Title 6 › Chapter CHAPTER 2— - NATIONAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - COMPREHENSIVE PREPAREDNESS SYSTEM › Part Part F— - Global Catastrophic Risk Management › § 824
The Secretary, working with the Administrator and other federal partners, must add an extra plan to each Federal Interagency Operational Plan. The annex must explain how the federal government will protect the health, safety, and general welfare of people after a catastrophic incident. It must cover meeting basic needs, coordinating with state, local, Tribal governments, the private sector, and nonprofit relief groups, encouraging personal and local preparedness so people do not rely only on government aid, and building international partnerships for relief goods and services. The annex must say what federal actions will meet basic needs; how to work with nonfederal partners (including disaster agencies, National Guards, first responders, and nonprofits); steps to boost individual resilience like public alerts, improving supplies of critical goods, and public information campaigns; what agreements to seek with allies; how to operate if major infrastructure is destroyed or offline; and which federal authorities would be used. The plan must assume multiple critical systems (transportation, communications, energy, health, and water) and governments may be largely disabled, the emergency may exceed Stafford Act response limits, and the U.S. military may be engaged elsewhere or unable to help.
Full Legal Text
Domestic Security — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
6 U.S.C. § 824
Title 6 — Domestic Security
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73