Haw. Code R. § 11-19-3 - Types of Emergencies
(a) "Type A"
emergencies are major state or county disasters and include: nuclear disasters,
tsunamis, earthquakes, volcano eruptions, floods, hurricanes and tornadoes.
Type A disasters will most likely be characterized by:
(1) Relatively widespread disruption of many
basic public services in the affected areas;
(2) A significant number of people affected
and, consequently, a significant extent and degree of public health risk -
requiring greater assistance from, and cooperation with, other governmental
agencies; or
(3) Major strains on
available resources - with greater likelihood that assistance priorities and
allocation of DOH resources will be set by agencies other than DOH (e.g.
governor's office, mayors' offices, civil defense agencies).
(b) "Type B" emergencies are
limited situations affecting only water systems and include: drought, major
contamination of a system's basic water source, major destruction or impairment
of a system's physical facilities which substantially interferes with quantity
and quality of water delivered to the public. Type B emergencies will most
likely be characterized by:
(1) An impact
essentially limited to the water system and not directly impacting other public
services;
(2) A more limited number
of affected people, but nonetheless a possibly high degree of health
risk;
(3) More flexibility
available to department of health in setting its assistance priorities and
access by department of health and water supplier to other resources for
assistance.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.