Thursday, October 29, 2009

Final Call for Participation

Science & Technology Directorate U.S. Department of Homeland Security Workshop on Emergency Management: Incident, Resource, and Supply Chain Management (EMWS09) November 5-6, 2009 Center for Emergency Response Technologies, UC Irvine University of California, Irvine, 4100 Calit2 Building, Irvine, CA 92697-2800 Overview Emergency management refers to activities encompassing prevention, protection, response, and recovery. Emergency response consists of multiple functions performed immediately after an event: damage assessment, response needs assessment, response prioritization, coordination and mobilization of rescue operations, resource and logistic planning, evacuation planning, situation monitoring, and timely information dissemination to citizens and organizations. Among these vital steps to recovery, the ability to identify resource needs and get those resources to victims is critical. Resource management coordination among all federal, state, local, tribal, private sector and non-governmental personnel is guided by the National Incident Management System (NIMS). Furthermore, the plan that establishes a comprehensive all-hazards approach to enhance the ability of the United States to manage domestic incidents is based on the National Response Framework which assigns responsibilities for identifying, obtaining, and delivering resources to victims. While NIMS provides a structure for organized effective execution of emergency response functions, this can only be accomplished in an environment where all response units can effectively share information. Challenges in meeting victim needs arise from the magnitude and geographic setting of the disaster, the level of coordination required across heterogeneous government organizations as well as the number of people involved in the operation. Effectiveness of response is incident specific and a function of providing the needed support when it is required at that particular time in the incident. A several hour delay in initiating some response actions could result in dire consequences that would impede critical response operations. One fundamental cause for high response latency is the lack of effective resource delivery systems and resource management methodologies for information sharing among all stakeholders and their respective data management applications. This latency cause is further magnified by a lack of essential integration among vital functions (i.e., information stovepipes), notably: incident management at local and national levels and, resource/service and supply chain management. The delivery of resources is locked in these stovepipes of information with each having its own stakeholders and applications, generally unconnected. There is a need to explore how advanced technologies can be effectively used to identify the next generation of resource information sharing in order to improve overall emergency management. Workshop Goals and Objectives The objective of the workshop is to provide a forum for i) representatives from various government agencies and commercial resource suppliers to present their strategic vision of incident management, resource management, and supply chain management as intersecting disciplines not as separate stovepipes; ii) researchers from academia, industry and national laboratories to assess the state-of- the-art in logistics, identify related R&D challenges, and propose solutions to address these challenges; iii) subject matter experts, practitioners, state and local representatives to discuss their perspectives on the current state of resource management; where should the technology and science be in 5-10 years from now; why we are not there now - What are some of the challenges that are in the way of to be there now?; and why do we need to be there? That is, what legitimate case can be made to justify the needed R&D investments? The results of the workshop will help DHS-S&T formulate near and long term investment decisions as well as research strategies, plans and objectives for next generation emergency management and response. Workshop General Chair Lawrence Skelly, DHS-S&T (lawrence.skelly@dhs.gov) Program Chair/Co-chair Nabil R. Adam, DHS-S&T (nabil.adam@dhs.gov) (Chair) Sharad Mehrotra, UC Irvine (sharad@ics.uci.edu) (Co-Chair) Program Committee Vijay