DOD Releases Final Fort Hood
Review
(Washington) – August 20, 2010 - The Department of Defense (DoD) released
today the final review of the recommendations from the independent report
"Protecting the Force: Lessons Learned from Fort Hood."
The DoD will place a high priority on implementing recommendations that will
strengthen policies, programs and procedures in the following areas:
Educating
commanders about the symptoms of potential workplace violence and the tools
available to them to address it;
Ensuring
commander and supervisor access to appropriate information in personnel records
throughout a service member's career;
Improving
law enforcement and force protection information sharing with partner agencies
and among installations to ensure that all relevant personnel are aware of and
able to analyze and respond to potential threats;
Expanding
installations' emergency response capabilities, to include enabling enhanced 911
to notify dispatchers of a caller's location, mass notification and warning
systems to guide installation personnel and emergency responders to an
emergency, and a common operating picture to ensure that emergency responders
have access to real-time information in a crisis;
Integrating
force protection policy through the creation of a consultative and policy-making
body which will bring together the various entities across the department with
force protection responsibilities; and
Ensuring
that we provide top quality health care to our service-members and our
healthcare providers though the hiring of additional healthcare providers -
particularly in the mental health field - and ensuring that healthcare providers
receive appropriate post-deployment respite and dwell time.
The tragic shooting of military personnel at Fort Hood in November 2009
underscored the need for the DoD to review its approach to force protection and
to broaden its force protection policies, programs, and procedures to go beyond
their traditional focus on hostile external threats. The follow-on review final
report recommends concrete actions across a range of issues that all contribute
to the safety and health of our military forces.
The DoD will track implementation of the various recommendations contained in
its final report, focusing particularly on force protection issues.
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