Training Day 6

Other NIMS Structures & Interconnectivity

MAC Groups, JIS, and How It All Connects

Learning Objectives

  • Identify the roles and responsibilities of the Multiagency Coordination Group (MAC Group)
  • Describe the Joint Information System (JIS)
  • Describe the interconnectivity of NIMS Command and Coordination structures
25 minutes

The Complete Picture

Four Structures, One System

You've learned about ICS and EOCs. Now let's complete the picture with MAC Groups and the Joint Information System, then see how all four structures work together.

ICS

On-scene management of incidents

EOC

Off-site support for on-scene operations

MAC Groups

Policy guidance and scarce resource allocation (NEW)

JIS

Coordinated public information across all structures (NEW)

Multiagency Coordination Groups (MAC Groups)

Policy-Level Coordination

MAC Group - Multiagency Coordination Group

A group of administrators, executives, or their designees who provide policy guidance and prioritize resources during incidents.

Real World Example

During a major wildfire, the MAC Group might include the county administrator, fire chief, sheriff, public health director, and representatives from utilities and the Red Cross. They make policy decisions about evacuations, resource priorities, and public messaging direction.

Elected and Appointed Officials

Leadership at the Policy Level

Elected and appointed officials (governors, mayors, city managers, county commissioners) are key players in incident management.

Our elected and senior appointed officials have first a moral obligation to do whatever is possible to provide for the well-being, the welfare if you will, of the citizens that elected them and entrusted them with their well-being.

— Steve Grainer, Former Chief, Incident Management Programs, VA Dept. of Fire Programs

Voices of Experience: Elected Officials

1:28

Leadership Responsibility

  • Policy-level decisions
  • Public welfare
  • Official accountability

Moral Obligation

Steve Grainer, Former Chief, Incident Management Programs, VA Dept. of Fire Programs

NIMS Familiarity

  • Core reasoning
  • Primary components
  • Key concepts

Public Welfare

Curry Mayer, Former Training & Exercise Chief, Governor's Office of Emergency Services (CA)

Same System Everywhere

  • Rural to urban, same structure
  • Scalable and consistent
  • Officials know what to expect

Key Takeaway

  • Officials must understand NIMS
  • Public welfare is paramount
  • Leadership enables response
Slide 1 of 6
Use play button or spacebar to start. Arrow keys to navigate slides. Press C for captions, M to mute, F for fullscreen.

Knowledge Check

Which of the following statements are correct about MAC Groups? Select all that apply.

Joint Information System (JIS)

One Voice for Public Information

JIS - Joint Information System

A system that integrates incident information and public affairs into a unified organization that provides consistent, coordinated, accurate, accessible, timely, and complete information to the public and stakeholders.

In a major incident, there might be dozens of agencies involved. JIS ensures they all deliver the same message to the public - no conflicting information, no confusion.

PIO and JIC

Two key elements support the JIS:

Public Information Officer (PIO)

A key member of ICS and EOC organizations responsible for public information.

Key Functions

  • Advising the IC, Unified Command, or EOC director on public information
  • Gathering, verifying, coordinating, and disseminating accurate information
  • Handling inquiries from media, public, and elected officials
  • Providing emergency public information and warnings
  • Conducting rumor monitoring and response

Joint Information Center (JIC)

A central location that houses JIS operations and where public information staff perform their functions.

  • Normally, an incident should have a single JIC
  • Multiple JICs can be established if necessary
  • Brings together PIOs from all involved agencies

The JIS Information Cycle

  1. Gathering complete information
  2. Verifying information for accuracy
  3. Coordinating with other public information personnel
  4. Disseminating consistent, accurate, timely information

Explore the JIS Information Cycle

Click on each step in the cycle to learn what happens at that stage and why it matters for effective public information.

Click on each step to explore the JIS Information Cycle.

