Cascadia Coastal Coalition
2023
What: Two Winter Speakers -- 28 February 2023 from 10 am - 12 pmWho: Session 1: Tiffany Brown, Emergency Manager, Clatsop County. “Disruption and Innovation on the Oregon Coast: Leveraging Partnerships and Programs to Increase Cascadia Resilience”.Session 2: Chuck Perino, City of Albany, Emergency Manager. "My Labor Day 2020, the Trials and Tribulations of Evacuation".When: Tuesday, February 28, 2023 10:00 am until 12:00 pmWhere: Three Rivers Casino Resort Event Center, 5647 OR-126, Florence OR 97439In Person and via Zoom --- Admission is free.
What: Two Summer Seakers -- 5 June 2023 from 10 am - 12 pmWho: Session 1: Loren Flindt, Mountain Wave SAR, DMR (Digital Mobile Radio) & Search and Rescue in the PNW: an Introduction to DMR.Session 2: Della M. Graham, Senior Project Manager, Associate Geologist, Haley & Aldrich, Inc.Vancouver, WA. Statewide Emergency Response Islands Determination: Resilience Planning for Isolated Populations due to Widespread Transportation Failures Following a Catastrophic Earthquake.Where: Three Rivers Conference Center, 5647 OR-126, Florence OR 97439In Person and via Zoom --- Admission is free.
Rural Coastal Oregon Hospital Tabletop
Cascadia Coastal Coalition is working closely with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) to engage several rural coastal Oregon hospitals in a facilitated tabletop exercise to be held this winter.
Special thanks to the Oregon CISA Director, South Coos Hospital, Curry General Hospital,Lower Umpqua Hospital and Columbia Memorial Hospital! The risk of cybercrime and its impacts are very real. U.S. Healthcare facilities have had an 86% increase in cyberattacks just in the past year. Rural areas are not immune and in fact are increasingly targeted. Steps in prevention, mitigation, planning, incident notification, response and operational continuity for safe and effective patient care are all critical to learn and share.
Special thanks to the Oregon CISA Director, South Coos Hospital, Curry General Hospital,Lower Umpqua Hospital and Columbia Memorial Hospital! The risk of cybercrime and its impacts are very real. U.S. Healthcare facilities have had an 86% increase in cyberattacks just in the past year. Rural areas are not immune and in fact are increasingly targeted. Steps in prevention, mitigation, planning, incident notification, response and operational continuity for safe and effective patient care are all critical to learn and share.