The National Incident Management System (NIMS) guides all levels of government, nongovernmental organizations and the private sector to work together to prevent, protect against, mitigate, respond to and recover from incidents. NIMS provides stakeholders across the whole
community with the shared vocabulary, systems and processes to successfully deliver the capabilities described in the National Preparedness System. NIMS defines operational systems that guide how personnel work together during incidents. Local, state, territorial, and tribal nation jurisdictions are required to adopt NIMS
in order to receive federal Preparedness grants. Find guides and training to help implement. The FEMA Regional NIMS Coordinators are subject matter experts for their state, local, territorial, or tribal nation governments. Find your regional contact. The National Integration Center routinely posts draft guidance and tools for national engagement. Check back here or follow the links in NIMS Alerts for updates.Get Started
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Recent Releases
New and Updated Fire Management & Suppression Resource Types
FEMA published the Fire Management and Suppression resource typing documents. These National Incident Management System (NIMS) Job Titles/Position Qualifications and Resource Typing Definitions provide fire management and suppression support to emergency response and recovery operations.
4/5/22
National Qualification System Implementation Objectives FAQ
The NQS Implementation Objectives FAQ reflects the concepts and principles contained in the NQS doctrine and aim to promote consistency in NQS implementation nationwide. The FAQ is intended for use during planning, preparedness, and training efforts to help organizations and jurisdictions implement NQS.
12/20/21
National Qualification System Implementation Objectives
The NQS Implementation Objectives provide specific benchmarks and example activities for organizations and jurisdictions to use when implementing NQS and when discussing NQS implementation with their partners and sub-jurisdictions.
8/31/21
EOC How-to Quick Reference Guide
This all-hazards how-to guide provides state, local, tribal and territorial (SLTT) jurisdictions with information and guidance related to setting up, operating, maintaining and deactivating an EOC that successfully meets the jurisdiction’s needs.
8/3/21
Building Private-Public Partnerships Guide
This guide provides recommendations and resources for a jurisdiction to establish and maintain a P3 to help coordinate mitigation, response and recovery planning and preparedness.
7/20/21
We will be performing scheduled maintenance on Thursday, November 17, 2022 at 7:00 AM ET. Service is expected to be restored by 10:00 AM ET. However, this could run over. During this time Independent Study exams, Online Admissions, NETC Transportation, IMDA, STAR and the EMI Student Portal will not be available. Please contact us if you experience any issues outside of this maintenance window.
Independent Study
IS-100.C: Introduction to the Incident Command System, ICS 100
Course Date
6/25/2018
Course Overview
ICS 100, Introduction to the Incident Command System, introduces the Incident Command System (ICS) and provides the foundation for higher level ICS training. This course describes the history, features and principles, and organizational structure of the Incident Command System. It also explains the relationship between ICS and the National Incident Management System (NIMS). The Emergency Management Institute developed its ICS courses collaboratively with:
- National Wildfire Coordinating Group (NWCG)
- U.S. Department of Agriculture
- United States Fire Administration’s National Fire Programs Branch
Course Objectives:
At the completion of this course, you should be able to:
- Explain the principles and basic structure of the Incident Command System (ICS).
- Describe the NIMS management characteristics that are the foundation of the ICS.
- Describe the ICS functional areas and the roles of the Incident Commander and Command Staff.
- Describe the General Staff roles within ICS.
- Identify how NIMS management characteristics apply to ICS for a variety of roles and discipline areas.
Primary Audience
The target audience includes persons involved with emergency planning, and response or recovery efforts.
Prerequisites
None
CEUs:
0.2
Course Length:
2 hours
Take Final Exam
- Please note that the is program now requires a fema sid to be used instead of your ssn. if you do not have a sid, register for one here.
- Take Final Exam Online
- Test questions are scrambled to protect test integrity