1: Mapping and developing necessary relationships
BACKGROUND:
A frequent shortcoming in any disaster is the failure to develop an understanding of the tendons and sinews of a community before that disaster happens. How can such an inventory of representative people and sites be done and what does it look like when successful?
GOALS:
1. To determine the reasonable nodes of effective community management during a time of self-reliance.
2. To determine the power and communications support requirements at key sites for a period of disrupted infrastructure.
3. To understand the development of a social-network contact list of key members and organizations within a typical community.
2: Deployment kits customized for task member responsibility
BACKGROUND:
Short-notice deployment is the norm for several members of the Strong Angel Team. What does an appropriate deployment kit bag look like in 2006?
GOALS:
We are overdue for recognizing the 2006 requirements and opportunities for field-expedient habitability, power, comms, and safety. We can define it here and learn more from the research associated with the tracking forms we build.
3: Resurrection
BACKGROUND:
Waveland Mississippi after Hurricane Katrina had no light, power, communication, or coordination. Yet we had to do effective work there immediately or risk civil unrest and lives lost.
GOALS:
This is the core problem in Strong Angel III. This is what team members found in Banda Aceh, in Phuket, in Pakistan after the earthquake, and in Katrina, and the problem that serves as the strategic goal around all other Strong Angel tasks.
4: Creating the urgent work environment with a foundation of existing tools.
BACKGROUND:
Arriving in a disaster area with no power, lighting, comms, or adequate staff available can be challenging. Those were the circumstances faced by Strong Angel members in Sarajevo, Baghdad, Banda Aceh, Pakistan, New Orleans, Waveland, Yogyakarta, Darfur, and more. Having a clear process for establishing an effective site and integrating with local colleagues would be helpful.
GOALS:
Deploy effective tools that allow responders to develop sector responsibilities quickly and effectively despite having unfamiliar colleagues present, and then develop processes appropriate to the response that incorporate all those who must take part in reconstruction.
5: Urgently reach out to the civ-mil network for continuing conversation
BACKGROUND:
In each crisis, response agencies and communities fail to link among each other effectively. In some cases, failure of effective incorporation at a key decision point has led to alienation, and valuable resource integration has been lost. Furthermore, civil-military coordination can be very challenging since military and civilian organizations usually operate on different networks.
GOALS:
Establish a rapid and effective link to each of the sector agencies likely to be useful in SA-III. Link through as many modes as can be devised on open networks and confirm the communication took place with time-date-person stamps.
6: Hook up the city's key infrastructure with urgent power and comms.
BACKGROUND:
In emergencies, despite knowing who to contact, we have all seen failures of communication because of lost power - including dead batteries - and wrong contact numbers.
GOALS:
Establish a rapid and effective link to each of the local resources likely to be useful in SA-III. Link through as many modes as can be devised and confirm the communication took place with time-date-person stamps.
7: Examine how work-efficiency metrics can be used within urgent environments.
BACKGROUND:
We have only a general understanding of the effort it takes to work within a disaster. We know, however, that there can be consequences when effort-capabilities are exceeded and staff lose efficiency and heart. The loss in resources and morale can severely impede a response.
GOALS:
To incorporate the research performed at Ohio State University in the evaluation of effort required to respond within a disaster.
8: Establish effective multi-modal trans-boundary communications
BACKGROUND:
Communications in the field has been seen to devolve into people passing scraps of paper or digitally photographing maps to send elsewhere as jpegs. We do not plan well-enough to optimize complex communications far forward between civilian and military agencies responding to a common purpose.
GOALS:
To identify critical community nodes through other tasks, then determine by how many methods those nodes can be reached each day to exhange a piece of information ("word of the day").
9: Explore failure modes for power and communications
BACKGROUND:
An early priority in a crisis is to identify and connect key decision makers and establish the ability to communicate critical information to citizens. The three areas that fail most frequently are communications, transportation, and power (comms, lift, and power). This task is specifically to explore options in the provisioning of communications.
