Confirmed cases of Ebola in Ohio: 0 patients
Confirmed cases of Ebola in the entire US: 3 patients
Confirmed pet cases of Ebola in the entire US: 0 pets
Confirmed cases of Ebola in Ohio: 0 patients
Confirmed cases of Ebola in the entire US: 3 patients
Confirmed pet cases of Ebola in the entire US: 0 pets
If you are getting started in taking a few National Incident Management System (NIMS) / Incident Command System (ICS) classes, you’ve come to the right place! Best part about the classes below? They are all online, available 24/7/365, and can be done for free.
Here’s a list of recommended Incident Command System (ICS) classes according to the 2008 requirements.
1. ICS-100.b: Introduction to the Incident Command System (ICS)
2. ICS-700.a: National Incident Management System (NIMS) An Introduction
3. ICS-200.b: ICS for Single Resource and Initial Action Incidents
4. ICS-800.b: National Response Framework, An Introduction
After you complete the courses above, let me know so I can recommend the next steps in training.
BTW-You even get a certificate when you successfully complete the above class and post tests.
After all this talk about ebola and passing communicable diseases…I guess I forgot to address safety messages at all weddings.
Jeez.
Confirmed cases of Ebola in Ohio: 0 patients
Confirmed cases of Ebola in the entire US: 3 patients
Confirmed pet cases of Ebola in the entire US: 0 pets
Confirmed cases of Ebola in Ohio: 0 patients
Confirmed cases of Ebola in the entire US: 3 patients
Confirmed pet cases of Ebola in the entire US: 0 pets
Confirmed cases of Ebola in Ohio: 0 patients
Confirmed cases of Ebola in the entire US: 4 patients
Confirmed pet cases of Ebola in the entire US: 0 pets
| 14-008: No complaining – offer solutions | |
| Agency: Long Beach Fire | Topic(s): Public Perception and Solutions |
| Date: Fall 2014 | Platform: Twitter |
Complaining or venting on social media is fairly common. However, as an official agency, public displays of affliction does not portray the best image. Long Beach Fire expressed some displeasure on Twitter when discussing the their pilot program.
After reading this tweet, the public’s perception is that if 9-1-1 is called, no ambulances will respond. This is irresponsible and wrong. (Almost all emergency services have mutual aid agreements or memorandum of understandings in place.)
Positioning your agency as a fear mongerer or the Harbinger of Evil will only further distance yourself from people who would be willing to help your cause. Inform them of dangers, but more importantly, engage them publically on social.
If there is internal displeasure with the new staffing models, be proactive and offer transparent solutions in the tweet. Cite websites that provide industry information. Publically share statistical data that supports changes with current programs. These online tactics will help direct and educate the general public on how to be better informed on other program and possible other options yet unexplored.
Additionally you can rally your constituents behind better initiatives by engaging with them publically via social media. It demonstrates that your department’s community involvement is a key part of a better solution.
As an official account, Twitter’s 140-character limit is really no place to moan/groan.
A more effective tweet could have read:
| LBFD resources are maxed out. #Firefighters cannot provide adequate #Paramedic service to our communities. Help us find a solution <insert link here> |
By phrasing it this way:
Time is valuable, so tweet good stuff.
***To download this as a single-page printable format, click this file:
Well…that was fun.
Giving a few tips on Ebola safety/preparedness was quite…interesting.
I decided I couldn’t respond to the entire world’s Ebola concerns, but responding to those in the general vicinity would be more social because I’m local to the area in the geocode.
I did a simple geolocation on all the tweets, using DT Cleveland as center (N: 41.502715 x W: -81.695709) in a 62 mile circular radius that specifically used the term “ebola” in tweets/responses.
Easy Cheesey huh?
Wash your hands peeps.
If you haven’t checked out your LinkedIn profile in a while, you should.
The new feature JUST added is supposedly this background image (similar to Facebook’s Cover Photo or Twitter’s Header) will make you more appealing business minded individuals.
LinkedIn uses the term, “Make your profile stand out with a custom background”
Ahem.
IMHO: It sucks. If your image you upload is not 1400 x 425 pixels, programming will distort the image. Big time fug.
No one likes fuzzy pictures.
Unless of course you are a bear. Bears like fuzzy pictures.
And we all know, bears do not use LinkedIn regularly.