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Chapter 40a- Incident Management

Emergency Care and Transportation of the Sick and Injured, Twelfth Edition
Horizontales
The shipping papers used for transport of chemicals along roads and highways; also referred to as bills of lading
Glass, plastic, or steel containers, ranging in volume from 5 to 15 gallons (19 to 57 L).
Areas at hazardous materials incident that are designated as hot, warm, or cold, based on safety issues and the degree of hazard found there
The shipping papers used for transport of chemicals over roads and highways; also referred to as freight bills.
The process of removing or neutralizing and properly disposing of hazardous materials from equipment, patients, and responders.
An agency that assists emergency responders in identifying and handling hazardous materials and transport incidents.
The area immediately surrounding a hazardous materials spill or incident site that endangers life and health. All responders working in this zone must wear appropriate protective clothing and equipment. Entry requires approval by the incident commander or other designated officer.
An area set up by physicians, nurses, and other hospital staff near a major disaster scene where patients can receive further triage and medical care.
A safe area at a hazardous material incident for the agencies involved in the operations. The incident commander, the command post, EMS providers, and the other support functions necessary to control the incident should be located in this zone. Also referred to as the clean zone or the support zone.
In incident command, the person appointed to determine the type of equipment and resources needed for a situation involving extrication or special rescue; also called the rescue officer.
The designated area in a hazardous materials incident where all patients and responders must be decontaminated before going to another area.
In incident command, the position that oversees the incident, establishes the objectives and priorities, and develops a response plan.
The process of directing responders to return to their facilities when work at a disaster or mass casualty incident has finished, at least for those particular responders.
Verticales
Any container other than non-bulk storage containers, such as fixed tanks, highway cargo tanks, rail tank cars, totes, and intermodal tanks. These are typically found in manufacturing facilities and are often surrounded by a secondary containment system to help control accidental release.
When individual units or different organizations make independent and often inefficient decisions about the next appropriate action.
In incident command, the position in an incident responsible for accounting of all expenditures
Any vessel or receptacle that holds material, including storage vessels, pipelines, and packing.
An incident in which a hazardous material is no longer properly contained and isolated.
The designated field command center where the incident commander and support staff are located.
An incident that is contained, and all casualties are accounted for.
A widespread event that disrupts community resources and functions, in turn threatening public safety, citizens' lives, and property.
A preliminary action guide for first responders operating at a hazardous materials incident in coordination with the US Department of Transportation's labels and placards marking system. Jointly developed by the DOT, the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation of Mexico, and Transport Canada.
Barrel like containers used to store a wide variety of substances, including food-grade materials, corrosives, flammable liquids, and grease. May be constructed of low-carbon steel, polyethylene, cardboard stainless steel, nickel, other materials