Ep. 1- March 25, 2026 –26P6135
Ep. 2- June 24, 2026 –26P6136
Ep. 3- July 22, 2026 –26P6137
Ep. 4- September 23, 2026 –26P6138
Everyday Correctional Emergency Management Webinar Series
Episode 4
The Everyday Correctional Emergency Management Webinar Series is a quarterly, virtual educational initiative designed to support the continued development of emergency management capability of the U.S. correctional system. The series is primarily intended for correctional professionals working in federal, state, county, local, and tribal prisons and jails, with secondary relevance to community corrections staff and leadership. Its central purpose is to strengthen a shared understanding of nationally recognized emergency management principles and to explore how those principles can be meaningfully integrated into everyday correctional operations, leadership practices, and decision-making processes. The series is framed at a strategic and organizational level and avoids institution-specific procedures or sensitive operational details, consistent with publicly available federal emergency management doctrine.
The Everyday Correctional Emergency Management Webinar Series is grounded in the National Incident Management system (NIMS), the incident Command System (ICS), and an all-hazards approach to preparedness as articulated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) (FEMA n.d.; FEMA 2017). These frameworks provide a common language and conceptual structure for managing incidents of varying scale and complexity across disciplines. Within corrections, many routine activities such as managing incidents, supervising staff, coordinating resources, and communicating across functional areas, already align with these principles, even if they are not always explicitly identified as such. This series is intended to make those connections more visible, reinforcing existing practices while supporting a more consistent and intentional application of emergency management doctrine across correctional roles and levels of responsibility.1
A central theme of the series is the recognition that emergency management in corrections is not limited to rare, large-scale disasters but can be woven into everyday operations. Incidents such as housing unit disturbances, medical emergencies, infrastructure failures, staffing challenges, or external community events all require elements of command, coordination, communication and situational awareness. When viewed through an emergency management lens, these routine challenges become opportunities to reinforce shared expectations, clarify roles, and strengthen organizational readiness before a larger emergency occurs (FEMA 2017). The series emphasizes this integrative perspective, positioning emergency management as a way of thinking and operating rather than as a stand-alone function activated only during crises.2
The Everyday Correctional Emergency Management Webinar Series also seeks to support improved alignment and interoperability between correctional agencies and external partners, including local, county, state, and federal offices of emergency management, as well as first responder organizations. FEMA doctrine emphasizes the importance of whole-community coordination and shared frameworks to support effective preparedness and response across jurisdiction and disciplines (FEMA 2011). By increasing familiarity with how emergency management systems are structured and applied outside the correctional environment, the series aims to help correctional professionals better understand how their agencies fit within broader community preparedness and response efforts, while preserving the unique legal, operational, and custodial responsibilities of correcitons.3
Each quarterly webinar will feature subject matter experts drawn from the emergency management community, first responder disciplines, and related professional fields whose experience and perspective can inform correctional preparedness and leadership. Content will focus on strategic concepts, organizational lessons learned, and cross-disciplinary perspectives rather than tactical procedures or facility-specific practices. Over time, the series is intended to contribute to the continued development and professionalization of correctional emergency management as a discipline. By reinforcing nationally recognized frameworks, encouraging shared language, and promoting the thoughtful integration of emergency management principles into daily correctional work, the series supports preparedness as an ongoing process rather than a compliance-driven or episodic activity. In doing so, it aligns with FEMA’s emphasis on preparedness as a sustained, whole-community effort and supports correctional leadership in building organizational resilience, decision clarity, and coordinated response capabilities under both routine and emergent conditions (FEMA 2011; FEMA 2017).4
Footnotes
- Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). National Incident Management System (NIMS), 3rd ed. (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 2017).
- FEMA, NIMS, 2017.
- FEMA, A Whole Community Approach to Emergency Management: Principles, Themes, and Pathways for Action (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Homeland Security, 2011).
- FEMA, A Whole Community Approach to Emergency Management, 2011: FEMA, NIMS, 2017.
Works Cited
- FEMA, 2011. A Whole Community Approach to Emergency Management: Principles, Themes, and Pathways for action. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
- FEMA, 2017. NIMS, 3rd ed. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
- FEMA. n.d. “National Incident Management System (NIMS). “U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Accessed 12/21/2025. https://www.fema.gov/emergency-managers/nims.
Works Referenced
- FEMA. n.d. “Preparedness.” U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Accessed 12/21/2025. https://www.fema.gov/emergency-managers/national-prepardness.
Some NIC programs utilize NIC's Learn Center.
We encourage you to create an account on NIC's Learn Center if you don't already have one.