Emergency Evacuation Planning for Your Workplace

From Chaos to Life-Saving Solutions

Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Technology, Operations Research, Technical & Manufacturing Industries & Trades, Engineering
Cover of the book Emergency Evacuation Planning for Your Workplace by Jim Burtles, KLJ, CMLJ, FBCI, Rothstein Publishing
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Author: Jim Burtles, KLJ, CMLJ, FBCI ISBN: 9781931332859
Publisher: Rothstein Publishing Publication: November 21, 2014
Imprint: Rothstein Publishing Language: English
Author: Jim Burtles, KLJ, CMLJ, FBCI
ISBN: 9781931332859
Publisher: Rothstein Publishing
Publication: November 21, 2014
Imprint: Rothstein Publishing
Language: English

Would your routine office fire drill be able to handle the large-scale chaos of a major disaster? Can you get everyone out safely in the face of a factory fire, explosion, or natural disaster? In Emergency Evacuation Planning for Your Workplace: From Chaos to Life-Saving Solutions, Jim Burtles leads you step-by-step through a planning methodology that saves lives. You can be assured your company will be ready and that everyone will know what to do -- whatever the nature of the emergency.

In one practical, easy-to-read resource, Burtles helps you create a comprehensive plan to evacuate people of all ages and health conditions from workplaces such as small offices, skyscrapers, stores, industrial plants, hospitals, college campuses, and more. His carefully constructed methodology leads you through the development of organization-wide plans - ensuring that your procedures align with best practices, relevant regulations, sound governance, and corporate responsibility.

His five stages of an Emergency Evacuation Planning (EEP) Lifecycle include:

  1. Set up the EEP program – Bring management on board, get executive buy-in and policy approval to proceed.
  2. Embed EEP into the corporate culture – Begin your awareness campaign immediately, getting the message out to the community you are serving.
  3. Understand the environment – Explore which areas of the organization have emergency plans and which need to be covered in your overall EEP/
  4. Agree upon an EEP strategy – Work closely with people who know the premises to identify threats that could trigger an emergency, and visit and evaluate potential exit points.
  5. Develop evacuation procedures – Look at the people, their probable locations, their existing challenges. Determine if you will need one plan or a suite of plans.
  6. Exercise and maintain the EEP– Run regular exercises to familiarize everyone with plans and choices – as often as needed to accommodate changing personnel and individual needs. Because this a long-term process, go back to the earlier parts of the cycle and review the plan to keep it current.

Thought-provoking discussion questions, real-life case studies and examples, comprehensive index, and detailed glossary facilitate both college and professional instruction.

Downloadable resources and tools – practical toolkit full of innovative and field-tested plans, forms, checklists, tips, and tools to support you as you set up effective workplace evacuation procedures.

Instructor's Manual available for use by approved adopters in college courses and professional development training.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Would your routine office fire drill be able to handle the large-scale chaos of a major disaster? Can you get everyone out safely in the face of a factory fire, explosion, or natural disaster? In Emergency Evacuation Planning for Your Workplace: From Chaos to Life-Saving Solutions, Jim Burtles leads you step-by-step through a planning methodology that saves lives. You can be assured your company will be ready and that everyone will know what to do -- whatever the nature of the emergency.

In one practical, easy-to-read resource, Burtles helps you create a comprehensive plan to evacuate people of all ages and health conditions from workplaces such as small offices, skyscrapers, stores, industrial plants, hospitals, college campuses, and more. His carefully constructed methodology leads you through the development of organization-wide plans - ensuring that your procedures align with best practices, relevant regulations, sound governance, and corporate responsibility.

His five stages of an Emergency Evacuation Planning (EEP) Lifecycle include:

  1. Set up the EEP program – Bring management on board, get executive buy-in and policy approval to proceed.
  2. Embed EEP into the corporate culture – Begin your awareness campaign immediately, getting the message out to the community you are serving.
  3. Understand the environment – Explore which areas of the organization have emergency plans and which need to be covered in your overall EEP/
  4. Agree upon an EEP strategy – Work closely with people who know the premises to identify threats that could trigger an emergency, and visit and evaluate potential exit points.
  5. Develop evacuation procedures – Look at the people, their probable locations, their existing challenges. Determine if you will need one plan or a suite of plans.
  6. Exercise and maintain the EEP– Run regular exercises to familiarize everyone with plans and choices – as often as needed to accommodate changing personnel and individual needs. Because this a long-term process, go back to the earlier parts of the cycle and review the plan to keep it current.

Thought-provoking discussion questions, real-life case studies and examples, comprehensive index, and detailed glossary facilitate both college and professional instruction.

Downloadable resources and tools – practical toolkit full of innovative and field-tested plans, forms, checklists, tips, and tools to support you as you set up effective workplace evacuation procedures.

Instructor's Manual available for use by approved adopters in college courses and professional development training.

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