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.

Plan owner: Marion County EMA
County FIPS: 17121
NWS zone: ILZ070
Forecast office: NWS LSX
Last reviewed: Apr 2026
Working summary. This page is a public-facing summary of the Marion County Emergency Operations Plan. It is not the controlling document. The full EOP, base plan, annexes, and SOPs reside with the EMA Director and are reviewed by the County Board EMA Sub-Committee. Conflicts between this page and the signed EOP are resolved in favor of the signed EOP.

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

2. Authorities & References

The Marion County EOP is developed and maintained under the following statutory authorities:

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:

Primary natural hazards

Primary technological hazards

Special populations and critical facilities

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

  1. Prevention / Preparedness. Planning, training, exercises, hazard mitigation, public education, equipment readiness, mutual-aid agreements, LEPC engagement.
  2. Response. Notification, activation, ICS organization, operations, public information, demobilization criteria.
  3. Recovery. Damage assessment, debris management, individual and public assistance, restoration of services, financial reconciliation.
  4. Mitigation. Post-incident analysis, hazard mitigation projects, plan updates.

Coordination structure

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.

3
Monitoring
Day-to-day awareness. EMA Duty Officer monitors NWS, NIFC, alerts, and operational reports. No EOC physical activation. Used for routine watches, brief road closures, single-jurisdiction incidents handled by IC alone.
2
Partial Activation
EOC opens with a limited command and general staff. Triggered by warnings affecting the County, multi-jurisdiction incidents, or hazmat releases requiring coordination. Selected ESFs activate.
1
Full Activation
All ESFs and command staff stand up. Triggered by a significant tornado event, major flood, large pipeline release, mass-casualty incident, or any event requiring State or Federal disaster declaration. 24-hour operations.
Notification flow. The EMA Duty Officer is notified by the Marion County 9-1-1 / ETSB PSAP, by NWS LSX (zone ILZ070), or by partner agencies. Notification triggers a recall of EOC staff per the call-down roster maintained by the EMA Director.

6. Task Organization

The Marion County EMA — OHS task organization is structured as a single department under a Director, with two Deputy Directors (Operations and Administration), three Operations Captains, a Public Information Officer, and six numbered operational Companies plus a dedicated EOC Operations group. Liaison positions tie the department into the County Health Department, hospitals, public works, utilities, finance, and long-term recovery.

Position holders below are pulled from the current MCEMA Org Chart workbook. ID numbers (1600–1699) are department-issued personnel identifiers; vehicle numbers (1660–1687) are tracked separately under §6.6. 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

Marion County Board
Board Members
Policy oversight · declares local emergency · authorizes expenditures
EMA Sub-Committee Liaison
Cody Rose
Marion County Board, District 4 · County Board ESDA Liaison

6.2 Director and Deputies

Director
Andrew Strong
ID 1600 · Vehicle 1660
Oversees all department operations, programs, companies, policies and budget. Communication with elected officials and municipalities.
Deputy Director — Operations
Shane Mansker
ID 1601 · Vehicle 1661
Staff and operations, response protocols, SOG, units, training, building, fleet management.
Deputy Director — Administration
VACANT
ID 1602 · Vehicle 1662
Staff, units, training and response records. Compliance with IEMA, MABAS, ILEAS, IPWMAN, and all EOPs.
Public Information Officer
Becky Phillips
ID 1657
Sole assigned PIO · media releases · social media · public warning

6.3 Operations Captains

Captain — Centralia Operations
VACANT
ID 1603 · Vehicle 1663
Companies 1 & 2 (Traffic Incident Management) · Centralia region
Captain
VACANT
ID 1604 · Vehicle 1664
Captain
VACANT
ID 1605 · Vehicle 1665

6.4 EOC Operations & Six Operational Companies

The EMA fields a dedicated EOC Operations group plus six numbered Companies. Companies 1 and 2 share the Traffic Incident Management mission, currently led by the Centralia Operations Captain (vacant — ID 1603). Companies 3 through 6 are led by Lieutenants assigned by function.

EOC Operations
Manning Operations Center · EOC reporting · PIO support
Lead
Terry Mulvany
ID 1650
  • Tim Tucker1651
  • Marvin Owens1652
  • Sammy Karrick1653
  • Andrew Kendrick Sr.1654
  • Sheila Mulvany1655
  • Andrew Kendrick Jr.1656
Company 1
Centralia Traffic Incident Management Team
Captain
VACANT
ID 1603
  • VACANT1627
  • Joe Smith1628
  • Travis Payne1633
  • David Smith Jr.1643
  • VACANT
Company 2
Traffic Incident Management Team
Sr. Specialist
Jamie Wilkins
ID 1637
  • David Smith Sr.1639
  • John Smoth1644
  • April Snow1645
  • VACANT
  • VACANT
Company 3
OHS Operations
Lieutenant
TBD
ID 1607 · Vehicle 1667
  • Joe Lyons1623
  • Matthew Arrasmith1624
  • Joe Nix1625
  • Travis Nix1626
  • Jon Hanedegan1632
Company 4
Planning & Recovery
Lieutenant
Josie Public
ID 1608 · Vehicle 1668
  • Grace Moon1630
  • Allyson McCann1631
  • David Franco1634
  • Frankie Ayala1638
  • Corey Cordova1640
Company 5
Special Operations — DRT / RTF / SAR / Water Rescue
Lieutenant
TBD
ID 1606 · Vehicle 1666
  • Ryan Crouse1620
  • Clint Wolfe1621
  • Jon Hanedegan1622
  • Rhett Burton1641
  • Nick Savin1642
Company 6
First Responders
Lieutenant
Justin Montgomery
ID 1610 · Vehicle 1669
  • VACANT
  • VACANT
  • VACANT
  • VACANT
  • VACANT
Function references. Companies 1–2 cover incident detection & verification, scene management, traffic control, and motorist support. Company 3 (OHS Ops) covers statewide interoperability, school & campus safety, DVEP/TVTP, critical infrastructure, intelligence, REP&R, and HazMat. Company 4 covers recovery planning, training & exercises, hazard mitigation, debris management, and individual & community assistance. Company 5 fields RTF, Drone Task Force, SAR, and Water Rescue. Company 6 stands up as the field-side first-responder element.

