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Canadian Red Cross Charity Registration Number: 119219814RR0001

Quick Drill – Flood

 This document will guide you through facilitating a response drill for floods. It presents a disaster scenario, discussion topics, and steps for completing the documentation and conducting a debrief. 

For a quick walkthrough or rapid scenario planning discussion (15-minute discussions over coffee or during a regularly scheduled meeting), focus on steps 1 through 3. To conduct a tabletop or functional exercise, complete all the tasks below. The preliminary set-up for a drill is outlined in the document titled “How to Conduct a Drill” in the Ready Rating Resource Centre.   

Flood  The National Weather Service (NWS) issues flood and flash flood alerts  
Additional sources of information for the scenario  Canada: Flooding Information and Support – Canadian Red Cross 

U.S.: Red Cross – Prepare for Emergencies – Flood  

Resources you may wish to consider or use during the drill  Local radio stations, fire department, emergency response team, safety & fire wardens, emergency notification system, storm equipment, and emergency action plan. 

 

#  Tasks 
1  The facilitator provides introductions, presents drill objectives, and sets the ground rules.  
2  The facilitator introduces the scenario. Provide the time and location. Describe immediate impacts on people, operations, or services, as well as the availability and engagement of resources. 

SAMPLE SCENARIO 

You have had light, but persistent rain for the last 3 days so the ground is saturated and low-lying areas have standing water. At 5:00 a.m., Environment Canada/National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration issued an alert stating that thunderstorms with heavy rainfall and damaging winds are headed your way. Within 3 hours, low-lying areas have flooded, and strong winds have downed power lines throughout the area. Local media is reporting road closures, washed out bridges, and widespread power outages. If the rain continues, local water treatment facilities will be at risk.   

3  Discuss available resources and immediate actions. 

Consider the following: 

  • What type of notification or alarms would be activated in this situation? 
  • What actions need to be taken to ensure personnel safety? 
  • What are the current and potential impacts on personnel, assets, services, and critical business processes? 
  • What will you need to communicate with personnel, customers, or business partners? Who is responsible for drafting the communication? What method of communication will you use? 
  • How will you address the needs of your customers? 
  • What considerations do you need to make regarding the impact on individual personnel and their families? 
  • What immediate financial costs might be incurred and how do you plan to manage them? 
  • How do you manage staffing?  
  • How are you going to monitor the situation? 
  • What actions do you need to take to continue business operations? 
  • What actions do you need to take to recover processes that have been interrupted? 

If you are conducting a functional exercise, some or all the response actions should be simulated. 

4  Document key discussions, actions, and decision points. 

  • Document the actions that should be taken, the required resources, and the individual(s) or group(s) responsible. 
  • Responses should be as complete as possible. 
  • Revisit and review the discussion points if the scenario involves additional ‘injects’. 

These should be compared to what is in existing plans. Where necessary, after-action items should be assigned to revise plans. 

5  Conduct a debrief. Discuss the following: 

  • Did you meet the drill/exercise objectives? 
  • What went well? 
  • What challenges did you face? 
  • How can you improve? 

Are there any gaps, changes, and/or additions that need to be made to your plan(s)? For any action items, ensure that you document responsibility and deadlines.  

6  Document the drill/exercise and lessons learned. The following forms can be used for this documentation: 

  • Drill/Exercise History Form  
  • After-Action Report 

For any action items, ensure that you document responsibility and deadlines. 

 

 

 

Additional Resources