Introducing Victoria’s 21 core capabilities

The Victorian Preparedness Framework’s core capabilities and their critical tasks set the foundation for how we mitigate, plan, prepare, respond to and recover from emergencies.

The delivery of the Framework’s capabilities align with the State Emergency Management Priorities (outlined in the State Emergency Management Plan), which provides clear direction on the factors that are required to be considered and actioned throughout all phases of an emergency.

The 21 core capabilities are each expressed as a statement with associated critical tasks.

Core capability

Core capabilities outline what Victoria needs to manage emergencies, coordinate and unify efforts, improve training and ensure capabilities are effectively applied to all stages of a major emergency.[1]

Each core capability is expressed as a statement that details the requisite abilities in a specific area to reduce the likelihood and consequences of an emergency.

 

CRITICAL TASKS

# A core capability’s critical tasks are detailed in the Core capabilities and their critical tasks section, in tables like this.

# Critical tasks are the fundamental activities of the core capability. These are the tasks that need to be undertaken and delivered to fulfil the intent of the core capability.
# Critical tasks are tangible, definable activities and are agency agnostic.
 

Victoria’s 21 emergency management core capabilities aligns with the State Emergency Management Plan and provides a snapshot of the 21 core capabilities required to deliver emergency management.

To be effective, the core capabilities are interdependent, coordinated and overlap across mitigation (including planning and preparedness), response (including relief) and recovery.

 

Victoria’s 21 emergency management core capabilities

Capabilities

Mitigation

Response (including relief)

Recovery

1. Planning

yes

no

no

2. Community Information and Warnings

yes

yes

yes

3. Operational Management

yes

yes

yes

4. Intelligence and Information Sharing

yes

yes

yes

5. Public Order and Community Safety

yes

yes

no

6. Building Community Resilience

yes

yes

yes

7. Fire Management and Suppression

yes

yes

no

8. Fatality Management

no

yes

no

9. Critical Transport

no

yes

no

10. Logistics and Supply Chain Management

no

yes

no

11. Impact Assessment

no

yes

yes

12. Search and Rescue

no

yes

yes

13. Health Protection

no

yes

yes

14. Health Emergency Response

no

yes

yes

15. Relief Assistance

no

yes

yes

16. Environmental Response

no

yes

yes

17. Economic Recovery

no

no

yes

18. Natural and Cultural Heritage Rehabilitation

no

no

yes

19. Built Recovery

no

no

yes

20. Social Recovery

no

no

yes

21. Assurance and Learning

yes

no

no

 

End notes

[1] “Major emergency” means:

  1. a large or complex emergency (however caused) which
    1. has the potential to cause or is causing loss of life and extensive damage to property, infrastructure or the environment; or
    2. has the potential for adverse consequences for all parts of the Victorian community; or
    3. requires a multi-agency response; or
  2. a Class 1 emergency; or
  3. a Class 2 emergency.