Emergency Operations Plan & Task Organization
A summary of the Marion County Emergency Operations Plan (EOP) and the EMA task organization. The EOP is the County's all-hazards framework for preparing, responding to, and recovering from emergencies and disasters. This page describes authorities, the concept of operations, activation levels, ESF assignments, and the staffing structure that carries them out.
1. Purpose & Scope
The Marion County EOP establishes the policies, organization, and procedures used by County government and partner agencies to prepare for, respond to, and recover from emergencies and disasters affecting Marion County, Illinois. It is an all-hazards plan covering natural events (severe weather, tornado, flood, winter storm, drought, wildland fire), technological hazards (hazmat release, pipeline failure, utility interruption, cyber incident), and human-caused incidents (mass casualty, civil unrest, terrorism).
The plan applies to all incorporated municipalities and unincorporated areas within Marion County (Salem, Centralia, Sandoval, Patoka, Odin, Kinmundy, Iuka, Alma, Wamac, Junction City, Kell, Walnut Hill, Vernon) and to County departments, fire protection districts, EMS providers, hospitals, schools, utilities, and mutual-aid partners that operate within the County.
Objectives
- Save lives, protect property, and minimize the impact of emergencies on Marion County residents and infrastructure.
- Provide a unified command-and-control structure compatible with NIMS / ICS for any size incident.
- Coordinate response with adjacent counties, IEMA, FEMA Region V, and federal partners.
- Sustain critical government services during and after an incident.
- Support an orderly transition from response to recovery.
2. Authorities & References
The Marion County EOP is developed and maintained under the following statutory authorities:
- Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act (20 ILCS 3305) — establishes county EMAs, EMA Coordinator role, and accreditation requirements.
- Illinois Emergency Operations Plan — the State plan into which county EOPs nest.
- Marion County Ordinance creating the Marion County Emergency Management Agency — local enabling authority. VERIFY ORD #
- Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (42 USC 5121 et seq.) — federal disaster assistance.
- National Response Framework and National Incident Management System (NIMS) — federal doctrine for incident management.
- Homeland Security Presidential Directive 5 (HSPD-5) — NIMS adoption.
- Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA / SARA Title III) — LEPC authority for hazmat planning.
- Illinois Open Meetings Act and Freedom of Information Act — governance of EMA Sub-Committee meetings and records.
3. Hazard Analysis Summary
Marion County faces a recurring set of hazards driven by its geography, climate, and infrastructure. The summary below is grounded in the County's Historical Data and Risk Reports compiled by Brooke Frederick (PDF source →) and forms the planning baseline for the EOP. The full Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment (HIRA) is maintained as an annex.
Federal Disaster Declarations — Marion County
Six federally-declared disasters have impacted Marion County since 1990:
- COVID-19 pandemic — declared 2020-01-20
- Tornado — 2022-04-21
- Severe storms and flooding — 2011-04-19
- Severe winter storm and snowstorm — 2011-01-31
- Severe storm — 1996-04-18
- Severe storm — 1990-05-15
Primary natural hazards
- Tornadoes. Approximately 32 tornadoes have touched down in Marion County between 1922 and 2026 — 7 EF0, 19 EF1, 5 EF2, and 1 EF3. Highest concentrations occurred 1956–1960 and 1973–1976. The most recent federally-declared tornado event was 2022-04-21. Detailed track data on file with the National Weather Service.
- Severe thunderstorms. Marion County sits in the central Illinois severe-weather corridor. As of the 2026 baseline, the County recorded its 27th wettest March on record over the past 132 years (+1.55 inches above normal). Wind-related risk is currently rated minor, but severe-weather frequency is increasing year over year.
- Flooding. The County has logged 34 flood-related events since 1996, including 31 flash flood events resulting in 5 fatalities and total reported property damage of $127,000. The stream network (Skillet Fork, Crooked Creek, East Fork Kaskaskia tributaries) produces both flash and riverine flooding. The County is mapped on FEMA NFHL effective 2011-11-16 across 12 panels covering Salem, Centralia, Sandoval, Patoka, Odin, Kinmundy, Iuka, and Alma.
- Severe winter weather. The 24-hour snowfall record stands at 19.7 inches on 1971-04-06. Recent winter weather events have included polar vortex intrusions, ice storms, and significant snowfall — creating transportation, power, and shelter demands. The 2011-01-31 winter storm was federally declared.
