When natural disasters strike, areyou ready? Have you made plans to keep your family informed and safe?
Will you take a leadership role
and help others remain safe
and get to a safe location?
Take the challenge.
A brush fire is quickly expanding. A recall election for governor is in process.
Everyone has a role in the
emergency response: Fire, Police, Local Government, homeowners, NGO teams, shop owners, neighborhood watch, governor candidates.
WHAT DO YOU DO?
China has invaded Taiwan.
Students are growing uneasy and are planning to protest.
How do you, as the administration, respond? What messaging is effective? How do you handle misinformation and bad actors?
What do you do in the aftermath?
A city faces a natural disaster. As the various city departments, do you collaborate and respond?
What happens when personal
and departmental goals get
in the way? what do you tell
the residents?
Can you keep them safe?
A pandemic has gripped the entire world.
How will you take care of the
residents of your states? Does the federal government have a right to tell YOU how to govern?
What will you and your team of governors decide to do?
A mysterious illenss is affecting children in New Orleans. And a major hurricane is approaching.
Is New Orleans ready?
Can you and your news team
solve the mystery and post
emergency information the
public needs in time?
The president has been shot.
The VP is on a flight.
How do you handle the situation? Who is in charge International threats arise? Do you invoke the 25th amendment?
Can you and your team guide the country through this challenging time?
A bomb is detonated in a foreign police department.
How will this affect your military plans for the region? How do you help identify the culprits?
What negotiations do you need to make for a peaceful outcome?
A cargo train carrying toxic chemicals has derailed in the city train yard.
What do you do to respond,
contain it, and keep your team and the public safe?
Time is ofthe essence to avoid the situation devolving into a major crisis.