6.5 Liaisons & Support Roles

Medical Liaisons
  • Bill ThouvininMarion County Health Department
  • Suzie LeutySalem Township Hospital
  • VACANTCentralia Hospital (SSM Good Samaritan)
Public Works Liaison
  • Alex KrekeMarion County Highway Engineer (ESF-1 / ESF-3 lead) · 618-548-3887
Utilities Liaison
  • PLACEHOLDER — assigned per incidentAmeren IL · municipal water (ESF-12)
Finance Team — Budgets / Grants / Donations
  • Greg JonesID 1690
  • Brenda JonesID 1691
  • Roy KoduvalilID 1692
  • Sam PhillpsID 1693
Long-Term Recovery Committee
  • Members TBDStood up after Stafford Act declaration

6.6 Rank Structure & Insignia

Marion County EMA uses a 10-grade department rank structure. Grades are reflected in the trailing two digits of the personnel ID (1600 series for command and field staff, 1690 series for finance team, 1657 for PIO).

Grade
Rank
Duties
10
Director
Oversees all department operations, functions, programs, companies, policies and procedures. Maintains budget and communication with elected officials and cities/villages.
9
Deputy Director — Operations
Oversees all staff and department operations, response protocols, SOG, department units, trainings, response, building and maintenance, and fleet management.
8
Deputy Director — Administration
Oversees all staff, units, trainings and response records. Oversees compliance with IEMA, MABAS, ILEAS, IPWMAN, and all EOPs.
7
Captain
Oversees operations of a unit or units and its functions within an assigned city limit or region of the county.
6
Lieutenant
Oversees operations of an assigned unit.
5
Sr. Specialist (SGT.)
Oversees unit functions and all trainings of said unit.
4
EM Specialist II — FTO
Completes unit assignments and mentors all Probationary Members, Members, and EM Specialist I.
3
EM Specialist I
Completes assigned tasks of units on calls and reports to EMS-II for guidance.
2
EM Member
Completes assigned tasks of units on calls and reports to EMS-I for guidance.
1
Probationary Member
Completes tasks while under direction of an assigned mentor (typically an EMS-II / FTO).

6.7 Vehicle Numbers & Assignments

Department vehicles use 1660-series numbers. Command vehicles map directly to the position holder; community-assigned vehicles support specific townships and apparatus types.

1660Director Strong (1600)
1661Dep. Director Mansker (1601)
1662Dep. Director Admin (1602)
1663Capt. (1603)
1664Capt. (1604)
1665Capt. (1605)
1666Lt. (1606)
1667Lt. (1607)
1668Lt. (1608)
1669Lt. (1609)
1670–1673Salem — field units
1674–1677Centralia — field units
1678Kinmundy / Alma
1679Kell
1680Sandoval (Patoka / Odin) · Utility Truck (Salem)
1681Ambulance — DRU (Salem)
1682Ambulance — Blocker
1687Mobile Command Post — MCP (Salem)

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.

ESF
Function
Lead
Support
ESF-1
Transportation
Marion Co Highway Dept
IDOT District 9 · municipal street depts · school district transportation
ESF-2
Communications
Marion Co 9-1-1 / ETSB
EMA · ARES/RACES · MABAS comms · IEMA STARCOM21
ESF-3
Public Works & Engineering
Marion Co Highway Engineer (Alex Kreke)
Municipal public works · USACE St. Louis District (recovery)
ESF-4
Firefighting
Salem FD / Centralia FD (career) · MABAS
Township FPDs · IDNR Forestry (wildland) · IL Office of State Fire Marshal
ESF-5
Information & Planning
Marion County EMA
Planning Section · GIS (mcema.us) · IEMA · NWS LSX
ESF-6
Mass Care, Housing, Human Services
American Red Cross — Southern IL
Salvation Army · faith-based partners · school districts (shelters) · DCFS
ESF-7
Resource Support
EMA Logistics
County Purchasing · municipal purchasing · IEMA resource requests
ESF-8
Public Health & Medical
Marion Co Health Dept
SSM Good Samaritan · Salem Township Hospital · IDPH Region 4 · Coroner
ESF-9
Search & Rescue
Marion Co Sheriff / Local FD
MABAS · ILEAS · IL Task Force 1 (structural collapse)
ESF-10
Hazmat & Oil Response
Local FD (initial) · IEPA
CHEMTREC · pipeline operators · PHMSA · USCG NRC · MABAS hazmat
ESF-11
Agriculture & Natural Resources
Marion Co Animal Control
USDA · IL Dept of Agriculture · IDNR · UI Extension
ESF-12
Energy
EMA Liaison
Ameren Illinois (electric / gas) · municipal utilities · pipeline operators · ICC
ESF-13
Public Safety & Security
Marion Co Sheriff
Municipal PDs · ISP · ILEAS · IL National Guard (state activation)
ESF-14
Long-Term Recovery & Mitigation
Marion County EMA
FEMA Region V · IEMA Recovery · SBA · USDA RD
ESF-15
External Affairs / Public Information
EMA PIO
Joint Information Center (JIC) · municipal PIOs · IEMA Public Affairs

8. Direction, Control & Coordination

9. Communications

10. Administration, Finance & Logistics

11. Plan Maintenance & Training

12. Cross-References

📄 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.