- Drought and extreme heat. 2026 is currently the 39th driest year-to-date over the past 132 years. Multi-year drought cycles affect agricultural producers and rural water systems.
- Wildland fire. Approximately 10,954 properties (38% of the county) are at risk of wildfire over the next 30 years; the County is rated at moderate wildfire risk despite no historical record of wildfire events. Stubble burning and rural grassland fires occur. NIFC perimeter feeds are monitored for IL and adjacent states.
- Earthquake. Marion Co sits between two active intraplate seismic zones — the Wabash Valley Seismic Zone (WVSZ) ~50–100 mi east and the New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ) ~135–200 mi south. USGS NSHM 2023 places the county in the 0.15–0.20g PGA hazard band (2% in 50 yr). Modeled MMI from a repeat M7.5 NMSZ event = VI–VII. Most likely near-term hazard is a moderate (M5–6) WVSZ event. See the dedicated Earthquake page for hazard breakdown, monitoring, and mitigation. Layered exposures: coal mine subsidence (Centralia/Wamac/Sandoval corridor), liquefaction (Crooked Creek + Skillet Fork + Salem Creek alluvium), and bridge/pipeline secondary hazards.
Primary technological hazards
- Patoka petroleum hub. Marion County hosts terminals for Phillips 66, Energy Transfer (LP), Marathon Pipe Line LLC, and Enterprise Products Partners. Patoka is one of the highest-volume crude / NGL pipeline crossroads in the central United States. Pipeline release is the County's highest-consequence technological hazard.
- Rail. Canadian National (CN) mainline through Centralia and a CN segment through Salem carry hazmat traffic. Historical incidents include the Tonti train wreck (1971) and the Iuka train derailment (1972).
- Highway hazmat. US-50, IL-37, and I-57 (just west) move hazmat through and around the County. Varied transportation accidents along the interstate involving semi-trucks carrying harmful chemicals are a recurring threat.
- Fixed facility hazmat. SARA Tier II reporters within the County. LEPC ROSTER
- Utility interruption. Ameren Illinois electric and natural gas; municipal water in Salem and Centralia.
- Cyber. County networks, water/wastewater SCADA, 911 ETSB systems.
Special populations and critical facilities
- Centralia Correctional Center — IDOC medium-security, ~1,000+ inmates, 9330 Shattuc Rd. Sheltering and evacuation considerations are unique.
- SSM Health St. Mary's Hospital (Centralia) and Salem Township Hospital — primary acute-care assets in Marion County. Both report to the IDPH EMS Region 5 RHCC at SSM Good Samaritan (Mt. Vernon, Jefferson Co) during surge activations.
- ⚠ Trauma desert. Marion County and the rest of IDPH EMS Region 5 contain zero Level 1 or Level 2 trauma centers. Closest Level 2 is SIH Memorial Carbondale (~55 mi south); closest Level 1 are Springfield Memorial (~70 mi north), Barnes-Jewish (~80 mi west, St. Louis), or SLU Hospital (~80 mi west, St. Louis). Air medical activation (Air Evac Mt. Vernon, Air Evac Marion, ARCH Sparta) is operationally critical for major trauma response.
- Schools — multiple districts across Salem, Centralia, Sandoval, Odin, Kinmundy, and rural townships.
- Long-term care, assisted living, and home-bound residents. Coordinated through Marion County Health Department and the IDPH EMS Region 5 hospital coalition (RHCC: SSM Good Samaritan, Mt. Vernon).
Historical figures sourced from Historical Data and Risk Reports, Brooke Frederick — view source PDF. Tornado track and intensity data: National Weather Service.
4. Concept of Operations
Marion County operates under the National Incident Management System (NIMS) using Incident Command System (ICS) doctrine. Incidents are managed at the lowest competent level. As an incident grows in scale, complexity, or duration, support escalates from local jurisdiction → County EMA → adjacent counties via mutual aid (e.g., MABAS for fire, ILEAS for law enforcement) → IEMA → FEMA.
Phases
- Prevention / Preparedness. Planning, training, exercises, hazard mitigation, public education, equipment readiness, mutual-aid agreements, LEPC engagement.
- Response. Notification, activation, ICS organization, operations, public information, demobilization criteria.
