Web site portal for homeland security opens
Computerworld -
A consortium of government agencies, including the Federal Emergency Management Agency and 26 partner agencies, has created an Internet portal to help municipalities prepare for and respond to disasters.
The site, DisasterHelp.Gov, can now support first-reponse agencies as part of the country's disaster preparedness efforts.
One key piece that will be available online at the end of this month is a Disaster Management Interoperability Services tool kit that will make it possible for police, fire and ambulance responders to directly communicate with each other in disasters through the portal.
Right now, communications between different agencies are often difficult because they use different radio frequencies and incompatible equipment, said Mark Zimmerman, program manager for the portal. Zimmerman said the portal was created after input from first responders and representatives from a range of small to large municipal governments.
Among the most sought-after features were geographic information system capabilities to provide maps and data, and the ability to conduct secure online chats between emergency officials in times of crisis, Zimmerman said. The site had a soft launch last November, with features and improvements continually being added.
Links are provided to Web sites for some 17 nongovernmental assistance agencies, such as the American Red Cross and the World Health Organization, as well as to 27 federal disaster help sites. The portal also allows communities to register and build their own custom Web pages, which can be linked to their own home pages to provide updated disaster information for residents.
The site can also provide the public with information and resources before, during and after an emergency, Zimmerman said.
The portal was built on EMC's Clariion CX400 storage arrays, MirrorView software for remote mirroring between CX400 arrays set up in different locations and Navisphere Manager software, which is used to manage storage.
The site also uses servers and software from several smaller vendors, including software from Appian Corp. in Vienna, Va. and blade servers and software from Egenera Inc. in Marlboro, Mass.
Disaster Recovery
Additional Resources



Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.
White Papers & Webcasts
Why Email Must Operate 24/7 and How to Make This Happen
Learn how to avoid an email outage by implementing a hosted email continuity solution.
Disaster Recovery 2008: Reduced Costs and Improved Performance
How long can your Enterprise afford to be without your data? With an accelerated disaster recovery program, you never have to answer this...
Optimizing Data protection Operations in VMware Environments
This Taneja Group Solution Profile identifies the data protection optimizations available in the VMware vSphere environment.
HP StorageWorks EVA4400 & Microsoft
Download this video, free, compliments of HP.
The Benefits of Virtualization: Why It's Time for IT to Move Now
Six major benefits of virtualization.
Data Protection and Disaster Recovery with iSCSI and VMware
Get this on demand webcast now
Saving Your Servers from Disaster using VMware Virtualization
Take a look at some of the key features of virtualization that help defend your IT environment against disaster.
The Top Ten Most Forgotten Things When building a Disaster Recovery Plan
The checklist that could help your company survive a disaster.
Effectively Implementing Datacenter Automation
Effectively select and deploy the best datacenter automation solution today!