GOALS:
To provide communications systems through non-grid power methods, improving resiliency and self-sufficiency.
10: Broad area WiFi cloud development
BACKGROUND:
In each disaster in which Strong Angel team members have participated, communications have been difficult. Historically shortwave radio has been the lowest common denominator for long-haul communications, with VHF and UHF radios used for short range. Now IP traffic is becoming the standard and the deployment of an effective wireless cloud, with at least one link to the Internet, is becoming more common but is not yet well-understood.
GOALS:
Deploy sustainable high-performance wireless clouds to support a wide area network in austere conditions. Develop quantitative assessment of WiFi networks in austere and urban environments.
11: Network distribution and traffic modeling
BACKGROUND:
In an emergency response or in the wake of a disaster, it is difficult to predict the number of people who will be on any given network. This requires close monitoring of the network traffic in order to ensure high performance of a network so that people can effectively communicate.
GOALS:
Measure the efficiency of wireless communications in remote, austere conditions and model traffic flows through a series of network traffic simulations.
12: Search and Rescue capabilities integration
BACKGROUND:
Search and Rescue workers in the field need to have a full sensory assessment of ground zero in order to evaluate and complete a successful rescue mission.
GOALS:
Integrate all sensor modalities for Search and Rescue operations into remote visualization, evaluations, and reporting.
13: Multi-modal sensor integration and visualization
BACKGROUND:
Rapid assessment in the field can be potentially dangerous, depending upon the type of threat (hazardous environment, polluted landscape, enemy warfare), and may require using a blend of different modes for perceiving information.
GOALS:
To broaden the scope of methods for information retrieval in order to capture the most comprehensive information possible from the field, and distribute that information to both the internal and external daily briefings.
14: Discovering rich messaging
BACKGROUND:
During the Indonesian earthquake, people discovered that they could not make phone calls at the most critical time because the system was overloaded. The most reliable form of communication between Banda Aceh and Jakarta was through the use of SMS messaging on GSM cell phones. And SMS messaging was very cheap.
GOALS:
Enhance public safety and group situational awareness through rich text messaging and first response alerts.
15: Interoperability competition
BACKGROUND:
The inability to readily communicate through emergency communications systems often leads to an impaired response.
GOALS:
To enhance communication and coordination among agencies working in a common response using a broad range of communications devices and information sharing systems designed to interoperate gracefully.
16: Figure Eight Decision Assessments
BACKGROUND:
Initiation of resource disruption predictably leads to a loss in social continuity and cohesiveness. It should be easy to understand how assessments are made and how to in corporate the results of those assessments into planning and policy decisions.
In another sense, how can we incorporate valuable lessons learned in our decision making and planning in order to be better prepared for the next crisis?
GOALS:
Develop an effective decision making and assessment methodology for decision makers and field teams.
17: Day Zero Cyber Threat Mitigation
BACKGROUND:
How do we rapidly build a defense against day-zero cyber attacks from unwanted viruses, worms, spyware, and unsanctioned software?
GOALS:
Provide Day Zero protection to local workstations and network by blocking unknown application execution and unknown files.
18: Inform everyone of everything important
BACKGROUND:
In an emergency situation, how do you organize and distribute daily briefings and urgent "need-to-know" information to core ops and across multiple organizations, agencies, and individuals who may be physically displaced/scattered?
GOALS:
Enable multiple groups in SA-III to accomplish common goals of information sharing, planning, and coordination across multiple agencies and organizations.
19: Sustainable and independent power
BACKGROUND:
In Hurricane Katrina, approximately 3 million people were without electricity. If grid power fails, how do you get power? In addition, naturally, with no power there are no electrons flowing and so no data stream either, so power is the most critical single resource requested at national conferences.
GOALS:
To generate sustainable power without dependence on the grid.
