HSM 318 WK2 ASSIGNMENT THE COMMUNITY CONCEPT | LATEST UPDATE
The Community Concept
Taran Singh
Prof Lee Bennett
06/15/2024
HSM 318 Emergency Planning & Response (CAP2422A)
, The Community Concept
As we know natural disasters can happen anytime almost any time of the day around the world
so our first and local respondents must have a national response plan. Disasters can happen anytime;
these tests should work together to rebuild stronger than before. In this paper, I will review the basic
elements of FEMA’s whole community concepts and compare the entire planning. Nature has been a
threat and will not be reduced or fought within us only our communities that have been devasted. The
fear that many communities have when they see the potential of uncontrollable weather is unseen.
Colorado has a lot of mitigation strategies that are helpful plus on the state level where it can
manage natural hazards that are in need and impressive for the strong model. The CPG 101 planning
cycle endures a lot of comprehensive preparedness. A collaborative planning team's main purpose is to
assemble a diverse team with the right mix of skills and authority and focus on inclusive participation
from various stakeholders (FEMA, 2024). The inclusion of all the Stakeholders they are not just
government agencies but also businesses, nonprofits faith-based organizations, and community groups.
As the members of the community serve great threats from disasters every year, they brace to mitigate
the loss of life and the destruction known to people's property and assets (FEMA, 2024b). With FEMA’s
vision on their website, the Whole Community concept is, “ As a concept, the whole community is a
means by which residents, emergency management practitioners, organizational and community
leaders, and government officials can collectively understand and asses the needs of their assets,
capacities, and interests (FEMA, 2024).
Furthermore, when we compare the following two planning cycles that are presented in the
textbook and CPG101 the comprehensive preparedness cycle or otherwise (CPG 101) proposes 14
principles that also create an in-depth analysis of the planning stages (DHS/FEMA, 2010). These plans
must be met based on the communities represented by the whole population and are presumably off
The Community Concept
Taran Singh
Prof Lee Bennett
06/15/2024
HSM 318 Emergency Planning & Response (CAP2422A)
, The Community Concept
As we know natural disasters can happen anytime almost any time of the day around the world
so our first and local respondents must have a national response plan. Disasters can happen anytime;
these tests should work together to rebuild stronger than before. In this paper, I will review the basic
elements of FEMA’s whole community concepts and compare the entire planning. Nature has been a
threat and will not be reduced or fought within us only our communities that have been devasted. The
fear that many communities have when they see the potential of uncontrollable weather is unseen.
Colorado has a lot of mitigation strategies that are helpful plus on the state level where it can
manage natural hazards that are in need and impressive for the strong model. The CPG 101 planning
cycle endures a lot of comprehensive preparedness. A collaborative planning team's main purpose is to
assemble a diverse team with the right mix of skills and authority and focus on inclusive participation
from various stakeholders (FEMA, 2024). The inclusion of all the Stakeholders they are not just
government agencies but also businesses, nonprofits faith-based organizations, and community groups.
As the members of the community serve great threats from disasters every year, they brace to mitigate
the loss of life and the destruction known to people's property and assets (FEMA, 2024b). With FEMA’s
vision on their website, the Whole Community concept is, “ As a concept, the whole community is a
means by which residents, emergency management practitioners, organizational and community
leaders, and government officials can collectively understand and asses the needs of their assets,
capacities, and interests (FEMA, 2024).
Furthermore, when we compare the following two planning cycles that are presented in the
textbook and CPG101 the comprehensive preparedness cycle or otherwise (CPG 101) proposes 14
principles that also create an in-depth analysis of the planning stages (DHS/FEMA, 2010). These plans
must be met based on the communities represented by the whole population and are presumably off