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shall provide for the organization, duties and functions, and procedures and capabilities <br />of the city's response to the emergency. Each city department will supplement the EOP <br />with those standard operating procedures necessary to fulfill their role in an emergency <br />under the EOP. <br />The EOP shall comply with the principles of the Orange County Operational Area <br />Agreement, the California Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS) and <br />the federal National Incident Management System (NIMS). <br />The emergency operations advisory board shall be responsible to review and <br />recommend adoption of the EOP to city council, and to implement the requirements of <br />the plan once adopted. City council shall review and adopt the plan by resolution as a <br />policy of the city. Once adopted, the plan shall be mandatory upon city departments and <br />agencies, employees and registered volunteer emergency workers and shall have the <br />effect of law whenever an emergency has been proclaimed as provided in this division. <br />Sec. 2-646. - Emergency proclamations and measures. <br />A. Proclamations of local emergency. A local emergency, as defined by section 2-643 <br />and by California Emergency Services Act Section 8558(c), may be proclaimed <br />upon conditions of disaster or extreme peril, existing or imminently likely, so as to <br />threaten lives and property, and by reason of its magnitude is or is likely to be <br />beyond the control of the available services, personnel, equipment and facilities of <br />the city. <br />The director of emergency services may request the city council to proclaim the <br />existence of a local emergency, if the city council is in session, or may issue such <br />proclamation if the city council is not in session. Such proclamation must be made <br />within ten (10) days of the occurrence of the disaster or emergency. Whenever a local <br />emergency is proclaimed by the director, the city council must, within seven (7) days <br />from the date of the original proclamation by the director, approve a resolution ratifying <br />the proclamation, or allow the proclamation to expire. City council shall review the need <br />for continuing the local emergency at least once every thirty (30) days and shall <br />terminate the emergency or allow it to expire at the earliest possible date that conditions <br />warrant. <br />During a local emergency, the city council or the director of emergency services <br />may promulgate ordinances, orders or regulations necessary to provide for the <br />protection of life and property, including orders or regulations imposing a curfew within <br />designated boundaries where necessary to preserve the public order and safety. Such <br />orders and regulations and amendments and rescissions thereof shall be in writing and <br />shall be given widespread publicity and notice. <br />The city council shall proclaim the termination of the local emergency at the earliest <br />possible date that conditions warrant. Upon termination of the local emergency, any <br />such rules, regulations, orders and directives or suspensions thereof prepared under <br />the proclamation of local emergency shall terminate and have no further force or effect. <br />B. Initial emergency measures. All emergency measures taken by the director of <br />emergency services prior to the issuance of an official proclamation of emergency. <br />or prior to any decision by the city council not to issue such proclamation, shall be <br />Ordinance No. NS-XXXX <br />11 A-40 Page 40 of 44 <br />