Document Citation: 19 CCR 2726

Header:
CALIFORNIA CODE OF REGULATIONS
TITLE 19. PUBLIC SAFETY
DIVISION 2. CALIFORNIA EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY
CHAPTER 4. HAZARDOUS MATERIAL RELEASE REPORTING, INVENTORY, AND RESPONSE PLANS
ARTICLE 3. MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR AREA PLANS


Date:
08/31/2009

Document:
19 CCR 2726 (2011)

ยง 2726. Public Safety and Information

Area plans shall include, but not be limited to:

(a) site perimeter security procedures for use during a release or threatened release of hazardous material;

(b) provisions for informing business personnel and the affected public of safety procedures to follow during a release or threatened release of a hazardous material;

(c) procedures, developed in consultation with the County Agricultural Commissioner, to notify residents of a pesticide drift exposure incident and a procedure to assist in the coordination of an evacuation, if deemed necessary by emergency response personnel;

(d) procedures to identify all languages known to be spoken in the administering agency's county or city, as the case may be, and ensure that any individual is able to access services in their native language as required by Section 11135 of the Government Code. The area plan will outline what these services are and how they will be provided in the languages identified;

(e) designation of responsibility for the coordinated release of safety information to the public and to the local Emergency Broadcast System;

(f) provisions for informing medical and health facilities of the nature of the incident and the substance(s) involved in an incident; and

(g) provisions for evacuation plans. Evacuation planning shall provide for the following elements:

(1) determination of the necessity for evacuation;

(2) centralized coordination of information with local law, fire, public health, medical, and other emergency response agencies;

(3) timely notification of the affected public, including release of messages prepared pursuant to subsections (e) and (f) of this section;

(4) properties of hazardous materials, such as quantity, concentration, vapor pressure, density, and potential health effects;

(5) possible release scenarios;

(6) facility characteristics, topography, meteorology, and demography of potentially affected areas;

(7) ingress and egress routes and alternatives;

(8) location of medical resources trained and equipped for hazardous material response;

(9) mass-care facilities, reception areas, and sheltering; and

(10) procedures for post-emergency period population recovery.