conditions.
4.2. Wearing shorts and slippers at the MDRRMOC is prohibited at all times.
4.3. Proper attire decorum must also be observed during official video tele-
conferencing meetings.
5.1. A Staff Duty Officer (SDO) report shall be prepared and submitted to
the MDRRMC Chairman, after the tour of duty of personnel. It shall
also be put on file.
6.1. Employees are required to render forty (40) hours of work in a week,
subject to the work schedule adopted by the agency. In the exigency of
the service, employees may be required to render services beyond
working hours.
6.2. The CTO may be availed of in blocks of four (4) or eight (8) hours.
Agencies adopting alternative work schedules should make parallel
adjustments in the availment blocks, tantamount to either a half or full
day leave from work.
6.3. The employee must first obtain approval from the head of the
agency/authorized official regarding the schedule of availment of CTO.
The management shall accommodate, to the extent practicable all
applications for availment of CTO at the time requested by the
employee. In the exigency of the service, however, the schedule may
be recalled and subsequently rescheduled by the Head of the
Office/authorized official within the year.
6.6. COCs will not be added to the regular leave credits of the employee.
Hence, it is not part of the accumulated leave credits that is paid out to
the employee.
6.7. All personnel who render duty at NDRRMOC for 12 to 24 hours straight
(holidays/weekends) shall be entitled to Compensatory Time-Offs
(CTOs) as prescribed in the enabling laws.
6.8. All duty personnel shall be provided with food/meals during their tour of
duty.
7. Telephone Courtesy
All duty personnel shall observe telephone courtesy at all times, regardless of
who the callers are.
Personal phone calls (landline and mobile) using the Operations Section mobile
phone and direct lines/facsimile are STRICTLY PROHIBITED. Should there be
any need to do so (due to emergencies), inform first the Duty Team Leader and /
or Operations Officers present.
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ANNEXES
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ANNEX A
REPORT FORMAT
Appendix 1 – Initial Report / Spot Report
I. SITUATION OVERVIEW
II. EFFECTS
A. MDRRMC Members
B. BDRRMCs
C. Other member agencies
III. EFFECTS
A. CASUALTIES
B. AFFECTED / DISPLACED POPULATION
C. DAMAGED HOUSES
D. SUSPENSION OF CLASSES
E. SUSPENSION OF TRIPS (SEA, AIR) AND STRANDED
PASSENGERS
F. STATUS OF LIFELINES / BASIC UTILITIES
G. STATUS OF PORTS
H. COST OF DAMAGES
I. DECLARATION OF STATE OF CALAMITY
V. ANNEXES
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ANNEX B
ORGANIZATION
APPENDIX 1. MDRRMC STRUCTURE
Chairperson
Municipal Mayor
MSWDO MEO
MPDO LDRRMO
Vice Chair, DISASTER Vice Chair, Recovery &
Vice Chair, DISASTER Vice Chair, DISASTER
RESPONSE Rehabilitation Committee
PREVENTION AND PREPAREDNESS
COMMITTEE
MITIGATION COMMITTEE COMMITTEE
Members:
Members: Mun. Agriculture Office
Members:
Members: Local Civil Registrar Mun. Treasurer's Office
DepEd Supervisor
Tourism Officer Mun. Health Officer Mun. Accounting Office
SAN MIGUEL BFP Chief
Municipal Assessor AFP Representative HRMO
SAN MIGUEL PCG Chief
CSO - Women's Balikatan SAN MIGUEL PNP Chief CSO - SAN MIGUEL
MBO
Pres. -Liga ng mga Brgy. CSO - DCPMPC Motorela Association
CSO - Sr. Citizens
MLGOO Pres - Liga ng mga Brgy. Private Sector (Business)
Pres.- Liga ng mga Brgy.
MLGOO Pres - Liga ng mga Brgy.
MLGOO
MLGOO
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APPENDIX 3.
The MDRRMC EOC Organizational Structure
during Emergency Condition
Municipal Mayor
EOC Manager
(EOC Manager shall depend
upon the type of emergency)
Cluster Report
Administrative
Coordinator Developer
Assistant
Logistics Documenter
Coordinator Utility
Security
Driver
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ANNEX C.
WORST-CASE
SCENARIOS PER
HAZARD BASED
ON THE
MUNICIPAL
CONTINGENCY
PLANS
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APPENDIX 1. EARTHQUAKE
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ANNEX D.
COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
APPENDIX 1. ANALOG TWO-WAY RADIO
Analog radio signals utilize sinusoidal value waveforms to communicate voice
signals in a continuous wave. The simple radio wave is harnessed via
frequency modulation and requires very little in the way of technology in order
to work. As such, they transmit the natural human voice without digital
interference and make good use of bandwidth, making them the preferred
radio platform for many businesses and organizations around the world.
BDRRMC
BDRRMC
BDRRMC
BDRRMC
BDRRMC
BDRRMC
REPEATER
BDRRMC
BASE
BDRRMC
BDRRMC
BDRRMC BDRRMC
BDRRMC
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REFERENCES
1. RA10121
2. National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Standard Operating
Procedures and Guidelines
3. Regional Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Plan 2020-2022
4. Regional Contingency Plan for Earthquake
5. Regional Contingency Plan for Hydromet
6. Regional Contingency Plan for Mt Kanlaon Volcanic Eruption
7. Regional Contingency Plan for Human-Induced Hazard
8. Asian Development Bank
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