TheFederal Interagency Operational Plans (FIOPs)are the documents that describe theConcept of Operations (CONOPS)for how the federal government delivers the 32 Core Capabilities described in the National Preparedness Goal.4While the National Response Framework (NRF) provides the "high-level doctrine," the FIOPs provide the "operational detail" for federal agencies to work together and with state/local partners. There is a specific FIOP for each of the five mission areas: Prevention, Protection, Mitigation, Response, and Recovery.5
The FIOPs describe:
Critical Tasks:Specific actions that must be taken to deliver a core capability.
Responsibilities:Which federal department or agency (e.g., FEMA, HHS, EPA) is responsible for which task under variousEmergency Support Functions (ESFs).
Resource Requirements:The types and quantities of resources typically needed for a "national-level" response.
Integration:How federal operations mesh with state, local, tribal, and territorial (SLTT) efforts, as well as the private sector.
For theCEDPcandidate, the FIOP is the "How-To" manual for federal integration. Option A is partially correct in sentiment, but FIOPs are designed around known core capabilities, not just "unseen contingencies." Option C refers specifically to Healthcare Coalitions, which are addressed inASPRdocuments rather than the broader interagency FIOPs. By detailing theConcept of Operations, the FIOPs ensure that when a federal disaster is declared, the massive machinery of the U.S. government moves in a synchronized, predictable fashion.6It ensures that the "Tiered Response" is not just a theory, but a functional reality where federal support is tailored to the specific gaps identified by local and state commanders on the ground.
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