Design of Disaster Crisis Center Function based on Crisis Management
Concept
Aang Gunawan Sutyawan
1
and Albarda
1
1
School of Electrical Engineering and Informatics, Faculty of electrical Engineering, Bandung Institute of Technology,
Bandung, Indonesia
Keywords:
Crisis Center, Crisis Management, Emergency, Disaster.
Abstract:
Crises can be interpreted as a condition/situation that threatens and creates risks so that immediate han-
dling/action needs by means of an emergency to prevent it from deteriorating. A situation can be a crisis
in the event of a natural disaster that has the risk of causing casualties and a broad impact on the community,
afflicting government business units, and very large financial losses. The way to deal with disasters in the
crisis phase is to create a Crisis Center which is the center of management in managing information and coor-
dinating disaster response centers. In a crisis situation, gathering information, making decisions, and directing
appropriate actions requires good coordination. This research attempts to answer the problems by designing
the functions of a Crisis Center related to crisis situations to support emergency response action plans based
on the concept of crisis management so that decision-makers can determine the most optimal steps.
1 INTRODUCTION
Referring to a study conducted by the National Disas-
ter Management Authority (NDMA), millions of In-
donesians are in the threat of natural disasters. Based
on the data, 86.2 million people were exposed to
the risk of earthquake disasters, 3.7 million people
were prone to tsunamis, and millions of other disas-
ters (Mohd. Robi Amri, 2016). In the last decade,
there have been seven tsunami disasters in Indone-
sia. Mentawai (2010), Papua (2011), Aceh and West
Sumatra (2012), and Southeast Sulawesi, Banten and
Lampung (2018) (Bencana, 2019). The impact of the
tsunami was very large and caused many casualties
and damage. This data illustrates that a tsunami dis-
aster is one of the disasters that pose a serious threat
to the risk of high casualties. The time span between
tsunami early warning and the arrival of a tsunami un-
til the status of a tsunami ends is a phase of crisis that
must be managed optimally in an effort to deal with
disaster emergencies.
A crisis or emergency is a threatening condi-
tion that requires immediate action. Effective emer-
gency action can prevent events from getting worse
(UNISDR, 2009)(Zamoum and Gorpe, 2018)(Al-
Dahash et al., 2016). So the crisis can be interpreted
as a condition/situation that threatens and raises risks
so that it needs immediate handling/action by means
of an emergency so that it does not deteriorate. This
phase begins when a disaster occurs until the end of
the crisis period and the start of the disaster recovery
phase(Khan et al., 2008). This stage greatly deter-
mines the impact of a disaster. If the crisis phase can
be handled properly, it can minimize the loss of life
and material losses due to the disaster. Therefore re-
quires management that can manage a crisis situation
from occurring due to natural disasters.
Crisis management means to deal with situations
in which events that threaten the safety and security of
the public will occur, or to manage it after happened
(Abe et al., 2018). Crisis management is a proactive
process that involves handling crises and specific ac-
tions taken to solve problems caused by crises (Car-
bery et al., 2014)(Devlin, 2006). So crisis manage-
ment is a planned response to a crisis situation, which
must be carried out effectively and on time when the
crisis occurs. Crisis management also provides criti-
cal information needed for decision makers and plans
that can be used to deal with crisis situations.
A situation is interpreted as a crisis in the event of
a natural disaster which has the risk of causing casual-
ties and widespread impact on the community, afflict-
ing government business units at once, and very large
financial losses. In this condition, the highest level
of management in the area must lead the implementa-
tion directly. The highest management in question is
Sutyawan, A. and Albarda, .
Design of Disaster Crisis Center Function based on Crisis Management Concept.
DOI: 10.5220/0009858400850090
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Creative Economics, Tourism and Information Management (ICCETIM 2019) - Creativity and Innovation Developments for Global
Competitiveness and Sustainability, pages 85-90
ISBN: 978-989-758-451-0
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
85
the district head of the affected area. After the district
head receives news of a disaster emergency, the next
step is to do a brief analysis, whether the emergency
situation has reached a crisis situation. If it reaches a
crisis situation, the district head must announce that
the condition of the area is in a crisis situation. One
of the facilities needed in carrying out crisis manage-
ment is the Command Center (CC).
In general, CC can be interpreted as a lo-
cation/place to provide orders, coordination, and
decision-making in supporting emergency responses.
