Esri Will Train Agencies How to Map High-Risk Neighborhoods, Assess Community Needs
Redlands, California—May 6, 2014—Esri and Alchemy Management have selected five of the nation’s leading fire rescue departments to take part in the 2014 National Community Risk Reduction (CRR) Leadership Program. As part of the program, Esri will train fire rescue staff on how to use mapping software to identify community risk, establish risk prevention programs, and prioritize neighborhood outreach and education.
Twenty fire service leaders and faculty members will come together for the five-day inaugural workshop. The program will provide staff resources and expert training to build a comprehensive, intelligence-led, integrated risk reduction program. The departments were nominated by national fire service prevention experts and community risk reduction specialists.
"Safe, sustainable communities are the bedrock of our society," says Jim Crawford, program manager, Vision 20/20, the Institution of Fire Engineers’ fire loss prevention project. "This program will advance the goal of fire protection among our nation’s fire service leadership. Our goal is to bring talented fire service innovators together to build relationships that are critical to shaping and advancing the future."
In addition to the inaugural event, the program will include a second weeklong workshop to be held after a six-month pilot period. Both sessions will include training on the use of GIS for understanding patterns of risk causality and improving resource allocation. Participants will learn how to apply statistical methods to incident data, combine it with demographic lifestyle data, and perform geospatial analysis that identifies high-risk areas. Participants will then develop programs to reduce these risks and prioritize intervention strategies based on location. The program will also examine how embedding CRR into organizations requires a transformational leadership approach.
Each participating department has identified a team of data analysts and executive officers to participate. The teams will attend both workshops to learn, share experience from within and outside the United States, and oversee an individualized pilot project to reduce risk in their community.
The first workshop, to be held May 12–16 at Duke University Fuqua School of Business in Durham, North Carolina, will cover cutting-edge developments in four key components of effective community risk reduction:
- CRR models, methodologies, strategies, and guiding principles
- Using operational intelligence
- Designing and implementing effective risk reduction programs
- Managing transformational change
The fire departments selected to participate in the 2014 Community Risk Reduction Leadership Program are the following:
- Austin Fire Department, Texas—Chief Rhoda Mae Kerr
- Fresno Fire Department, California—Chief Kerri Donis
- Richmond Fire Department, Virginia—Chief Robert Creecy
- Rancho Cucamonga Fire District, California—Chief Mike Bell
- Stockton Fire Department, California—Chief Jeff Piechura
For more information about GIS for fire and rescue, visit esri.com/fire.
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Since 1969, Esri has been giving customers around the world the power to think and plan geographically. The market leader in GIS, Esri software is used in more than 350,000 organizations worldwide including each of the 200 largest cities in the United States, most national governments, more than two-thirds of Fortune 500 companies, and more than 7,000 colleges and universities. Esri applications, running on more than one million desktops and thousands of Web and enterprise servers, provide the backbone for the world’s mapping and spatial analysis. Esri is the only vendor that provides complete technical solutions for desktop, mobile, server, and Internet platforms. Visit us at www.esri.com.
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