Smith School to Host Emergency Management Conference
The University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business will host
“X-Treme Management: Managing in Times of Crisis,” Feb. 16-18, 2012.
We are aware now more than ever that disaster can strike when we least expect
it—and that it is important to understand how successful businesses prepare and
adapt in order to maintain resiliency and continuity of essential operations
during a crisis. Recent events dramatically demonstrate the consequences of
failing to plan ahead for unanticipated shocks to our operations. The degree to
which we are able to prepare ourselves and strengthen our systems against such
shocks can significantly mitigate their impact on organizations, assets and
people facing emergencies ranging from extreme weather to breakdowns in public
order.
This conference will cover a range of topics and provide key takeaways important
to effectively managing in times of crisis—both from public and private sector
perspectives. We will explore three distinct scenarios over this three-day
event, which illuminate the underlying theme of each session—Preparing for,
Responding to, and Recovering from Crises.
Students in business, journalism, government, and agriculture, as well as
practicing administrators and managers, will learn best emergency management
practices from leading experts in the industry who have developed robust
methodologies to plan for and manage events, providing a template now in use
throughout U.S. governmental agencies, and employed in handling crises such as
the BP oil spill, Hurricane Katrina, and the 9/11 World Trade Center disaster.
“Effective preparedness will require the integrated contributions of government
and business organizations and academia,” says Patricia Cleveland, associate
dean for undergraduate studies at the Smith School and organizer of this
first-time event. “In this conference we have the benefit of bringing together a
number of outstanding experts instrumental in developing these new systems and
methodologies, and serving at some of these most harrowing events, to help raise
awareness and expand the capabilities of the next generation of managers and
decision-makers.”
Featured speakers include:
David Willman, author of “The Mirage Man” and award-winning journalist with
The Los Angeles Times. His work has prompted major public reforms—including a
ban in 2005 of drug company payments to government scientists at the U.S.
National Institutes of Health. Willman was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for
Investigative reporting in 2001 for articles in The Los Angeles Times exposing
how unsafe prescription drugs had been approved by the Food and Drug
Administration. His groundbreaking reporting in 2008 on the investigation of the
deadly anthrax mailings was cited by the Scripps Howard Foundation as the year's
best Washington-based coverage.
John Schulte, former Disaster and Emergency Operations Specialist, Fire and
Aviation Management Staff for the U.S. Forest Service, whose experiences in the
disastrous wildfires and major all-hazards incidents throughout the U.S. and
internationally led to his involvement in writing the first Incident Command
System (ICS) guidelines and development of the National Incident Management
System (NIMS), which he then brought to stand-up systems at the World Trade
Center on 9/11, Hurricane Katrina and the BP oil spill. A former federal law
enforcement officer now in private practice as a consultant to government
agencies in the U.S. and abroad, he will present best practices in ICS/NIMS and
lead a hands-on workshop for students in the Smith School's MBA and
Undergraduate Fellows Programs.
Gordon Cleveland, Radiological Program Analyst for the USDA and member of the
Radiological Advisory Team for Environment, Food and Health, who will share his
observations consulting on behalf of the government of Japan and the
International Fund for Animal Welfare in response to the earthquake, tsunami and
subsequent nuclear incident at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant in March 2011.
David Mitchell, University of Maryland Chief of Police and Director of Campus
Safety, who was involved in the anthrax response and subsequent sniper threats.
He will lead a panel of campus and community safety professionals in a
discussion of preparedness efforts at UMD, providing advice and guidance to
campus officials charged with responsibility for their offices and units.
Antonio Rodriguez, who is responsible for quality management efforts within
the office of research services at the National Institutes of Health (NIH),
where he has developed simulations and models to guide development of
preparedness efforts. He will share a simulation of evacuation plans for the NIH
campus, with implications not just for the university but the broader region, as
evidenced by the serious traffic emergency experienced in the snowstorm of
January 2011.
An expert panel from PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) will address “whole
community efforts for emergency management” with lessons for building resilience
from the public and private sector for businesses, and open the discussion to
members of the audience. The panel includes Sanjay Subramanian, director
advisory forensic services working on responses to corporate crises; and fellow
Smith School alumnus, John Saad, partner in public sector consulting currently
working with clients at FEMA; Carlos Castillo, senior advisor for emergency
management solutions and former head of Emergency Services in Miami/Dade County
with experience at Hurricane Katrina and the BP spill; and Frank Genco, manager
advisory public sector consulting and former U.S. Coast Guard officer who served
as task force leader of USCG's relief efforts in the 2004-05 tsunami operations
in Southeast Asia, and lead on the FEMA Region IX catastrophic planning guide
and hurricane plan for Hawaii.
This event will be held in Van Munching Hall at the Robert H. Smith School of
Business, University of Maryland, College Park, in partnership with the Business
Honors and Journalism Honors Councils and the Smith School’s MBA and
Undergraduate Consulting Clubs.
All presentations are open to the public without charge, with opportunities for
networking after each session. We do ask that you please reserve your spot
online now for planning purposes.
For more information about the conference, e-mail
events@rhsmith.umd.edu.
Register
online now