The aim of CC is to collect and process the infor-
mation needed to be able to manage various events
and situational awareness quickly and effectively. The
command center function is to provide central control
points for the operations of the actors involved during
the crisis so that they can give and obtain, every and
all, available information about the status of the crisis
(Devlin, 2006).
Indonesia, as one of the countries that helped rat-
ify the Framework for Hyogo has also implemented
disaster risk reduction efforts. Thus many govern-
ment departments rely on their own special emer-
gency response systems to conduct rescue operations,
most contingency plans are designed from the per-
spective of their own sector. It is not surprising that
these emergency plans usually have many disadvan-
tages, such as inappropriate human resources alloca-
tion, poor information communication with external
entities, and a narrow range in which resources are
distributed. Once a large scale emergency occurs,
such an emergency plan type cannot provide an ad-
equate response. The way to deal with disasters in the
crisis phase is to create a Crisis Center which is the
center of management in managing information and
coordinating disaster response centers. This research
attempts to answer the problems by designing the
functions of a Crisis Center related to crisis situations
to support emergency response action plans based on
the concept of crisis management, so that decision-
makers can determine the most optimal steps. In a
crisis situation, CC can turn into a crisis center. The
focus of this research is on tsunami natural disasters
with adequate early warning assumptions.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Crisis Management
(Bundy et al., 2017) identified two main perspectives
that focused on various aspects of crisis and crisis
management.
1. Internal perspective, focusing on organizational
dynamics in managing risk, complexity, and tech-
nology. Crisis management involves the coordi-
nation of complex technical and relational sys-
tems and the design of organizational structures to
prevent the occurrence, reduce impacts, and learn
from crises.
2. External perspectives, focusing on the interaction
of organizations and external stakeholders, mostly
come from the theory of social perception and im-
pression management. According to this perspec-
tive, crisis management involves the formation of
perceptions and coordination with stakeholders to
prevent, resolve, and develop a crisis. From this
literature review, the internal perspective focuses
on crisis leadership, while the external perspective
focuses on stakeholder perceptions.
(Blyth, 2009) illustrate the focus areas involved in
crisis events as follows: incident and crisis manage-
ment teams, crisis control centers, evacuation coordi-
nation centers, emergency response teams, corporate
front teams, incident management plans, and other
crisis response plans. During emergency response op-
erations, information management becomes very im-
portant. Emergency management stakeholders - as
decision makers - require ongoing access to a vari-
ety of distributed data sources to plan, make the right
decisions, and allocate resources for certain tasks.
2.2 Emergency Operation Center
(EOC)
The Japanese government made its crisis management
system model follow the Incident Command System
(ICS) in Europe and the US disaster crisis manage-
ment, seen from administrations that have important
factors, namely: (1) organization, (2) information, (3)
evacuation, (4) coordination, (5) reduction of inci-
dents, and (6) reconstruction. Especially about disas-
ter information includes what has happened and disas-
ter management what must be done to reduce damage
(Abe et al., 2018).
(Dave, 2015) put forward the definition of an
emergency operations center is a physical facility
equipped with technical infrastructure where decision
makers meet to coordinate disaster emergency mea-
sures. Seven important functions (there may be more
or less based on the disaster management agenda) oc-
cur in the EOC before, during, and after a disaster: co-
ordination, policy making, operations management,
information management, documentation, public in-
formation, and simulation. During emergency re-
sponse operations, information management becomes
ICCETIM 2019 - International Conference on Creative Economics, Tourism Information Management
86
very important. Emergency management stakehold-
ers - as decision makers - require access to a variety
of distributed data sources to plan, make the right de-
cisions, and allocate resources for certain tasks (Asi-
makopoulou and Bessis, 2011)(Perry, 1995).
3 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
3.1 Crisis Information and Response
Timeline
Information Tsunami disaster begins with tsunami
early warning issued by Meteorological, Climatolog-
ical, and Geophysical Agency (BMKG) as the autho-
rized institution. This institution delivers earthquake
information, tsunami early warning information, and
suggestions for follow-up in tsunami-threatened areas
to other parties in the tsunami early warning commu-
nication chain. After receiving an emergency tsunami
warning message, the next step is for regional heads
to announce that in a crisis situation, and at this time
is the beginning of the crisis phase. At this stage, the
crisis center gives the command to disaster manage-
ment units regarding steps that must be taken in order
to deal with the disaster crisis. In the event of a dis-
aster, the command is integrated at the crisis center.