- Recovery. Damage assessment, debris management, individual and public assistance, restoration of services, financial reconciliation.
- Mitigation. Post-incident analysis, hazard mitigation projects, plan updates.
Coordination structure
- Incident Command (IC) on scene runs tactical operations. The first arriving qualified responder establishes command and is relieved as appropriate.
- Marion County EOC activates to support IC with resources, information, multi-agency coordination, and policy decisions. The EOC does not supersede the IC.
- Unified Command is used when an incident crosses jurisdictional or functional lines (e.g., a Patoka pipeline release involving local fire, MCSO, IEPA, PHMSA, and the operator).
- Multi-Agency Coordination with adjacent counties, IEMA, and federal partners runs in parallel to on-scene command.
5. EOC Activation Levels
The Marion County EOC at 1999 S Marion St, Salem activates at one of three levels based on incident scope. Activation is ordered by the EMA Director, the County Board Chair, or the senior elected official available.
6. Task Organization
The Marion County EMA — OHS task organization is structured as a single department under a Director with two Deputy Directors, an Operations Command of three Captains, a Division Command of five Lieutenants, and three operational Divisions (Traffic Incident Management, Rescue Operations, and Drone Response Team). A dedicated EOC Operations group, a Finance Team, and a network of Liaisons (medical, police/fire/EMS, public works/utilities, city/town/village, long-term recovery) round out the structure.
Position holders below are pulled from the current MCEMA Org Chart 2 workbook (sheet "Org Chart 2"; the prior "Org Chart 1" is marked DNU — Do Not Use). Personnel and unit IDs use the 90-XX series: 90-01–90-11 for senior, operations, and division command; 90-20–90-49 for division members; 90-50–90-59 for EOC Operations; 90-60–90-72 and 90-87 for field vehicles and special equipment; 90-90–90-94 for the Finance Team. Direct cell phone numbers and personal emails are restricted to authenticated EMA personnel via Cloudflare Access on the gated Staff Directory.
6.1 Executive Leadership
6.2 Senior Command — Director & Deputies
6.3 Operations Command — Captains
Three Operations Captains span the field side. Captain Burner commands Division 1 (T.I.M.); Captain Montgomery commands the Rescue Division covering both Division 2 (Rescue Operations) and Division 3 (Drone Response Team). The third Captain seat is reserved for a future regional assignment.
6.3a Division Command — Lieutenants
Five Lieutenant seats. Lt. Wilkins commands Division 1 (T.I.M.). The Division 2 (Rescue Operations) and Division 3 (Drone Response Team) Lieutenant seats are TBD. Two additional Lieutenant seats (90-10, 90-11) are reserved for future unit expansion.
6.4 Operational Divisions
The EMA fields three operational Divisions. Division 1 (T.I.M.) and the Rescue Division (Divisions 2 & 3) are commanded by the two active Operations Captains; Lieutenants lead each individual Division. Division 1 members are marked with ** where they hold a primary EOC seat and serve T.I.M. on a PRN (as-needed) basis.
- Dakota Hires90-22
- Andrew Kendrick Sr.90-24
- Sammy Karrick90-25
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- ** Terry Mulvany (PRN, EOC 90-52)PRN
- ** Tim Tucker (PRN, EOC 90-53)PRN
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- Clint Wolfe90-20
- Jagger Fenton90-21
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
- VACANT—
6.4a EOC Operations Group
Dedicated EOC manning, reporting, call-log keeping during activations, social-media updates, and PIO support. The EOC Manager seat (90-50) and the deputy seat (90-51) are open. Several EOC members are dual-hatted as PRN T.I.M. unit members (flagged **) under §6.4.
