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KITTITAS COUNTY CEMP <br /> Page 29 of 63 November 2024 | BASIC PLAN <br />Bringing representatives from various stakeholder and partner organizations together in EOCs <br />optimizes unity of effort and enables staff to share information, provide legal and policy guidance to <br />on-scene personnel, plan for contingencies, deploy resources efficiently, and generally provide <br />whatever support is required. The composition of EOC teams may also vary depending on the <br />nature and complexity of the incident or situation. Regardless of which organizations are <br />represented, all EOC teams receive oversight from elected and/or appointed officials such as <br />governors, tribal leaders, mayors, and city managers. They typically make decisions regarding <br />priorities and on issues such as emergency declarations, large-scale evacuations, access to <br />extraordinary emergency funding, waivers to ordinances and regulations, and adjudication of scarce <br />resources. <br /> <br />C. Emergency Support Function/Agency Cross-reference Matrix Table <br /> <br /> <br />Emergency Support Function <br /> <br /> <br />Lead Agencies/Organizations <br /> <br />ESF #1—Transportation <br /> <br />• Kittitas County Public Works <br />• City Streets and Public Works Departments <br /> <br /> <br />ESF #2—Communications <br /> <br />• Kittitas County Emergency Management <br />• Kittcom (Kittitas County 9-1-1) <br /> <br /> <br />ESF #3—Public Works and Engineering <br /> <br />• Kittitas County Public Works <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />ESF #4—Firefighting <br /> <br />• Kittitas County Fire Protection Districts <br />• Kittitas County Municipal Fire Departments <br />• United States Forest Service <br />• Washington Department of Natural Resources <br /> <br /> <br />ESF #5—Information and Planning <br /> <br />• Kittitas County Emergency Management <br />• Kittitas County Board of Commissioners <br />• City/Town Mayors and City Managers <br />