7.1 Institutional Base for Training:
Disaster management training, like any other form of
continuing education, is an ongoing process. Officials move on to new
appointments; others taking their places need to be trained. Trainers themselves
have to be kept up to date, to refresh their knowledge, lest they become out of
touch with realities of disaster and their teaching becomes remote and
irrelevant. Ad hoc programmes lack continuity, have no institutional
memory and are denied the security of ongoing budgetary provisions.
Brian Ward
Many training programmes are initiated by a whole group of
enthusiastic and concerned individuals, if not by one energetic person. Often,
the institutional base for training is established after a few ad hoc workshops.
The continuity of these programmes, however, depends upon rapid
institutionalisation of training.
There can be different homes for training. The
appropriate option will vary from country to country, organisation to
organisation, depending upon the existing organisational structure of disaster
management, availability of resources etc. The possible options can be broadly
classified into three approaches:
·
Centralised
· De-centralised
· Distributed
Centralised - This approach involves a
central unit (e.g. ministry, department, training centre, training
section) for NGO implementation of the training strategy, co-ordination and
management of all training activities.
Training policy and approach are decided centrally and all
training requirements are processed via this unit, even if the
actual training is carried out locally or through distant learning.
This approach enables the consistency and quality of training to be controlled,
and ensures that all training is designed and produced using the appropriate
methodologies.
De-centralised - This approach places
training units where they are needed (e.g. in line ministries,
relevant departments, local offices, local Red Cross/Red Crescents) specific
needs are met directly and units provide the training resources.
There can be a central policy unit agreeing upon strategy and
co-ordinating diverse training units. Alternatively, each unit may
have autonomy. In this approach, maintaining standards can be difficult. There
is also a risk of effort being duplicated and deviations from the desired
direction. On the other hand specific needs can be more appropriately met.
Distributed - The distributed approach
combines the two previous approaches. A central unit provides
resources, co-ordination and management, which are consistent and of high
quality. De-centralised units decide on the training needs and
implement programmes.
The following are the possible centralised, de-centralised and
distributed institutional bases for national training:
One ministry/ department responsibility
· increases control
through a central power
· reduces
co-ordination time
· rapid decision
making
· can create inter-ministerial
friction
· may not safeguard sense of
belonging to the programme amongst all parties
(Example: Federal Emergency Management Agency, USA)
Specialised training centre (as a separate entity; within
a ministry or a department)
· can be effective
in countries of frequent disaster event
· can
develop training skills, train trainers as an integral part of its
responsibilities
· if a separate entity, can
be above internal politics
· creates
institutional memory more easily
· may not
have decision-making powers
(Examples: Natural Disaster Training Centre [AFEM] within the
Ministry of Public Works and Resettlement, Turkey; Australian Counter Disaster
College; Indonesian Disaster Management Centre)
Existing training centre(s) extending
responsibility
· can be effective
in countries of less frequent disaster event
· benefits from an existing training
expertise
· benefits from the existing
administrative experience
· shares resources,
therefore can be run cheaply
· provides
in-house, experienced organisers for training
· might have regional branches to duplicate
programmes
· may not have decision-making
powers
(Example: SENA regional, vocational training centres in
Colombia)
Interdepartmental/interministerial training
committee
· reduces friction
amongst various ministries and departments
·
increases participation in the programmes
·
covers decision-making and programme implementation under the same
umbrella
· provides better financial and
human resources
· provides a
multidisciplinary approach
· co-ordination
may become a problem
· lines of
responsibility may not be clear
·
administrative problems may get into the way of the actual training
(Example: Philippines programme, see the Appendix for
details)
Consortium of representatives from ministries, agencies,
academia, local authorities etc.
· provides wider
representation
· creates a sense of
belonging
· increases participation in
the programme
· provides better financial and
human resources
· helps to establish disaster
management networking
· avoids duplication of
efforts
· can create conflict of training
priorities
· decision-making can be
problematic
· co-ordination and
administration can be time consuming
· line
of responsibilities can be unclear
In some situations more than one model might be operating
simultaneously. For example, training decisions can be taken by a
consortium or a committee but the implementation of
training can be carried out by one ministry or a specialised training centre.
Insofar as the broader training is concerned with service to
staff colleges, public administration and management schools, relevant higher
education institutes can provide, at a small cost, an appropriate arena where
the idea of disaster management can be promoted. This idea has been put forward
several times (UNDRO [1975], Ritchie [1976] and Ward [1990]) but it has yet to
be taken on by national governments.
The role of international and regionally based centres can also
be crucial in initiating and supporting national programmes by:
· training the cadre
of national resource staff
· establishing an
international forum to promote disaster management networking
· providing assistance in developing and sustaining
national programmes
Already, the ADPC in Bangkok and CARICOM in the Caribbean are
successfully serving their regions.
Some of the options for an institutional base in training have
been operational. There can be lessons to learn from their experiences but there
is no formula for establishing a training base. Each option has its advantages
and disadvantages. The appropriate approach should be to identify the system
which:
· satisfies the
objectives in the best manner
· creates
co-operation among the agents of disaster management
· increases commitment by all parties
· reduces political friction
· guarantees better financial and human resource
input
· is sustainable over a long period of
time
· safeguards practical/operational links
with various levels (national, local and
international)