20: Map the provisioning of stadium power
BACKGROUND:
In a disaster situation, people often need to relocate for safety, shelter, and to receive basic provisions. Collection points, such as a stadium or convention center, are key locations for emergency response teams to provide basic medical care, power, and communications.
GOALS:
Provide a description of large-scale power provisioning for single and multiple locations in an affected region. Use the Superdome in Katrina as the concept.
21: Sustainable and efficient lighting
BACKGROUND:
Core operations not only needs power, we need lighting too.
GOALS:
Use the most efficient, robust, and reliable lighting that can be supported by the limited power supply onsite.
22: Embracing diversity
BACKGROUND:
A very complex crisis situation requires a combination of management tools for use across multiple agencies and networks. Those systems rarely talk with each other yet information sharing is a critical component of response efficiency.
GOALS:
Demonstrate shared situational awareness in a heterogeneous collection of disaster management tools, particularly those already used within the NGO community because they are competent, free, and open-source.
23: Civil-Military radio management by protocol
BACKGROUND:
Civil and military don't always speak the same language. In particular, the military has a strict code of terminology that civilian operations may not understand. So how does everyone work together in an emergency response situation?
GOALS:
Monitor and maintain radio management for five days, including call sign assignment, frequency allocation, back-up frequency allocation, and battery charge management.
24: VOIP management
BACKGROUND:
During the time period immediately following a destructive incident (natural disaster or terrorist), the cellular networks are oftentimes shut down. Voice communication is the primary method responders use to transfer information to designated personnel. Integrated WiFi technology on hand-held Smartphones and broad area WiFi cloud networks allow people to talk to each other during a crisis, and at very little cost.
GOALS:
Maintain voice communications with core operations team during disaster response via WiFi on Windows Mobile Smartphone Voice-over-IP.
25: Rapid epidemiological assessment, analysis, and reporting
BACKGROUND:
There is a widespread need for information specific to the outbreak, disaster victim identification, and for generalized medical reporting. The challenge is how to collect, transport, and deliver this information?
GOALS:
Rapid collection and dissemination of medical reporting and GIS mapping via highly-mobile just-in-time wireless clouds.
26: HAM radio integration and management
BACKGROUND:
Communication systems break down in disaster situations, however ham radios remain a relatively archaic, yet versatile and reliable, technology. They can operate virtually anywhere, anytime, and are often used in conjunction with other cross-communication technologies during emergencies and major relief operations.
GOALS:
Establish Amateur Radio links to ten global HAM radio operator sites on four continents from the SA-III site.
27: Video-VOIP for interviews and secure reporting
BACKGROUND:
Relief workers and rescue teams have difficulty communicating with one another, with victims, and with local emergency centers for rapid assessment and secure information sharing. Remote sites often cannot see what is currently happening in other areas of crisis. Messaging in written text format is a slower means of communicating than video-VOIP. Audio requires a spoken distraction or sound without sight - a significant reduction in understanding and one that takes dedicated time from a valuable site resource.
GOALS:
Use encrypted Video-VOIP to report from a remote site to a local Emergency Operations Center. Record and playback selected video content upon request for urgent relief operations and improved shared situational awareness.
28: Secure tele-microscopy
BACKGROUND:
Remote sites and rural facilities without regular access to medical expertise need a secure means of transmitting information, especially when physical movement is limited.
"Cure Hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan needs pathology interpretations. They have complex patients with unknown diseases, adequate surgeons doing biopsies, a good microscope, an adequate prep-technician, and an excellent digital microscopy camera. They don't have a pathologist on the other end, nor do they have a secure means of transmitting patient information."
GOALS:
Support knowledge sharing by establishing a secure means of transmitting patient information and microscopic specimens to improve medical services and emergency response.
29: Civil-Military response economics
BACKGROUND:
Without an assessment of the economic impact of SA-III as a demonstration, we will not be able to determine analyses and recommendations for replication in the future.
GOALS:
To determine the monetary value and the economic impact of this demonstration, and to determine the cost for replication in real-world situation.