- VACANT90-51
- ** Terry Mulvany90-52
- ** Tim Tucker90-53
- Sheila Mulvany90-54
- Sammy Karrick90-55
- Andrew Kendrick Jr.90-56
- VACANT90-57
- VACANT90-58
- VACANT90-59
6.5 Liaisons & Support Roles
- Bill ThouvininMarion County Health Department
- Suzie LeutySalem Township Hospital
- VACANTCentralia Hospital (SSM St. Mary's)
- Assigned per incidentCoordination with MCSO, municipal PDs, Salem & Centralia FD, township FPDs, UMR / Salem Twp Hospital EMS
- Alex KrekeMarion County Highway Engineer (ESF-1 / ESF-3 lead) · 618-548-3887
- Utilities — assigned per incidentAmeren IL · municipal water (ESF-12)
- Assigned per incidentSalem, Centralia, Sandoval, Patoka, Odin, Kinmundy, Alma, Iuka, Kell, Walnut Hill, Vernon, Junction City
- VACANTID 90-90
- VACANTID 90-91
- VACANTID 90-92
- VACANTID 90-93
- VACANTID 90-94
- Members TBDStood up after Stafford Act declaration
6.6 Rank Structure & Insignia
Marion County EMA uses a 10-grade department rank structure. Personnel IDs use the 90-XX series: command staff in 90-01–90-11, Division members in 90-20–90-49, EOC Operations in 90-50–90-59, and Finance Team in 90-90–90-94. Vehicle/equipment IDs share the same series — command vehicles match their position number (e.g. Director Strong drives vehicle 90-01); field vehicles use 90-60+.
6.7 Vehicle Numbers & Assignments
Department vehicles and special equipment use the same 90-XX series as personnel. Command vehicles match the position number; field units and equipment occupy 90-60 through 90-72 and 90-87. Most field-vehicle assignments are currently TBD pending the fleet inventory rewrite.
90-XX series under Org Chart 2. The Equipment Tracker at /admin/equipment.html reflects the new numbering for active items; legacy asset tags on physical equipment will be re-stenciled during the next scheduled fleet PMCS cycle.
7. Emergency Support Function (ESF) Assignments
Marion County aligns its functional response with the 15 federal ESFs. Lead and support agencies below are the planning baseline; specific assignments may shift by incident.
8. Direction, Control & Coordination
- Local emergency declaration. The Marion County Board Chair (or designee) issues a local declaration when an incident exceeds routine response capability. The declaration triggers expanded purchasing authority and is required to request State assistance under 20 ILCS 3305.
- State support. The EMA Director coordinates State requests through the IEMA 24-hour Duty Officer at 1-800-782-7860. State activation supports county requests for SEOC resources, IL National Guard, IDOT mutual aid, and IDPH coalition support.
- Federal support. Through IEMA, requests escalate to FEMA Region V (Chicago) for Stafford Act assistance, ESF support, or a Presidential Disaster Declaration.
- Mutual aid. Pre-existing agreements include MABAS (fire), ILEAS (LE), IPWMAN (public works), and IPHMAN (public health). EMA-to-EMA mutual aid runs through IEMA's IL EMAC framework.
- Evacuation transportation. The largest single passenger fleet in Marion Co is school-district buses (80+ buses across the county districts) — the realistic activation window is after-school / weekend / summer. Wheelchair-accessible and ADA-required transport runs through South Central Illinois Mass Transit District (SCIMTD). Non-ambulatory medical evacuation (LTC, hospital, home oxygen-dependent) goes through UMR + LifeStar via Marion 911 dispatch with MABAS Region 9 EMS branch surge. Long-distance rail evacuation north (Chicago) or south (Memphis / New Orleans) is available via Amtrak Centralia on the City of New Orleans / Illini / Saluki lines. State-activated heavy transport (5-ton trucks, buses, aviation) requested through IEMA Duty Officer (1-800-782-7860). Full asset/contact roster: Contacts § Mass Transit & Evacuation Transportation.
- Warming / cooling center transportation. When centers are activated by EMA + Salvation Army (Centralia) / Red Cross, transit-dependent residents are shuttled by SCIMTD and (after-hours / surge) school district buses. Statewide referral for currently-open centers: dial 2-1-1. Vulnerable-population outreach (LTC + home-bound + dialysis + senior registry) coordinated through Marion County Health Dept and the Area Agency on Aging.
- Local tactical (SWAT). Marion County is a member of the South Central Regional SRT, a multi-county special response team commanded by Chief Jamie Ramsey (Central City PD). Marion Co member agencies: Centralia PD, Salem PD, Central City PD, Wamac PD. Washington Co member agencies: Washington County Sheriff's Office, Nashville PD, Okawville PD. Centralia PD also lists a Special Task Force Team in its recruiting. ISP Troop 9 has SWAT at troop level. FBI HRT is the federal escalation path.
- ILSOS Police specialized mutual aid. ILSOS Police has Bomb Squad, SWMD Tactical Support, and Statewide Task Force assets in the county. To request assistance of these assets after hours, contact the ILSOS Police PIU (Police Inquiry Unit).
