Incident Commander Sample Clauses
Incident Commander. The uniformed SBSD member present at the incident that has scene management responsibilities.
Incident Commander. The Incident Commander of the emergency shall be designated by the Requestor, and shall be in overall command of the operations under whom the personnel and equipment of the Responder shall serve. The personnel and equipment of the Responder shall be under the immediate control of a supervisor of the Responder. If the Incident Commander specifically requests a supervisor of the Responder to assume command, the Incident Commander shall not, by relinquishing command, relieve the Requestor of responsibility for the incident.
Incident Commander. The person who, by virtue of his/her position with the Requesting Entity, is responsible for the overall command and direction of the Emergency response activities.
Incident Commander. “Incident Commander” as defined by CRS §29-22.5-102(2) means the individual responsible for the overall management of the incident including developing incident objectives and managing all incident operations, by virtue of explicit legal, agency, or delegated authority.
Incident Commander. The first and/or highest qualified official of a jurisdictional agency at the scene of the incident initially establishes Command. The Incident Commander (IC) is responsible for overall management of the incident. It is the IC’s responsibility to prepare the incident objectives that will be the foundation upon which subsequent incident action planning will be based. Incident objectives will be based on the requirements of the agency and the incident. They should be broad, measurable and follow an ordered sequence of events.
Incident Commander. The uniformed RCPD member present at the incident that has scene management responsibilities.
Incident Commander. Person determined by local jurisdiction to be responsible for overall management under this MOU of a particular suppression incident. The Burn Boss shall be responsible for oversight of the suppression action until the Incident Commander arrives on site. The Incident Commander may assign one or more deputies from the Jurisdictional Party and/or from an Assisting Party to assist in suppression action.
Incident Commander. The Incident Commander is the ACP employee who is assigned responsibility for all on-scene decisions related to an oil spill or a release of hazardous or radiological material in the Canal Area (as defined herein) in accordance with the ACP's Contingency Plan.
Incident Commander. The person from the Local Authority who assumes overall command of personnel, apparatus, equipment and operations at the incident scene.
Incident Commander. The Incident Commander is responsible for overall incident activities and decision-making, including the development and implementation of strategic decisions consistent with land management direction and delegations of authority. The Incident Commander approves the mobilization and release of incident resources. Reporting directly to the Incident Commander are the Command and General Staff. The Forest Supervisor’s Tribal Government Liaison and the Designated Tribal Government Representative positions, described below, work under the Incident Liaison Officer in the Incident Command System (ICS) organization or the Incident Commander in the Liaison Officer’s absence. F ▇▇▇▇▇ Supervisor’s Tribal Government Liaison. A Forest Line Officer designated by the Forest Supervisor as the Liaison to the Tribe representing the Forest Supervisor for coordination and work with the Tribal staff and the Designated Tribal Government Representative(s) regarding day-to-day operations and implementation of agreements reached in the formal Government-to-Government consultation. The Forest Supervisor’s Tribal Government Liaison reports to the Incident Liaison Officer or the IC in absence of the Liaison Officer and is responsible to consult and coordinate with the Designated Tribal Government Representative and the Forest Service Heritage Resource Advisor, if one is present. Works with the Forest Service Heritage Advisor and Designated Tribal Government Representative to develop mitigation measures for the protection of cultural resources from direct and indirect effects related to wildland fire management.