Showing posts with label emergency management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emergency management. Show all posts

Sunday, October 26, 2025

From Suspicious Activity to Scene Response: Empowering CERT Volunteers in Terror-Threat Environments


When the Unthinkable Happens Nearby

When the unthinkable happens—a backpack left behind at a street fair, a car parked too long near a parade route—the space between awareness and official response can define the outcome. In that gap, calm, trained Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) volunteers become the bridge between fear and coordination. Their vigilance and composure can mean the difference between chaos and control.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) developed CERT to educate and organize citizens before disasters strike. But in an age of “soft-target” terrorism—public venues and everyday spaces vulnerable to low-tech, high-impact attacks—the CERT mission extends beyond earthquakes and floods. It now includes the prevention, recognition, and initial stabilization of human-caused threats (FEMA, n.d.-a).


The New Front Line: Suspicious Activity in the Era of Soft Targets

Terrorism today increasingly exploits community openness. A 2023 United Nations Counter-Terrorism Committee report identified “everyday venues” as the preferred settings for attackers seeking maximum fear with minimal planning. Such events often begin not with explosions or gunfire, but with indicators—unattended bags, unauthorized filming of access points, or someone testing barriers (United Nations, 2023).

The Department of Homeland Security’s If You See Something, Say Something® campaign reminds citizens that vigilance is a civic responsibility (DHS, n.d.-a). Yet for CERT members, vigilance is professionalized. They are trained to distinguish between credible observation and paranoia. CERT Unit 8, Terrorism and CERT, teaches volunteers how to identify precursor behaviors, collect descriptive details, and report accurately without escalating public panic (FEMA, n.d.-b).

This awareness transforms fear into readiness. By learning to see instead of merely look, CERT members extend national security’s reach into the spaces where Americans live, shop, and celebrate.


Empowerment Through Training: Turning Fear into Readiness

Preparedness transforms anxiety into agency. CERT volunteers train to observe calmly, communicate clearly, and act confidently. The FEMA course Introduction to Community Emergency Response Teams (IS-317) outlines the core mission: protect life, prevent additional harm, and support professional responders (FEMA, n.d.-c).

Training focuses on practical empowerment:

  • Observation and Reporting: noting who, what, when, where, and why before contacting authorities (DHS, n.d.-b).

  • Scene Safety: keeping distance from suspicious objects or areas while maintaining situational awareness.

  • Psychological First Aid: stabilizing frightened bystanders, easing fear through presence and direction.

The Texas A&M Engineering Extension Service (TEEX) complements CERT education with WMD/Terrorism Awareness for Emergency Responders (AWR160)—a course that teaches volunteers to recognize chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, and explosive indicators (TEEX, n.d.). The objective is not heroism but discipline: the courage to stay calm and the knowledge to act correctly.


Between Chaos and Control: The CERT Role at the Scene

When an incident occurs, the first few minutes define everything. FEMA’s Target Capabilities List (2007) emphasizes the intelligence and investigations function—collecting, verifying, and sharing information between the public and response agencies. CERTs play a unique role here: they are the trained eyes on the ground.

They do not confront suspects or defuse devices. Instead, they gather data, manage crowds, and maintain order until command arrives. They speak the same language as first responders because CERT training integrates the Incident Command System (ICS), ensuring consistent communication and chain-of-command discipline.

In practice, this means that when communication lines falter, CERT volunteers become the human relay—a stabilizing link that keeps local officials informed and communities safe.


Building a Culture of Vigilance and Trust

Effective counterterrorism begins with community trust. CERT volunteers embody that trust. Through neighborhood drills, faith-based workshops, and civic outreach, they normalize preparedness and replace fear with familiarity.

FEMA’s CERT guidance stresses that community education is prevention. Awareness sessions help residents recognize that suspicious activity is defined by behavior, not appearance—a distinction essential to maintaining both security and civil liberties (FEMA, n.d.-a).

The Department of Homeland Security’s Community Awareness Briefing similarly warns that bias-driven suspicion undermines the credibility of vigilance programs (DHS, n.d.-c). By training citizens to focus on actions—such as surveillance, testing of security, or unauthorized access—CERTs help ensure that vigilance strengthens unity rather than division.

Through this outreach, CERTs become more than responders. They are the local ambassadors of resilience—neighbors who remind others that preparedness is a shared duty, not a specialist’s privilege.


Prepared, Not Paranoid

Preparedness is not about predicting the next attack—it is about participation. The CERT volunteer embodies that principle: watchful but not fearful, proactive but not reckless.

