Bill Perry Safety Award submission - City Care 2016 - Good to Go safety vi…
Articles, UC QuakeStudies
A document which explains the rationale behind and development of City Care's Good to Go safety video.
A document which explains the rationale behind and development of City Care's Good to Go safety video.
A document which summarises each winning Bill Perry Safety Award submission.
The SCIRT Health and Safety Policy, revised in February 2016.
A document which sets out the terms of reference for SCIRT's Safety Leadership Group.
A document which describes the purpose of the Bill Perry Safety Awards and outlines each winning submission.
A board paper which asks the SCIRT board to review and revise SCIRT's existing Health and Safety Policy.
An example of a monthly presentation created to communicate with all SCIRT team members about SCIRT's safety performance.
A plan which aims to ensure an environment of Zero Harm on SCIRT worksites. The first version of this plan was produced on 29 July 2011.
A plan which aims to ensure an environment of Zero Harm on SCIRT worksites. The first version of this plan was produced on 29 July 2011.
A document which stipulates SCIRT's minimum standard for managing the risks arising from working around services.
A management plan which describes how SCIRT will coordinate utility authorities and utility relocations.
A video of the keynote-presentation by Dr Jeanne LeBlanc, Registered Psychologist, during the second plenary of the 2016 People in Disasters Conference. LeBlanc is a Registered Psychologist, specialising in Clinical Neuropsychology and Rehabilitation. She is the British Columbia Psychological Association (BCPA) Representative for the American Psychological Associate State, Territorial and Provincial Disaster Response Network, and has also been appointed as the Behavioural Health Liaison to the American Board of Disaster Medicine. The presentation is titled, "Machetes and Breadfruit: Medical disaster response challenges in unstable settings".The abstract for this presentation reads as follows: The January 2010 earthquake in Haiti resulted in a massive response to a setting which was already fraught with danger, causing a number of personal, logistical, and safety challenges to responding medical teams. This presentation will provide a first-person account of this experience from the perspective of a behavioural health professional, whose responsibility was both the overall emotional wellbeing of the medical responders, as well as those impacted by the quake. Unique 'lessons learned' by these response teams will be highlighted, and recommendations will be provided for responders considering deploying to future events in highly unstable areas.