The EOP consists of a base plan, fifteen Emergency Support Function (ESF) Annexes, Support and Incidents Annexes. The base plan provides guidance for response, roles and responsibilities, response actions, response organizations, and planning requirements to any incident that occurs. ESF Annexes group county resources and capabilities into functional areas that are most frequently needed in a county response. Support Annexes describe essential supporting aspects that are common to all incidents. Incident Annexes address the unique aspects of how the county responds to specific incident categories.
In an effort to help Emergency Responders Salt Lake County Emergency Management has created a Emergency Response Guide that covers all roads in Salt Lake County. We are working to make this book available to other agencies that might be interested. Please contact us if you have any questions.
Our Map Book has also been coverted to an iPhone/iPad application which is now available on the iTunes App Store. Read More
FlyteComm’s Guardian provides Salt Lake County a multi-jurisdictional all hazards real-time common operational picture. The service enables elected officials, the senior agency leadership and incident commanders to all have exactly the same information as situations evolve and responders manage complex events. The contract to supply FlyteComm’s hosted service was awarded by the county in June 2008 as part of a larger Federal COPS grant to inter-connect County Computer Aided Dispatch systems.
E•SPONDER Express™ is an easy-to-use collaboration tool, built to assist first responders in efficient, effective incident management by facilitating data tracking and real-time communication. The solution can be used in a variety of situations, from planned events to unforeseen emergencies. No matter the circumstance, this easy-to-implement program provides an incident command system, ensuring a consistent approach to every incident.
Salt Lake County Emergency Management uses this program for alert notifications and tracking of ICS documentation during and incident.
Every month Salt Lake County Emergency Management conducts a regular test of our 800 MHz and VHF radios.In order to validate the use of the Utah Communications Agency Network (UCAN) Trunked 800 MHz radio system, this exercise includes other local emergency operations centers and partner agencies.