Figure 1 shows the time period of the tsunami disas-
ter.
Figure 1: Estimated local tsunami time span (BMKG, 2012)
BMKG publishes news tsunami early warning
within 5 minutes after the earthquake occurred, fol-
lowed by a couple of times news updates news and
ending the threat of a tsunami has ended. Tsunami
early warning message contains the tsunami threat
level for the district with the status of ’Awas’, ’Siaga’
and ’Waspada’.
3.2 Analysis Concept of the Crisis
Center Functions
In disaster management, the readiness phase and re-
sponse phase are part of the disaster management ef-
fort that is nuanced by emergency and often emotional
nuances so that the crisis management function plays
an important role. The proposed concept is a combi-
nation of characteristics of the functions of the EOC
and crisis management. In chapter 2, a number of
crisis center function concepts have been defined and
identified in previous studies. Based on the existing
concept, analysis of key functions is carried out, and
then reformulated into a new concept. The process of
forming the crisis center function concept can be seen
in Figure 2.
Figure 2: Concept of crisis center function
3.2.1 Organizational Structure
Design of the organizational structure of crisis center
is divided into two stages, namely the stage of analy-
sis and process.
a. Needs analysis design of organizational structure
The selection of organizational structure is in-
tended so that the organization tasked with man-
aging the crisis and disaster emergency response
has a concise but reliable. It is necessary to ensure
that the crisis center head is in charge of the im-
plementation operational and disaster emergency
response management, and does not have the au-
thority to determine the emergency status of the
disaster which is the authority of the highest lead-
ership of the regional government, namely the dis-
trict head.
b. Organizational Structure Design Process
In the following organizational structure design,
the crisis center head is the command center and
operations leader to provide more flexibility in
terms of coordination. more details can be seen
in the Figure 3
3.2.2 Physical Facilities
The crisis center is a physical location complete with
the necessary infrastructure, where a leader together
with a team conducts a meeting, makes a decision,
assigns, coordinates, monitors and controls all actions
needed in response to the crisis. These actions include
Design of Disaster Crisis Center Function based on Crisis Management Concept
87
Figure 3: Crisis center organizational structure
emergency response actions, recovery and recovery
plans, and steps to provide public information. In de-
veloping a crisis center, it needs to be considered: lo-
cation, building and supporting facilities.
The chosen location must have natural disaster
risks and security threats in low-level. Crisis cen-
ter construction specifications issued under the dis-
aster risk management program (DRM) recommend
that crisis center spaces should be designed with rein-
forced concrete frames, for twice the seismic strength
normally designed by residential buildings in each
zone so that the crisis center building will have fac-
tors that much higher than security against possible
earthquakes.
Space layout should allow the team to meet, com-
municate, work, and stay in the place within a few
days. Communication systems, IT systems, power
systems, security systems, complete with emergency
support facilities are imperative in supporting facili-
ties. Figure 4 contains features of supporting facilities
from the crisis center.
Figure 4: Features of supporting facilities
3.2.3 Decision Makers
Decisions and procedures are developed at the cri-
sis center to anticipate disaster risk. A comprehen-
sive emergency plan must determine decisions to re-
spond to certain disaster events. However, most de-
cisions can be generated by situational demands (eg
the amount, time or specific impact of the threat) and
consequently not included in the existing plan. Such
decisions usually represent managerial decisions and
strategies taken by the crisis center leadership and
then disseminated. Important points that must be con-
sidered when formulating a decision include: Identi-
fication of events; Identification of personnel led with
overall responsibility; identification of key stakehold-
ers; standard operating procedures for operating func-
tions; emergency resource management system; exist-
ing infrastructure (Dave, 2015)(Perry, 1995).
3.2.4 Coordination Center
Crisis centers serve as coordination points for emer-
gency activities that provide centralized meetings,
planning, and reporting facilities. Coordination in-
volves assessing the nature of the threat of a disaster
and compiling the organizational resources available
to act together with each other against the threat. Con-
sequently, the crisis center is responsible for ensuring
that the respondent organizations work together and
know each other’s mission, responsibilities, and ar-
eas of operation. The crisis center leadership uses a
comprehensive emergency plan as a framework for
achieving coordination. In this plan a cooperation
agreement is made, assignment of tasks assigned to
different organizations, the chain of command and
enumeration of available resources. Coordination is
therefore facilitated and established before a disas-
ter occurs, and is codified in the plan. In this de-
sign, the crisis center leadership must creatively and
spontaneously overcome the problems of implemen-
tation and mobilization at that time, but the coordi-
nation base is established in the planning process and
strengthened through experience with disaster train-
ing or simulation.