Atluri, Rutgers U Chaitanya Baru, UCSD Ron Cabrera, Chief, LA County Fire Mani Chandy, CALTECH Soon Ae Chun, CUNY Larry Collins, Captain, LA County Fire Mark Cooper, GOHSEP, State of Louisiana Jerry Couretas, Lockheed Martin Bruce Davis, DHS-S&T Edmund H. Durfee, U of Michigan David Ebert, Purdue U. Ron Eguchi, CEO, ImageCat Inc. Ahmed K. Elmagarmid, Purdue U Ramesh Kolluru, U of Louisiana Lei Lei, Rutgers U Brock Long, EMA, State of Alabama Mike Macedonia, Forterra Inc. Paul Matheis, Newport Beach Fire Dept James W. Morentz, SAIC, Inc. Steve Sellers, California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services Basit Shafiq, Rutgers U Michael B. Smith, DHS-S&T Steve Stein, PPNL Nancy Suski, LLNL Bhavani Thuraisingham, UT Dallas Kathleen Tierney, Hazards Center-UC Boulder Jaideep Vaidhya, Rutgers U Linda Vasta, DHS-S&T Nalini Venkatasubramanian, UC Irvine Brent Woodworth, SAHANA Software Foundation Board Marianne Winslett, UI, Urbana-Champaign Classification The workshop will be conducted as Unclassified. Workshop Structure and Format Format for the workshop: * Keynote Speakers * Panels, position papers, and posters presentations. The presentations and panels will be discussing background useful for the breakout sessions * Breakout sessions and reports Submission Requirements Presentations at the workshop will be by invitation. If interested, please submit 3-page position paper (excluding references). Papers not selected for presentations at the workshop will be considered for a poster session. The major themes of the workshop will focus on technologies that enhance: 1. Information Sharing among incident management, resource management, supply chain management applications 2. Resource Data Analytics for the purpose of more quickly assessing requirements 3. Interoperability among existing systems and how to achieve it 4. Standards, existing and emerging, and what can be borrowed from the commercial business sector which moves goods everyday Sub-topics areas include: * Infrastructure vulnerability; resilience to attacks and disruptions * Multimodal transportation as a key component of supply chain * Trust and privacy issues in organizational information sharing * State-of-the-art incident logistics tools for data collection and sharing (such as barcode and RFID) * Protocols and frameworks for scalable and reliable logistics information exchange * Resource situational awareness and decision support technologies * Information integration challenges for dynamic virtual supply chain organizations that form in crises * On-site, rapidly deployable multi-networks for reliable asset management data collection * Agent-based coordination technologies; Multi-agent systems; Computational tools for distributed planning, scheduling, and control * Virtual environments to support collaboration, planning, and operations * Social networking for Incident Management team building and situational awareness Paper Submission Submission site: http://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=emws09 Important Dates * October 12, 2009 Extended Deadline for Position paper submission: October 19th * October 23, 2009- Author notification * November 5-6, 2009- Workshop Registration Workshop attendance is open subject to space availability, with October 26 as the cut-off date. Workshop registration is free. For registration detail and for an up-to-date copy of this workshop write up, please visit: https://www.enstg.com/signup/passthru.cfm?ConferenceCode=WOR77476 Workshop Venue This workshop is scheduled for November 5-6, 2009 at the Center for Emergency Technologies (CERT www.cert.ics.uci.edu) at the University of California, Irvine within the Calit2 building. Funded by National Science Foundation and the Department of Homeland Security, CERT has a relatively long history of exploring the application of advanced information technologies for crisis response in close partnerships with the first responder community. Hotel Accommodation http://www.hiltonirvinehotel.com/ Hilton Irvine/Orange County Airport 18800 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine, California 92612 Tel: 1-949-833-9999 Fax: 1-949-833-3317. The hotel offers a block of rooms at the discounted rate of $109.00 per night, with October 20, 2009 as the cut off date. Travel To get here from the John Wayne airport [SNA]: At the exit, turn