Homeland Security Presidential Directive/HSPD-5
Subject: Management of Domestic Incidents
Purpose
(1) To enhance the ability of the United States to manage
domestic incidents by establishing a single, comprehensive
national incident management system.
Definitions
(2) In this directive:
- the term "Secretary" means the Secretary of Homeland
Security.
- the term "Federal departments and agencies" means those
executive departments enumerated in 5 U.S.C. 101, together with
the Department of Homeland Security; independent establishments
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 104(1); government corporations as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 103(1); and the United States Postal
Service.
- the terms "State," "local," and the "United States" when it
is used in a geographical sense, have the same meanings as used
in the Homeland Security Act of 2002, Public Law 107-296.
Policy
(3) To prevent, prepare for, respond to, and recover from
terrorist attacks, major disasters, and other emergencies, the
United States Government shall establish a single, compre-hensive
approach to domestic incident management. The objective of the
United States Government is to ensure that all levels of
government across the Nation have the capability to work
efficiently and effectively together, using a national approach to
domestic incident management. In these efforts, with regard to
domestic incidents, the United States Government treats crisis
management and consequence management as a single, integrated
function, rather than as two separate functions.
(4) The Secretary of Homeland Security is the principal Federal
official for domestic incident management. Pursuant to the
Homeland Security Act of 2002, the Secretary is responsible for
coordinating Federal operations within the United States to
prepare for, respond to, and recover from terrorist attacks, major
disasters, and other emergencies. The Secretary shall coordinate
the Federal Government's resources utilized in response to or
recovery from terrorist attacks, major disasters, or other
emergencies if and when any one of the following four conditions
applies: (1) a Federal department or agency acting under its own
authority has requested the assistance of the Secretary; (2) the
resources of State and local authorities are overwhelmed and
Federal assistance has been requested by the appropriate State and
local authorities; (3) more than one Federal department or agency
has become substantially involved in responding to the incident;
or (4) the Secretary has been directed to assume responsibility
for managing the domestic incident by the President.
(5) Nothing in this directive alters, or impedes the ability to
carry out, the authorities of Federal departments and agencies to
perform their responsibilities under law. All Federal departments
and agencies shall cooperate with the Secretary in the Secretary's
domestic incident management role.
(6) The Federal Government recognizes the roles and
responsibilities of State and local authorities in domestic
incident management. Initial responsibility for managing domestic
incidents generally falls on State and local authorities. The
Federal Government will assist State and local authorities when
their resources are overwhelmed, or when Federal interests are
involved. The Secretary will coordinate with State and local
governments to ensure adequate planning, equipment, training, and
exercise activities. The Secretary will also provide assistance to
State and local governments to develop all-hazards plans and
capabilities, including those of greatest importance to the
security of the United States, and will ensure that State, local,
and Federal plans are compatible.
(7) The Federal Government recognizes the role that the private
and nongovernmental sectors play in preventing, preparing for,
responding to, and recovering from terrorist attacks, major
disasters, and other emergencies. The Secretary will coordinate
with the private and nongovernmental sectors to ensure adequate
planning, equipment, training, and exercise activities and to
promote partnerships to address incident management capabilities.
(8) The Attorney General has lead responsibility for criminal
investigations of terrorist acts or terrorist threats by
individuals or groups inside the United States, or directed at
United States citizens or institutions abroad, where such acts are
within the Federal criminal jurisdiction of the United States, as
well as for related intelligence collection activities within the
United States, subject to the National Security Act of 1947 and
other applicable law, Executive Order 12333, and Attorney
General-approved procedures pursuant to that Executive Order.
Generally acting through the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the
Attorney General, in cooperation with other Federal departments
and agencies engaged in activities to protect our national
security, shall also coordinate the activities of the other
members of the law enforcement community to detect, prevent,
preempt, and disrupt terrorist attacks against the United States.
Following a terrorist threat or an actual incident that falls
within the criminal jurisdiction of the United States, the full
capabilities of the United States shall be dedicated, consistent
with United States law and with activities of other Federal
departments and agencies to protect our national security, to
assisting the Attorney General to identify the perpetrators and
bring them to justice. The Attorney General and the Secretary
shall establish appropriate relationships and mechanisms for
cooperation and coordination between their two departments.
(9) Nothing in this directive impairs or otherwise affects the
authority of the Secretary of Defense over the Department of
Defense, including the chain of command for military forces from
the President as Commander in Chief, to the Secretary of Defense,
to the commander of military forces, or military command and
control procedures. The Secretary of Defense shall provide
military support to civil authorities for domestic incidents as
directed by the President or when consistent with military
readiness and appropriate under the circumstances and the law. The
Secretary of Defense shall retain command of military forces
providing civil support. The Secretary of Defense and the
Secretary shall establish appropriate relationships and mechanisms
for cooperation and coordination between their two departments.
