Anonymous ID: 230b4d March 20, 2020, 7:23 a.m. No.8488319   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8358 >>8365 >>8840

>>8488235

I posted bout this 3 times..

almost like it's "invisible" .

 

Rig for Red

Red = Crimson

Sabotage?

Posted yesterday about this Crimson Contagion 2019 b4 this article came out.

 

Operation 'Crimson Contagion' shows how the White House flubbed a test run at handling coronavirus

Thursday March 19, 2020 · 2:45 PM EDT

 

When Trump officials were first moving into the White House after his inauguration, they went through a simulated pandemic that eerily matched the real conditions of COVID-19, including a need for increasing hospital beds, overcoming a shortage of ventilators, and providing a consistent national message. Obviously, any lessons learned in that exercise didn’t stick.

 

And now it appears that wasn’t the only occasion. Because last October—just two months before the first cases of 2019 novel coronavirus appeared—the Department of Health and Human Services conducted a series of exercises about a hypothetical virus that: emerged from China; caused a fever and respiratory illness; was spread around the world by air travel; and generated a global pandemic. And the draft report from that simulation shows exactly what Americans are finding out the hard way—the Trump White House was dangerously unprepared.

 

As The New York Times reports, operation “Crimson Contagion” was actually a series of exercises intended to test every aspect of the government’s response to the outbreak of a novel disease. The “not to be disclosed” report showed the results of that test were nothing short of terrible. Without clear guidance, federal agencies sparred over their roles in fighting the disease. Without advance planning, hospitals and other facilities were short on materials and overrun with cases. Without any coordination from federal offices, states and localities were left on their own when it came to determining things like school closings and other restrictions. The whole thing was a fair description of chaos.

 

Which shows that the exercise was highly effective in predicting how Trump’s White House would react to real-world events, but an absolute failure when it comes to making agencies better prepared. And if it seems like something that happened in October might have been too late to generate the kind of lessons needed for a pandemic that began unfolding just weeks later, Crimson Contagion wasn’t the only such effort. In fact, there have been three such simulations since Trump moved into the White House.

 

Despite going through one of these tests every year, the latest such effort showed:

 

Insufficient funds for responding to a pandemic.

No clear way for states to take advantage of CDC or HHS resources.

No agencies designated to lead various aspects of the crisis.

No clarity on which officials were responsible for responding.

No consistent rules across cities, states, local, tribal, and federal agencies.

No planning for how state and federal agencies switch to working from home.

Overall, the report showed that agencies involved in the exercise provided “inconsistent and inaccurate response guidance and actions to healthcare and public health private sector partners.” And neither state nor federal officials involved were clear on what actions they should take or what information they should relay. It seemed very much like the kind of result that might have been expected from those officials coming in the door and hitting this scenario for the first time in 2017, but not what should have happened three years in.

 

The report also indicated there was confusion around the purpose of daily national reports, which is one problem the real world hasn’t shared … because those reports are all about praising Trump.

 

Maybe the most important results are those in which the real-world results were even worse than the test. The White House was slower to roll out testing, slower to insist on social distancing, slower to call for school closings. What the report said was the federal government needed to do more, and faster. What the Trump White House did when confronted with the real event was less, and slower.

 

But the chaos … they captured that part of the simulation perfectly.

 

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2020/3/19/1929110/-Operation-Crimson-Contagion-shows-how-the-White-House-flub-a-test-run-at-handling-COVID-19

 

Posted full pdf site yesterday 3/19/20

 

https://int.nyt.com/data/documenthelper/6824-2019-10-key-findings-and-after/05bd797500ea55be0724/optimized/full.pdf

Anonymous ID: 230b4d March 20, 2020, 7:43 a.m. No.8488482   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8532

>>8488445

https://www.azdhs.gov/preparedness/emergency-preparedness/#conferences-2019

 

https://www.azdhs.gov/documents/preparedness/emergency-preparedness/conferences/2019/2019-crimson-sate-the-date.pdf

Anonymous ID: 230b4d March 20, 2020, 7:47 a.m. No.8488532   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8488482

We can always see if this pans out:

 

https://azcher.org/powerplay2020/

 

The Arizona Coalition for Healthcare and Emergency Response (AzCHER) is pleased to announce their annual full-scale/functional exercise, Power Play 2020, happening on May 13th. This exercise aims to test the operational capacity of AzCHER to respond during a state-wide emergency or disaster affecting all four coalition regions within the state. Concurrently, the exercise provides an opportunity for members to engage with the coalition and organizations in other regions while meeting exercise requirements. AzCHER Power Play 2020 will enhance critical healthcare collaborators’ and healthcare provider organizations’ preparedness and response to large-scale system disruptions, building resilience in the state’s healthcare system. AzCHER Power Play 2020 will align with the 2020 National Level Exercise (NLE) held in May 2020. The NLE scenario involves a cyber-attack resulting in widespread power outages over California, Southern Nevada, and Arizona.

 

Power Play 2020 Goals

The overarching exercise goal is to provide an operational learning environment for AzCHER member organizations and the coalition itself to:

 

Exercise emergency response plans, policies, and procedures during a prolonged statewide loss of power;

Practice operational interactions among various coalition sectors, including hospitals, long-term care facilities, ambulatory care facilities, home health and hospice organizations, emergency medical services, public health agencies, and tribal health partners;

Assess inter-regional coordination ability and cooperation during a simulated large-scale disaster scenario;

Validate performance of specific health care capabilities and their associated critical tasks; and

Identify priority needs in coalition preparedness activities in order to build upon healthcare system strengths and support improvements in preparedness and response.

Full-Scale vs. Functional Play

AzCHER Power Play 2020 is a full-scale/functional exercise. In the Extent of Play agreement, participants will be able to choose whether they are playing on a full-scale or functional level. A full-scale exercise includes all the components of a functional exercise and adds actual responding units in an interactive manner (“boots on the ground”). A functional exercise generally tests direction, command, and control functions. There are no actual responding units (no “boots on the ground”). More detailed information about the differences between full-scale and functional exercises can be found within the Extent of Play Agreement.

 

Info & Registration

AzCHER Power Play 2020

Date: Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Time: 9:00 am – 4:00 pm (This includes time for exercise play, hotwash, and providing exercise feedback)

Registration Deadline: April 30, 2020