Voices of Experience: Public Information

2:26

Public Information

  • Coordinated messaging
  • Public safety
  • Single voice

Coordinated Messaging

Curry Mayer, Former Training & Exercise Chief, Governor's Office of Emergency Services (CA)

One Message

  • Each agency has PIO role
  • Come together for coordination
  • Single unified message

Command Priority

Bill Campbell, Former Director of Training, NY State Emergency Management Office

Higher Than Ever

  • Greater importance now
  • Social media era
  • Consistent messaging critical

Single Point of Contact

Daryl Lee Spiewak, Former Emergency Programs Manager, Brazos River Authority, TX

Public Expectations

  • What we're doing
  • Why we're doing it
  • What public should do

Public Safety

Ron Britton, Former NIMS Coordinator, FEMA Region 10

Centralized System

  • Consistent message
  • Avoid confusion
  • JIS coordination

Key Takeaway

  • One message, many voices
  • Coordinated through JIS
  • Public safety depends on it
Slide 1 of 10
Use play button or spacebar to start. Arrow keys to navigate slides. Press C for captions, M to mute, F for fullscreen.

Knowledge Check

Which of the following are supporting elements of the JIS? Select all that apply.

NIMS Interconnectivity

How It All Works Together

NIMS structures don't operate in isolation. They're interconnected, with information and coordination flowing between them.

NIMS Command and Coordination Structures diagram showing MAC Group, EOC, and ICS with JIS spanning across all three. MAC Group provides policy guidance and scarce resource allocation. EOC provides off-site support for on-scene ICS operations. ICS manages on-scene incidents. JIS integrates incident information and public affairs across all structures.
NIMS Command and Coordination Structures Interconnectivity

When an incident occurs or threatens:

  1. Local emergency personnel manage response using NIMS principles and ICS
  2. If large or complex, local EOCs activate to support on-scene operations
  3. EOCs receive senior-level guidance from MAC Groups
  4. A JIC manages JIS operations for coordinated public messaging across all levels
  5. If resources aren't available locally, mutual aid provides resources from other jurisdictions, states, or federal sources

ICS ↔ EOC

EOC supports ICS with resources, coordination, information

MAC Group ↔ EOC

MAC Group provides policy guidance to EOC

MAC Group ↔ ICS

MAC Group provides policy guidance on resource priorities

JIS ↔ All

JIS coordinates public information across ICS, EOC, and MAC Group

Explore NIMS Command & Coordination Structures

Click on each structure to learn how it connects to the others. Explore all four nodes to understand how NIMS coordinates incident management at every level.

Click on any structure below to explore its role and connections.

Federal Support

When Does the Federal Government Get Involved?

Most incidents are resolved using local capabilities. Larger incidents use mutual aid from neighbors and states.

Federal Involvement

Triggers:

  • State governors or tribal leaders request federal assistance (and it's approved)
  • Federal interests are involved
  • Statute or regulation authorizes or requires it

Typical Role: Supporting role - providing assistance to affected state, tribe, or territory

Federal Takes the Lead When:

  • Incidents on federal property
  • Federal primary jurisdiction (terrorist attack, major oil spill)
Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act

Provides federal assistance when the President declares an emergency or major disaster

Knowledge Check

Question 1 of 2

When an incident occurs, local emergency personnel manage response using which of the following?

Training Day 6 Complete

Today you completed your understanding of NIMS Command and Coordination structures and learned how they all work together.

Key Takeaways

MAC Groups

Policy-level bodies that provide guidance, prioritize resources, and enable cooperative multi-agency decisions.

Joint Information System (JIS)

Ensures consistent, coordinated public information across all NIMS structures through PIOs and JICs.

Interconnectivity

ICS on scene → EOC supports → MAC Group provides policy → JIS coordinates public messaging across all.

Federal Role

Usually supporting state/local efforts; only leading when federal interests or jurisdiction are involved.

The Four NIMS Command and Coordination Structures:

  • ICS: On-scene incident management
  • EOC: Off-site coordination and support
  • MAC Groups: Policy guidance and resource prioritization
  • JIS: Coordinated public information

Up Next

Training Day 7: Communications and Information Management

Next, you'll learn the principles and practices that keep everyone connected and informed during incidents.