Figure 5: Crisis Center as a Coordination Center
3.3 Information Center
Information flows to the crisis center during a disas-
ter. Data on the implementation of disaster response,
ICCETIM 2019 - International Conference on Creative Economics, Tourism Information Management
88
damage assessment, and recovery operations must be
collected, analyzed, and distributed to the appropriate
parties so that they can be followed up in an effec-
tive and timely manner. Information needs related to
the impact of disasters, combined, form a crisis center
function as an information center. Beyond the dam-
age assessment, the crisis center requires information
about the successful implementation of the overall
disaster response. This includes information about the
timing and effectiveness of operational decisions. The
crisis center is also a clearinghouse for information;
collect information about the activities and successes
of various respondent institutions and submit this in-
formation to other respondent institutions with related
tasks.
3.3.1 Documentation Center
Information collected on crisis center during a disas-
ter is becoming critical in decision making, both dur-
ing and after the emergency. In addition, the docu-
mentation of the emergency response during a disas-
ter event allows for the evaluation in the future about
what works and what doesn’t work. This information
is often used to define ”lessons learned, which can
help the development of policies and procedures in
the future.
3.3.2 Public Communication Centre
The crisis center is responsible for disseminating in-
formation to the public, at-risk communities, and the
media. This will reduce the difficulties associated
with incorrect information and ambiguity because the
main source of response data is accurate, that is, from
the crisis center. With regard to public information
needs, two hearings are a major concern: the gen-
eral public and the community are at risk in the dis-
aster faced. Other important audiences who some-
times function as a buffer between the crisis center
and other publics are mass media. Historically, it was
also known that mass media would disseminate their
own information if disaster managers failed to work
together and provide information.
Thus, effective disaster management actually re-
quires some consideration from the mass media. Es-
tablishing a function of disseminating information
connected with crisis centers can resolve various dif-
ficulties that usually arise in disaster management. It
is very important that the respondent organization in
the field not be a source of independent contact with
the media. By concentrating this function in a cri-
sis center, and placing it under the supervision of a
public information officer, someone ensures that con-
sistent and accurate messages are disseminated, and
at the same time facilitates the media to obtain au-
thorized information. The dissemination of accurate
information to the wider community can also reduce
the demands of the emergency response system by:
ensure that outsiders know where the affected area
is and how to avoid it, thereby reducing problems
associated with convergence;
ensure that outsiders know where affected friends
and relatives are, reduce the need for information
to call, visit or ”save” these people.
Furthermore, Figure 5 shows the functions of in-
formation management and operations management
in the crisis center.
Figure 6: The function of information management and op-
erations management in the crisis center
4 CONCLUSIONS
In this study, the design of the structure and func-
tion of the crisis center has been described. The crisis
center description or model presented here is taken
from the research literature review and related re-
search data. This model can serve regional heads in
at least three main ways. First, it provides a basis for
comparison by offering standard structures and func-
tions that can be compared with existing emergency
response centers. Such comparisons are useful be-
cause they encourage oversight of the government’s
response system, the community, and it’s needed.
Second, this model can serve as a guide for the gov-
ernment in building a crisis center. This design pro-
vides structures and functions that might be included
in the design of the new crisis center. Third, the model
presented here can be the basis for discussion of how
the crisis center can be designed with the concept of
disaster crisis management. For further research on
the function of disaster crisis centers can be done in
two focuses. The first is how to implement the con-
cept of the function that has been designed. The sec-
ond is evaluating the concept of crisis management
implemented.
Design of Disaster Crisis Center Function based on Crisis Management Concept
89
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
For contributions and assistance in this study, the
author would like to thank Dr. Ir. Albarda, M.T. as
a supervisor, colleagues in School of Electrical En-
gineering and Informatics, Faculty of electrical Engi-
neering, Bandung Institute of Technology who par-
ticipated in this study, colleagues in Technical Im-
plementation Unit for Mine’s and Geological Hazard
Mitigation, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, and Min-
istry of Research, Technology and Higher Education
of the Republic of Indonesia who provided funding
for this study.
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