Page 17 - the SyI Quarterly 13 - (V4)
P. 17

Know your Institute
  Know your Institute











 BECRes Special Interest



 Group presents at Regional



 CPD Event in Newcastle




 - By Alan Cain FSyI




 In 2019 I joined the NHS as an EPRR (Emergency
 Preparedness, Resilience and Response) specialist,
 having spent the previous fifteen years working in
 security risk management. One of the questions I
 get asked most by former colleagues in security is
 what is the relationship between the two disciplines?
 On Tuesday 15th November 2022 I was asked to
 give a presentation on this very topic at the Security
 Institute Regional CPD Event at Northumbria
 University in Newcastle Upon Tyne. This brief article   The discipline of Emergency Planning clearly plays a part in all four of these categories. However, the
 attempts to give a summary of the contents of my   other risk management professions also play a vital role, with security playing a key role in mitigating
 presentation.   against terrorism and health and safety professionals playing a key role in preventing the occurrence
            of both ‘infrastructure or system failures’ and ‘accidents’. This disciplinary overlap plays out not just
 If I speak to colleagues who are security managers   at the level of emergency planners working across the blue light services (police, fire and rescue
 and ask where they believe security sits in their   and ambulance service), the NHS, the UK Health Security Agency, the Environment Agency and local
 organisation, they tend to answer pragmatically,   authorities, but also at the corporate level where the security manager may be heavily involved in the
 based on where the security department physically   planning.
 sits in their organisations corporate structure.
 Typically, the answer is ‘Facilities Management’ or   To take an example, consider a corporate ‘evacuation and shelter’ plan. There are numerous reasons
 ‘Estates’. Conceptually however security has nothing   why a corporate head office may need to fully evacuate, partially evacuate or lockdown. It could be the
 to do with either. Rather it is, alongside Emergency   result of a structural, power or other utility failure; an explosion or suspect package; adverse weather
 Planning and Health and Safety, a sub-set of the   such as flooding; a fire; a release of irritant fumes or hazardous materials; or even a terrorist event.
 much broader discipline that is Risk Management.   Who gives the order to evacuate or lockdown the building? For what type of incident? And how will this
            be communicated?
 Broadly speaking disaster risks may be divided into
 four types: (1) Natural hazards including diseases, for   For anyone wanting to take the conversation further check out the BECRes Special Interest Group,
 example flooding and COVID-19; (2) Infrastructure   which consists of four core streams covering: Business Continuity, Emergency Planning, Crisis
 or system failures, for example the collapse of the   Management and Resilience.
 Morandi bridge in Genoa; (3) Accidents including
 those leading to exposure to hazardous materials,   You can find the BECRes Special Interest Group on the Community Platform here: https://community.
 for example the Buncefield oil storage facility fire;   security-institute.org/communities/community-home?CommunityKey=db26b77b-5358-45d7-af27-
 and (4) Terrorism or those due to malicious acts, for   72bddba0e710
 example the Manchester Arena attack. Around the
 world in an average year there may be as many as
 700 disasters, of which the majority (about 60%) stem
 from natural hazards.




 16                                                          17
   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22