right on to MacArthur Blvd. Follow for about two lights, then turn left on Campus Dr. Take Campus Dr. SE for about 2-3 miles. Turn right when you get to East Peltason/Berkeley. Stop and buy a visitors parking permit ($4.00), then drive along East Peltason Drive (past 1 signal and 3 stop signs) until you reach the Anteater Parking Structure. Turn right into the parking structure. To get here from LAX: Take Century Blvd. to the 405 South. Follow 405 south for ~45 miles until you get to the Culver exit. Exit Culver, turn right (SW) towards the UCI campus. When you get to Campus Drive, turn right. Follow Campus Drive to the second stoplight, then turn left on to East Peltason Drive/Berkeley. Stop and buy a visitors parking permit ($4.00), then drive along East Peltason Drive (past 1 signal and 3 stop signs) until you reach the Anteater Parking Structure. Turn right into the parking structure. Parking Permits: You will need to purchase a parking permit on campus. A one day general parking permit is $7. For more information, please reference the UCI parking page: http://www.parking.uci.edu/ Agenda Thursday November 5th, 2009 7:30 – 8:00 am Registration / Breakfast (Calit2 Atrium) 8:00 – 8:10 am Workshop Kickoff Nabil Adam, DHS S&T (Calit2 Auditorium) 8:10 – 8:20 am Sharad Mehrotra, UC, Irvine: Welcome Address (Calit2 Auditorium) 8:20 – 8:30 am Sue Bryant, UC, Irvine, Vice Chancellor (Calit2 Auditorium) 8:30- 8:45 am Lawrence Skelly, DHS S&T (Calit2 Auditorium) 8:45– 9:00 am Christopher Doyle, DHS S&T(Calit2 Auditorium) 9:00 - 10:00 amPanel: Government Perspective on Emergency Management Chair: Lawrence Skelly (DHS S&T) Panel Members: Larry Collins (LA County), Mark Cooper (Governor’s Office, State of Louisiana), Brock Long (EMA, State of Alabama), TBD, (Calit2 Auditorium) 10:00 – 10:15 am Coffee break 10:15 – 11:45 am Panel: Industrial Perspective on Response Technologies Chair: Ron Eguchi (ImageCat Inc.) Panel Members: James W. Morentz (SAIC, Inc.), Dale Svenson (Boeing), Scott Gregory (ESRI), John Ellenberger (SAP Research), Shawn Smith (Emergency Visions) (Calit2 Auditorium) 11:45– 12:15 pm Invited Talk: FEMA – TBD (Calit2 Auditorium) 12:15 -1:15 pm Lunch (Calit2 Atrium) 1:15– 2:30 pm Position Papers 2:30 – 3:30 pm Panel: Virtual Worlds and Homeland Security Chair: Mike Macedonia (Forterra Inc.) Panel Members: Michael Pack (U Maryland), Ron Tarr (U of Central Florida), Randy Hill (USC), TBD (Calit2 Auditorium) 3:30– 5:00 pm Breakout Sessions Incident Level Response- Chair: Brent Woodworth Co-Chairs: Ellen Sogolow, Rufus Edwards Regional Level Response- Chair: Ellis Stanley Co-Chairs: Nancy Suski, Carter Butts Community Response- Chair: Bruce Davis Co-Chairs: Nalini Venkatasubramanian, Chuck Hagen 5:00 – 5:15 pm Coffee break 5:15 – 6:00 pm Breakout Reports (Calit2 Auditorium) 6:00 – 7:30 pm Reception / Poster Session (Calit2 Atrium) Friday November 6th, 2009 7:30-8:00 am Breakfast (Calit2 Atrium) 8:00-8:15 am Welcome Back Nabil Adam, DHS-Science and Technology Directorate (Calit2 Auditorium) 8:15 – 9:30 am Panel: Emerging Cloud Computing Infrastructure and its Role for Emergency Management Chair: Mike Carey (UCI) Panel Members: Mike Olsen (Coudera), Raghu Ramakrishnan (Yahoo), Gus Hunt (CTO, CIA) (Calit2 Auditorium) 9:30 – 10:45 am Panel: Sensors and Emergency Management: What has been Achieved, Potential, and Related Challenges Chair: Mani Chandy (CalTech) Panel Members: Ron Cabrera (LA Fire), Daniel Cotter (CTO, DHS), Andrei Shkel (UCI/DARPA) 10:45 – 11:00 am Coffee Break 11:00 – 12:15 pm Panel: New Issues and Challenges in Emergency Management of Pharmaceutical/Healthcare Supply Chain Chains Chair: Lei Lei (Rutgers) Panel Members: Beth E. Ford (IFF), Ron Guido (J&J), Michael Pinedo (NYU), Max Shen (UC, Berkeley), Michael Trocchia (Norvartis) 12:15 -1:00 pm Lunch / Poster Session (Calit2 Atrium) 1:00 – 1:30 pm Position Papers 1:30 – 2:45 pm Breakout Sessions Incident Level Response- Chair: Brent Woodworth Co-Chairs: Ellen Sogolow, Rufus Edwards Regional Level Response- Chair: Ellis Stanley Co-Chairs: Nancy Suski, Carter Butts Community Response- Chair: Bruce Davis, Co-Chairs: Nalini Venkatasubramanian, Chuck Hagen 3:45 – 3:45 pm Breakout Reports (Calit2 Auditorium) 3:45 – 4:00 pm Closing Remarks Nabil Adam, DHS-Science and Technology Directorate (Calit2 Auditorium) 4:00 pm Adjourn

Labels: , , , , , , ,