(10) The Secretary of State has the responsibility, consistent
with other United States Government activities to protect our
national security, to coordinate international activities related
to the prevention, preparation, response, and recovery from a
domestic incident, and for the protection of United States
citizens and United States interests overseas. The Secretary of
State and the Secretary shall establish appropriate relationships
and mechanisms for cooperation and coordination between their two
departments.
(11) The Assistant to the President for Homeland Security and
the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs shall
be responsible for interagency policy coordination on domestic and
international incident management, respectively, as directed by
the President. The Assistant to the President for Homeland
Security and the Assistant to the President for National Security
Affairs shall work together to ensure that the United States
domestic and international incident management efforts are
seamlessly united.
(12) The Secretary shall ensure that, as appropriate,
information related to domestic incidents is gathered and provided
to the public, the private sector, State and local authorities,
Federal departments and agencies, and, generally through the
Assistant to the President for Homeland Security, to the
President. The Secretary shall provide standardized, quantitative
reports to the Assistant to the President for Homeland Security on
the readiness and preparedness of the Nation -- at all levels of
government -- to prevent, prepare for, respond to, and recover
from domestic incidents.
(13) Nothing in this directive shall be construed to grant to
any Assistant to the President any authority to issue orders to
Federal departments and agencies, their officers, or their
employees.
Tasking
(14) The heads of all Federal departments and agencies are
directed to provide their full and prompt cooperation, resources,
and support, as appropriate and consistent with their own
responsibilities for protecting our national security, to the
Secretary, the Attorney General, the Secretary of Defense, and the
Secretary of State in the exercise of the individual leadership
responsibilities and missions assigned in paragraphs (4), (8),
(9), and (10), respectively, above.
(15) The Secretary shall develop, submit for review to the
Homeland Security Council, and administer a National Incident
Management System (NIMS). This system will provide a consistent
nationwide approach for Federal, State, and local governments to
work effectively and efficiently together to prepare for, respond
to, and recover from domestic incidents, regardless of cause,
size, or complexity. To provide for interoperability and
compatibility among Federal, State, and local capabilities, the
NIMS will include a core set of concepts, principles, terminology,
and technologies covering the incident command system;
multi-agency coordination systems; unified command; training;
identification and management of resources (including systems for
classifying types of resources); qualifications and certification;
and the collection, tracking, and reporting of incident
information and incident resources.
(16) The Secretary shall develop, submit for review to the
Homeland Security Council, and administer a National Response Plan
(NRP). The Secretary shall consult with appropriate Assistants to
the President (including the Assistant to the President for
Economic Policy) and the Director of the Office of Science and
Technology Policy, and other such Federal officials as may be
appropriate, in developing and implementing the NRP. This plan
shall integrate Federal Government domestic prevention,
preparedness, response, and recovery plans into one
all-discipline, all-hazards plan. The NRP shall be unclassified.
If certain operational aspects require classification, they shall
be included in classified annexes to the NRP.
- The NRP, using the NIMS, shall, with regard to response to
domestic incidents, provide the structure and mechanisms for
national level policy and operational direction for Federal
support to State and local incident managers and for exercising
direct Federal authorities and responsibilities, as appropriate.
- The NRP will include protocols for operating under different
threats or threat levels; incorporation of existing Federal
emergency and incident management plans (with appropriate
modifications and revisions) as either integrated components of
the NRP or as supporting operational plans; and additional
opera-tional plans or annexes, as appropriate, including public
affairs and intergovernmental communications.
- The NRP will include a consistent approach to reporting
incidents, providing assessments, and making recommendations to
the President, the Secretary, and the Homeland Security Council.
- The NRP will include rigorous requirements for continuous
improvements from testing, exercising, experience with
incidents, and new information and technologies.
(17) The Secretary shall:
- By April 1, 2003, (1) develop and publish an initial version
of the NRP, in consultation with other Federal departments and
agencies; and (2) provide the Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security with a plan for full development and
implementation of the NRP.
- By June 1, 2003, (1) in consultation with Federal
departments and agencies and with State and local governments,
develop a national system of standards, guidelines, and
protocols to implement the NIMS; and (2) establish a mechanism
for ensuring ongoing management and maintenance of the NIMS,
including regular consultation with other Federal departments
and agencies and with State and local governments.
- By September 1, 2003, in consultation with Federal
departments and agencies and the Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security, review existing authorities and regulations
and prepare recommendations for the President on revisions
necessary to implement fully the NRP.
(18) The heads of Federal departments and agencies shall adopt
the NIMS within their departments and agencies and shall provide
support and assistance to the Secretary in the development and
maintenance of the NIMS. All Federal departments and agencies will
use the NIMS in their domestic incident management and emergency
prevention, preparedness, response, recovery, and mitigation
activities, as well as those actions taken in support of State or
local entities. The heads of Federal departments and agencies
shall participate in the NRP, shall assist and support the
Secretary in the development and maintenance of the NRP, and shall
participate in and use domestic incident reporting systems and
protocols established by the Secretary.