When the next moment of uncertainty comes—a strange noise at a fairground, a suspicious package at a transit hub—the community’s first safeguard may not wear a uniform. It may be a trained volunteer who remembers the mission: see clearly, stay calm, and serve with courage.

Because the difference between chaos and coordination is often one steady voice—ready before the sirens ever sound.


References

Department of Homeland Security. (n.d.-a). If You See Something, Say Something® campaign. U.S. Department of Homeland Security. https://www.dhs.gov/see-something-say-something

Department of Homeland Security. (n.d.-b). How to report suspicious activity. U.S. Department of Homeland Security. https://www.dhs.gov/see-something-say-something/how-to-report-suspicious-activity

Department of Homeland Security. (n.d.-c). Community Awareness Briefing (CAB). U.S. Department of Homeland Security. https://www.dhs.gov/prevention/clearinghouse-category/training-opportunities

Federal Emergency Management Agency. (2007). Target Capabilities List: A companion to the National Preparedness Guidelines. U.S. Department of Homeland Security. https://www.fema.gov/pdf/government/training/tcl.pdf

Federal Emergency Management Agency. (n.d.-a). Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) Program. U.S. Department of Homeland Security. https://www.fema.gov/emergency-managers/individuals-communities/preparedness-activities-webinars/community-emergency-response-team

Federal Emergency Management Agency. (n.d.-b). CERT Basic Training: Participant Manual, Unit 8 – Terrorism and CERT. U.S. Department of Homeland Security. https://www.ready.gov/sites/default/files/2019.CERT_.Basic_.IG_.FINAL_.508c.pdf

Federal Emergency Management Agency. (n.d.-c). IS-317: Introduction to Community Emergency Response Teams. U.S. Department of Homeland Security. https://training.fema.gov/is/courseoverview.aspx?code=IS-317

Texas A&M Engineering Extension Service. (n.d.). AWR160 – WMD/Terrorism Awareness for Emergency Responders. https://teex.org/class/awr160/

United Nations Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate. (2023). Protecting vulnerable targets from terrorism. United Nations. https://www.un.org/counterterrorism


Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Rontal Announces Comprehensive Incident Management System for Remote Locations

July 18, 2007. Rontal Applications, Ltd. (www.rontal.co.il), a developer and provider of innovative incident management and business continuity systems, today announced SimGuard 6000 – a comprehensive incident management system for remote locations. SimGuard 6000 enables an organization’s headquarters to seamlessly detect and control any incident in remote manned and unmanned facilities.

SimGuard 6000 enables users to get the comprehensive, updated picture of what happens at all sites regarding safety, security and facility management. The system enables local
police or other security agencies to be alerted immediately if any kind of problem is detected. SimGuard 6000 not only enhances security, it also helps business continuity due to its ability to detect occurrences such as a burst water pipe, electricity problems, air conditioning malfunctions, etc., and to issue a relevant alert. For example, if a burst water pipe occurs, the system tells the operator to evacuate a nearby computer center, thus maintaining business continuity. SimGuard 6000 can utilize any means of communication, including the Internet, phone lines, and wireless.

"Many organizations, such as utility companies, operate remote facilities, including unmanned sites, with a high risk of vulnerability," said Roni Zehavi, Rontal’s co-founder and CEO. "Immediate detection of any incident is critical to the remote facility’s and the entire organization’s effective functionality. SimGuard 6000 enables the operator to identify and handle the problem as if he were physically located at the remote site."

SimGuard 6000 builds a virtual reality model of each remote facility, including a virtual installation of the actual sensors, and stores it in the system's database. Sensors include cameras, fences, access-control devices, GPS, RFID, fire alarm sensors, intrusion detection devices and more. Vulnerability assessment of each remote site is constantly performed (both indoors and outdoors), based on the simulation of various potential scenarios for security, safety, facility management, general operations, and business continuity. The SimGuard 6000 operator can make a virtual tour of the remote site or building at any location or floor, become familiar with the environment, and control it during exercises and in real incidents.

During an incident, SimGuard 6000 presents the real-time information on a Situational Awareness display. This display enables the operator to rapidly understand the implications of the incident, identify the relevant scenario from the scenario library, predict the potential impact on normal site operations, and then decide what optimal course of action should be taken. In addition, any appropriate layer of information is available for presentation, such as pipes, electricity and phone cables, specific routes and fire extinguishers.

About Rontal Applications
Founded in 2003, Rontal Applications, Ltd. develops and provides innovative solutions for incident management and business continuity. The company's executives have extensive experience in security and emergency management methods and techniques, as well as in advanced information technologies. Headquartered in Lod, Israel, Rontal is a private company owned by the founders and private investors. For more information about Rontal, visit
www.rontal.co.il