because
Incident management personnel organized according to function (i.e., Operations Section Chief, Planning Section Chief, Logistics Section Chief, and Finance/Administration Section Chief) and who report directly to the Incident Commander
General Sherman incident happened in 1866.
William Howe was the commander of the British forces who succeeded General Thomas Gage.
The major leaders in the Revolution are British: General Sir Henry Clinton, Commander in Chief, North America. General William Howe, Commander in Chief, British Forces. General Cornwallis. American: General Washington, Commander in Chief, Continental Army. General Rochambeau, Commander in Chief, French Expeditionary Forces. Major General Lafayette. Major General Nathanael Greene, Commander Continental Army of the South. Major General Benedict Arnold. Major General Horatio Gates.
Yes, General P.G.T. Beauregerd was a Confederate commander during the American Civil War.
The only position needed in EVERY incident is an "incident commander". All other command staff, general staff and subsidiary positions would be filled as necessary. Under HAZMAT regulations in the USA, an "incident safety officer" is also required when there is a HAZMAT incident, off-loading these duties from the Incident Commander.
Incident command, General staff, Branch directors.... not PIO
Incident Commander
Incident commander, General Staff Chiefs and Branch Directors may have deputies:An Incident Commander may have a Deputy ICGeneral Staff: A Section Chief may have a Deputy ChiefA Branch Director may have a Deputy DirectorOther ICS positions may have "assistants", "managers" or "coordinators" assigned to support the leader of the organizational element.Within a Strike Team or Task Force, smaller units may be administered by a "boss".
Yes, under ICS, there is always an incident commander (or a unified command) to which the operations section chief reports.
Incident management personnel organized according to function (i.e., Operations Section Chief, Planning Section Chief, Logistics Section Chief, and Finance/Administration Section Chief) and who report directly to the Incident Commander
A complex incident requires a complex ICS structure, i.e., one in which all command staff and general staff positions are filled.
The Incident Commander or a member of his general staff should but, the Planning Section Chief can act as the facilitator.
Incident management personnel organized according to function (i.e., Operations Section Chief, Planning Section Chief, Logistics Section Chief, and Finance/Administration Section Chief) and who report directly to the Incident Commander
Incident management personnel organized according to function (i.e., Operations Section Chief, Planning Section Chief, Logistics Section Chief, and Finance/Administration Section Chief) and who report directly to the Incident Commander
Incident management personnel organized according to function (i.e., Operations Section Chief, Planning Section Chief, Logistics Section Chief, and Finance/Administration Section Chief) and who report directly to the Incident Commander
General Sherman incident happened in 1866.