Students enrolled in emergency management & homeland security at Pennsylvania College of Technology are benefiting from a recent software donation.
D4H has donated its cloud-based emergency management software to the college. Students in the Incident Command System Operations class now have access to the same software used by over 100,000 responders in 37-plus countries.
The value of the donation is $14,450.
“By having access to this software, our students are exposed to modern incident management software that they will use in the field throughout their careers,” said William A. Schlosser, instructor of emergency management & homeland security. “All students in the major (about 60) will use the software.”
Marketed as “uncomplicated software for emergency and crisis management,” D4H facilitates real-time information sharing and collaboration among team members. The software includes configurable templates for various types of emergencies, integrated mapping and built-in weather forecasts.
“It allows emergency managers to organize the response to an incident and communicate with each other to manage the incident throughout the incident’s lifecycle,” Schlosser said. “It tracks things like resources used and tasks required. And you can create a map of the incident that is shared with everyone on the program.”
Penn College students employed the software for the first time earlier this month during a search and rescue full-scale exercise at the college’s Schneebeli Earth Science Center.