30: Propose reporting systems for wireless comms in quarantine zones
BACKGROUND:
During a period of restricted mobility (quarantine, terrorist attack, civil unrest), it is difficult to transmit localized information across physical zones and networks.
GOALS:
Develop small-device reporting methods for information flow during quarantine.
31: Effective volunteer integration
BACKGROUND:
People, both those affected directly and indirectly by the disaster, often wish to volunteer and thus be part of the solution. Many of these folks are better able to heal when they are able to feel useful and distracted from their own problems.
In the past, many of these people were turned away by relief agencies for reasons including a) the volunteer's lack of training b) lack of trainers within the organization c) no process to record volunteers and their abilities.
GOALS:
To work pre-event with all agencies that use volunteers and find an acceptable means for them to welcome and use walk-up volunteers.
To design, implement and deploy a method of registering all walk-up volunteers, including their skills, languages spoken and interests.
To match those volunteers with an appropriate agency that is willing to accept and integrate them into their volunteer community.
32: Network security with minimal compromise
BACKGROUND:
How do you keep the network secure and accessible to the greatest number of people, and yet protect the information in it without encrypting or eliminating the information from view to people who are not yet known to you but who may need access to the information?
GOALS:
Establish mesh networks that demonstrate principals of inclusiveness while protecting the information shared.
33: Machine translation assessment trials
BACKGROUND:
Effective communications in disaster relief operations and international development field work are often hindered by language barriers. The challenge is to quickly provide reliable information to a vulnerable population in order to help them understand the situation, and to gain and maintain trust of the affected population.
GOALS:
Facilitate shared situational awareness and regional-based multi-lingual communications through real-time language translation.
34: Crisis Management Assessment and Facilitation
BACKGROUND:
How do leaders and teams emerge and confront challenges in a crisis situation? How can we identify leaders within crisis situations and bridge the gap between leadership theory and practice?
GOALS:
Using Swift-Trust principles, develop systems to help urgently form reliable and effective Virtual Teams during a crisis.
35: Simple Sharing feeds for information flow
BACKGROUND:
Rapid establishment of post-contingency information flow typically faces a number of obstacles, including intermittent connectivity, information ownership concerns, and a heterogeneous assortment of applications, platforms, representational schemas and devices in use by various participating organizations.
GOALS:
Demonstrate a neutral, open source, platform-independent, standards-based data replication method capable of achieving bi-directional, asynchronous information flow. Test again.
36: Ethical oversight to ensure a consistent focus
BACKGROUND:
How do we ensure a consistent focus for the SA-III demonstration? How do we contribute to social change?
GOALS:
Consult a professional ethics advisor on-site for evaluation of the SA-III objectives in order to ensure a consistent focus in the overall demonstration.
37: Comprehensive remote risk analysis
BACKGROUND:
When the power goes down in a disaster area, what else goes down? How do you act in way that preempts the cascade-down effect?
GOALS:
Analyze the linkages, the overlaps, and the cascade effect for risk factors and vulnerabilities within San Diego County to prepare for "mitigation during failure".
38: Team Tracking
BACKGROUND:
In a disaster, it is very important to know where people are located in order to deliver supplies and relief, and to plan and run rescue missions. We need to physically know where core team members are located as they move around.
GOALS:
Maintain GPS tracker identification of SA-III core ops participants. Map GIS locations with video-VOIP capabilities.
39: Situational Awareness & Visualization
BACKGROUND:
Situational awareness is problematic in crisis situations, and there is a constant challenge found in collecting, analyzing, and disseminating accurate information frequently and rapidly.
GOALS:
Maintain a visual GIS understanding of the area around the Core operations.
40: GIS medical resource reporting
BACKGROUND:
How do we report medical information from a non-standard place where injured or sick people are accumulating during a disaster, like a ballpark field or nursing home?
GOALS:
Integrate GIS tools with data monitoring and alert programs to support comprehensive medical resource reporting.