(19) The head of each Federal department and agency shall:
- By June 1, 2003, make initial revisions to existing plans in
accordance with the initial version of the NRP.
- By August 1, 2003, submit a plan to adopt and implement the
NIMS to the Secretary and the Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security. The Assistant to the President for Homeland
Security shall advise the President on whether such plans
effectively implement the NIMS.
(20) Beginning in Fiscal Year 2005, Federal departments and
agencies shall make adoption of the NIMS a requirement, to the
extent permitted by law, for providing Federal preparedness
assistance through grants, contracts, or other activities. The
Secretary shall develop standards and guidelines for determining
whether a State or local entity has adopted the NIMS.
Technical and Conforming Amendments to National Security
Presidential Directive-1 (NSPD-1)
(21) NSPD-1 ("Organization of the National Security Council
System") is amended by replacing the fifth sentence of the third
paragraph on the first page with the following: "The Attorney
General, the Secretary of Homeland Security, and the Director of
the Office of Management and Budget shall be invited to attend
meetings pertaining to their responsibilities.".
Technical and Conforming Amendments to National Security
Presidential Directive-8 (NSPD-8)
(22) NSPD-8 ("National Director and Deputy National Security
Advisor for Combating Terrorism") is amended by striking "and the
Office of Homeland Security," on page 4, and inserting "the
Department of Homeland Security, and the Homeland Security
Council" in lieu thereof.
Technical and Conforming Amendments to Homeland Security
Presidential Directive-2 (HSPD-2)
(23) HSPD-2 ("Combating Terrorism Through Immigration
Policies") is amended as follows:
- striking "the Commissioner of the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS)" in the second sentence of the
second paragraph in section 1, and inserting "the Secretary of
Homeland Security" in lieu thereof ;
- striking "the INS," in the third paragraph in section 1, and
inserting "the Department of Homeland Security" in lieu thereof;
- inserting ", the Secretary of Homeland Security," after "The
Attorney General" in the fourth paragraph in section 1;
- inserting ", the Secretary of Homeland Security," after "the
Attorney General" in the fifth paragraph in section 1;
- striking "the INS and the Customs Service" in the first
sentence of the first paragraph of section 2, and inserting "the
Department of Homeland Security" in lieu thereof;
- striking "Customs and INS" in the first sentence of the
second paragraph of section 2, and inserting "the Department of
Homeland Security" in lieu thereof;
- striking "the two agencies" in the second sentence of the
second paragraph of section 2, and inserting "the Department of
Homeland Security" in lieu thereof;
- striking "the Secretary of the Treasury" wherever it appears
in section 2, and inserting "the Secretary of Homeland Security"
in lieu thereof;
- inserting ", the Secretary of Homeland Security," after "The
Secretary of State" wherever the latter appears in section 3;
- inserting ", the Department of Homeland Security," after
"the Department of State," in the second sentence in the third
paragraph in section 3;
- inserting "the Secretary of Homeland Security," after "the
Secretary of State," in the first sentence of the fifth
paragraph of section 3;
- striking "INS" in the first sentence of the sixth paragraph
of section 3, and inserting "Department of Homeland Security" in
lieu thereof;
- (striking "the Treasury" wherever it appears in section 4
and inserting "Homeland Security" in lieu thereof;
- inserting ", the Secretary of Homeland Security," after "the
Attorney General" in the first sentence in section 5; and
- inserting ", Homeland Security" after "State" in the first
sentence of section 6.
Technical and Conforming Amendments to Homeland Security
Presidential Directive-3 (HSPD-3)
(24) The Homeland Security Act of 2002 assigned the
responsibility for administering the Homeland Security Advisory
System to the Secretary of Homeland Security. Accordingly, HSPD-3
of March 11, 2002 ("Homeland Security Advisory System") is amended
as follows:
- replacing the third sentence of the second paragraph
entitled "Homeland Security Advisory System" with "Except in
exigent circumstances, the Secretary of Homeland Security shall
seek the views of the Attorney General, and any other federal
agency heads the Secretary deems appropriate, including other
members of the Homeland Security Council, on the Threat
Condition to be assigned."
- inserting "At the request of the Secretary of Homeland
Security, the Department of Justice shall permit and facilitate
the use of delivery systems administered or managed by the
Department of Justice for the purposes of delivering threat
information pursuant to the Homeland Security Advisory System."
as a new paragraph after the fifth paragraph of the section
entitled "Homeland Security Advisory System."
- inserting ", the Secretary of Homeland Security" after "The
Director of Central Intelligence" in the first sentence of the
seventh paragraph of the section entitled "Homeland Security
Advisory System".
- striking "Attorney General" wherever it appears (except in
the sentences referred to in subsections (a) and (c) above), and
inserting "the Secretary of Homeland Security" in lieu thereof;
and
- striking the section entitled "Comment and Review Periods."
GEORGE W. BUSH
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