- Continuity of Government. Lines of succession for the EMA Director, County Board Chair, and Sheriff are maintained as a separate annex. RESTRICTED
9. Communications
- Primary radio. Marion County operates on local public-safety frequencies coordinated through the 9-1-1 / ETSB. STARCOM21 (state interop) provides cross-discipline and cross-jurisdiction interoperability.
- NIMS-compliant plain language. No 10-codes during multi-agency operations.
- Public alerting. NWS LSX issues watches/warnings for ILZ070; the County uses the IPAWS Wireless Emergency Alert (WEA) framework via authorized originators (IEMA / NWS); siren activation is at the discretion of Salem, Centralia, and Sandoval police/fire as configured.
- Situational awareness. Live operations, road closures, NWS alerts, and NIFC fire perimeters are posted to the Marion County EMA Operations Map at mcema.us/map.
- EOC backup comms. ARES/RACES amateur radio support for degraded communications, coordinated through the ARRL Illinois Section (no standalone Marion County, IL ARES group is currently active). Local interest contact: MCEMA via crose@marionco.illinois.gov.
10. Administration, Finance & Logistics
- Records. All incident-related expenditures, decisions, and personnel time are documented for state and federal reimbursement. ICS Form 214 (activity log), Form 213 (general message), and Form 218 (support vehicle inventory) are the standard recordkeeping forms.
- Cost tracking. The Finance / Admin Section Chief tracks costs against the local declaration and prepares Public Assistance documentation if a Stafford Act declaration follows.
- Procurement. Emergency procurement follows County purchasing policy with declaration-triggered exemptions. Sole-source justifications are documented contemporaneously.
- Volunteers. Spontaneous volunteers are managed through the Logistics Section in coordination with American Red Cross and Salvation Army to ensure liability coverage and credentialing.
- Donations. In-kind donations are managed through ESF-6 partners; cash donations are routed to designated 501(c)(3) partners, not to the County.
11. Plan Maintenance & Training
- Annual review. The EMA Director conducts an annual review of the EOP and presents updates to the Marion County Board EMA Sub-Committee for adoption.
- Trigger-based update. The plan is updated after any incident-driven after-action review, after major staffing changes, or after a change in adjacent-county or State plans that affects mutual aid.
- Training. EOC staff complete NIMS / ICS training appropriate to their role:
- All EOC personnel: ICS-100, IS-700.
- Section Chiefs and Command Staff: ICS-200, ICS-300, IS-800.
- EMA Director / Deputy: ICS-400, EOC Skill-Set training, position-specific FEMA EMI courses.
- Exercises. Marion County participates in tabletop, functional, and full-scale exercises in coordination with IEMA, neighboring counties, and HSEEP cycles.
- Public review. Non-restricted portions of the EOP are made available for public review upon request consistent with Illinois FOIA. Restricted annexes (continuity of government, security plans, hazmat target lists) are exempt.
12. Cross-References
- Marion County EMA Operations Map — live situational awareness layer for the ConOps and Information & Planning section.
- Public Safety Contact Roster — agency main lines, 24/7 hazmat hotlines, mutual-aid partners.
- Tools & Resources — CISA, FEMA, NWS, IEMA, BHA REACH parcels, Hazus, NIFC, and 40+ vetted external resources.
- PIO Console 🔒 — operations posting, road closures, burn-status updates by the Public Information Officer (EMA staff only).
- Personnel Roster 🔒 — restricted directory of MCEMA, MCSO, Centralia ESDA, Salem PD, Centralia PD, UMR, and Coroner staff with IDs and ranks.
- EOP Annexes Index 🔒 — restricted catalog of 14 numbered annexes plus reference materials, with downloadable source files. ESF-8 / MCHD focused.
- Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) — State authority, Duty Officer line 1-800-782-7860.
- FEMA — National Response Framework, NIMS, Stafford Act guidance.
- FEMA Emergency Management Institute — ICS / NIMS training catalog.
- NWS St. Louis (LSX) — forecast office for Marion County (zone ILZ070).
📄 Save / Print
Use your browser's print function (Ctrl/Cmd+P) to save this EOP summary as PDF or to print a hard copy for emergency operations binders. The signed master EOP is held by the EMA Director.