42: Ghani-Lockhart Framework and Standards for Failed State Reconstruction
BACKGROUND:
Failed states/communities breed instability and insecurity and present a real-time challenge for developing strategic planning. Attempts to address multiple facets of the problem simultaneously and lack of understanding of the sequencing of critical tasks often leads to confusion as to appropriate priorities, and gridlocks in supply chains and tasking. Lack of clarity as to which organizations have which capabilities to address which tasks mean that roles and responsibilities are misaligned to tasks, and multiple actors compete to perform the same task in the same area, or no actors are assigned responsibility leaving vacuums. Lack of clarity as to goals for intervention and realistic timelines for delivery means that the expectation of the population is set unrealistically high, and so hopes are easily disappointed. Short term goals are often attempted to be satisfied, while short term solutions themselves hinder meeting the goals in the medium to longer term.
GOALS:
Using the Ghani-Lockhart Framework for Failed State Reconstruction, map the existing resources and assets, design frameworks for use of assets, sequencing and prioritization of tasks and assignment of responsibilities, design a process to strengthen relationships and accountabilities between communities and those in authority; advise communicators on appropriate messages to enhance citizen trust; and advise on the design of a process for orderly leadership including succession in the event of further disruption.
43: MOEs and analysis for each of the tasks
BACKGROUND:
It is difficult to know when we are achieving results if we do not set standards and objectives beforehand. The key to success of a process often lies in identifying measurable objectives that are consistently evaluated.
GOALS:
Keeping in mind that it is important to hold ourselves to a standard, set clearly defined objectives to achieve in SA-III and assess completion after the demonstration.
44: Community involvement
BACKGROUND:
Inclusion and openness are critical for community acceptance. Further, being able to have the project be viewable in a way that makes sense and resonates for each stakeholder is critical for comfort levels.
GOALS:
45: The public face of Strong Angel III
BACKGROUND:
SA-III team would like to address the challenge of cultivating community resilience in response to a complex disaster; how to ensure public involvement and open communications (one-to-one, one-to-many, and many-to-many).
GOALS:
Optimize public SA-III informatics 24x7 for the duration, including knowledge networking, mashups, information mobility, and trans-appliance interoperability with a public able to interact with us. Comprehensive transparency.
46: Complex System Monitoring
BACKGROUND:
How can we capture important topical conversations about SA-III objectives in real time so that the group can see the larger set of connections as a whole system rather than just a local perspective?
GOALS:
Build a system level story (model) to understand and evaluate the SA-III complex challenges and objectives.
47: Remote Medical Reachback
BACKGROUND:
Mount Merapi is the most active volcano in Indonesia, it has erupted 68 times and several of its eruptions have caused fatalities. It is very close to the city of Yogyakarta, and thousands of people live on the flanks of the volcano. It began erupting again in 2006, and scientists believe a large eruption is imminent. On May 27th, a 6.2 magnitude earthquake struck roughly 30 miles southwest of Merapi, killing at least 5,000 and leaving at least 200,000 people homeless in the Yogyakarta region, heightening fears that Merapi will "blow". A further 11,000 villagers were evacuated on June 6th as lava and superheated clouds of gas poured repeatedly down its upper slopes.
GOALS:
Demonstrate civil-military support from SA-III to humanitarian operations in Southeast Asia by linking information flow aboard the USNS MERCY to SA-III while the ship is deployed.
48: Virtual Team Management
BACKGROUND:
In response to a contingency, members of diverse organizations must be able to discover one another, form virtual teams, and work effectively under austere network conditions.
GOALS:
Evaluate at least 3 systems capable of facilitating user discovery, virtual teaming, presence, multi-modal communications, and information sharing among mobile users working over intermittent local area networks.
49: Experiment Emergency Operation Plan
BACKGROUND:
Policies and procedures that normally provide the operational framework within which institutions function, are not usually adapted for a ground zero pandemic crisis situation.
GOALS:
Implement a procedurally-based effort at emergency response.