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MuseumSOS: Strategies for Emergency Response SYNOPSIS For many people in the museum community, the events that took place in New York and Washington D.C. on September 11, 2001 brought home the vulnerability of our cultural heritage and added new urgency to efforts to put together collection preparedness & response plans (CollPRPs). Terrorist attack may be an improbable scenario for most museum collections but its effects, be they fire, flooding, or physical trauma, can be found in many other collection emergencies. One of the most encouraging aspects of developing a CollPRP is that the procedures put in place for truly catastrophic situations are often just as applicable to more mundane events, such as the failure of a sprinkler system. In May 2004, a conference entitled Museum SOS: Strategies for Emergency Response and Salvage was held at the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) in New York City as part of the 19th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Preservation of Natural History Collections (SPNHC). Over 200 people attended, from institutions worldwide. The high level of interest in the topic was reflected in the number of participants from outside the natural science collections community; from art and cultural institutions, biological repositories, and government agencies. It was an exciting and dynamic group resulting in a very successful conference. The talks at the meeting focused on a number of critical themes in emergency response. Case studies of individual collection emergencies were provided, giving examples of where emergency plans had succeeded or failed. Guidance was provided on developing CollPRPs for collection holding institutions. There was a strong emphasis on the importance of developing strategic partnerships, locally, nationally, and internationally, to provide support and assistance in the aftermath of an emergency. Finally, a 1-day workshop, entitled Don't Panic: Emergency Response & Salvage, provided hands-on training in how to respond in the critical first 24 hours after disaster strikes a collection. Support for the conference was provided by the National Science Foundation (NSF), through grant # DBI-0353533 from the Biological Research Collections Program. As part of the grant, this website has been created to disseminate information from the conference and as a continuing resource for anyone who is planning, mitigating, or responding to an emergency situation in the context of a natural history collection. We gratefully acknowledge the support of NSF, SPNHC, the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, and AMNH in the planning and hosting of both the meeting and the website. AGENDA Welcome AddressDr. Michael Novacek Keynote SpeakerAlliances for Response = Effective Emergency Response by Lawrence L. Reger Conference LecturesWhen we put out the SOS - Not Them!: International Planning, by Barbara O. Roberts Bringing Order out of Chaos: The Curator's Role by Richard Gould Non-Structural Mitigation Against Earthquake: A Case Study of Istanbul Museums by Bilgen Sungay and Nevra Erturk Collaborative Emergency Planning: Building Partnerships Outside-In by Dale Marsha Gregory Catastrophic Floods in the Czech Republic in 2002: Rescue Activities and Experience by Michal Stehlik Emergency Preparedness and Salvage in the Event of Armed Conflict by Catherine Sease Collections Theft: A Guide to Preventive Measures and Developing a Theft Response Plan by Wilbur C. Faulk Recovery & Renovation of the Pentagon following 9/11: The Phoenix Project by Brett D. Eaton Lessons Learned: Post September 11 by Jennifer L. Castro Disaster Recovery at the American Museum of Natural History: by Michael Benedetto, Kala Harinarayanan, Lisa Kronthal and Paul Schuchert Developing an Emergency Response Plan for Natural History Collections by David A. Tremain Assessing Fire Risks and Steps Toward Mitigation by J. Andrew Wilson Lessons from a Fire in a Natural History Museum by Fiona Graham |