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About Us
The Suburban Emergency Management Project (SEMP) originated in
2001 with a grant from the Grace A. Bersted Foundation, which provides
assistance to organizations in the suburban counties surrounding
Cook County, Illinois. Margaret R.
O'Leary, M.D., M.B.A., former chair of the M.B.A. program and
the Executive M.B.A. for Physicians and Health Care Executives
program at Benedictine University (Lisle, IL), served as principal
investigator for the grant.
The grant funded four all-day joint public-private invitational
SEMP meetings attended by regional leaders of health care, city
and county management, public health, public safety, public utility,
public works, emergency management, the American Red Cross, Argonne
National Laboratory, the broadcast and print media, academia, businesses,
and citizens.
The purpose of the four meetings was en masse exposure to evidence-based
disaster management theory and practice articulated by national,
state, and local experts; immersion in diverse professional cultures
in a collaborative setting; development of the “SEMP Model”;
cultivation of relationships among partners in disaster management;
and publication of an anthology—The First 72 Hours—to
document and share the experience with a larger audience.
A subset of original and new SEMP members participated in a second
set of SEMP meetings in 2004-2005 to develop a set of reliable
and valid community-based disaster-preparedness indicators.
SEMP offers a full spectrum of resources to support any community
organization that provides or manages disaster-related services.
SEMP publications include Securitas
Magazine and Biot
Reports (each free), SEMP Academy educational programs,
disaster management consulting and custom education, and SEMP books,
including the award-winning The
First 72Hours: A Community Approach to Disaster Preparedness.
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