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Reposted from AAM
*New Book*- Leaning Into Value: Becoming a user-focused Museum
Are you taking a user-experience approach to your museum? In this new book, a leading researcher on museums’ community value provides guidance to museum leaders who may be struggling to navigate today’s often tumultuous, ever-changing economic, political, and educational landscape. Don’t miss this invaluable new addition to your bookshelf—your museum’s audiences will thank you!
AAM Members receive 20% off
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The Annual Survey of Museum-Goers, conducted in partnership between Wilkening Consulting and the American Alliance of Museums, provides your museum with a cost-effective way to gain insight into your visitors and compare your institution to others in your locale, of similar type, and the museum field writ large. By participating in the Annual Survey of Museum-Goers, you will be:
Once you know exactly what makes your museum meaningful to your community, you’ll be better equipped to attract more visitors, make the case for increased funding, and keep up with our rapidly evolving environment.
Reposted from CISA/DHS
Internet of Things (IoT) devices used within smart city/connected community networks often provide greater efficiency and cost-effectiveness for municipal infrastructure services. However, the increasing use of IoT and the collection of data make connected communities an attractive target for malicious actors as vulnerabilities within IoT devices and systems could provide malicious actors with unauthorized access into connected community ecosystems and permit lateral movement across interconnected critical infrastructure networks. Compromise of IoT devices and systems provides malicious actors with the ability to steal sensitive data and disrupt services or critical processes, resulting in significant impacts throughout connected community critical infrastructure systems. The Connected Communities Initiative IoT Device Risk and Mitigation Infographic highlights cyber-based risks to connected communities from common interconnected IoT devices and groups the devices by IoT architecture, including the perception, transport, and application layers. Additionally, the infographic identifies mitigation recommendations to limit the risk posed by IoT devices used by a connected community. SLTT decision makers can utilize the infographic to visualize interconnected IoT risks introduced by and implement risk mitigation measures.
Reposted from PAR
The Performing Arts Readiness (PAR) project is offering the free emergency preparedness webinars listed below that are tailored to the needs of performing arts organizations. The better prepared an organization is, the more quickly and effectively it can respond to emergencies and crises, re-open for performances and programs, and return to normal operations. Webinars:
Fire Safety and Preparedness for Performing Arts Organizations, Tuesday, March 4, 2025, 3:00-4:30ET Description: Fire Safety is an essential element in the day to day preparedness of any organization, especially in the unique environment of the performing arts. In addition to sound emergency management principles, the application of National Fire Protection Association Standards (NFPA) will ensure that a comprehensive protection plan is developed in cooperation with appropriate emergency response partners. This free webinar will provide fire safety considerations and introduce best practices from the fire protection industry, which offers a road map to achieve fire safety benchmarks. Participants will learn how the Life Safety Code and the Code for Protection of Cultural Resource Properties can help you protect your patrons, staff, and facility. Instructor: Chris Soliz
Fire and Emergency Protection Plan Development, Tuesday, March 11, 2025, 3:00-4:30ET Description: Participants in this webinar will be presented with the components of a Protection Plan and the process to follow for the development of a plan following guidelines provided by the National Fire Protection Association’s Code for Protection of Cultural Resource Properties. Grounded in a vulnerability assessment, the planning process covers fire safety, security, construction considerations, prevention, special events, and recovery strategies. At the completion of this webinar, participants will have the tools needed to begin developing is a significant step towards a resilient organization. Instructor: Chris Soliz
Event Preparedness: Active Shooters and Hostile Activity at Your Venues, Tuesday, March 18, 2025, 2:00-3:30ET Description: In recent years we have seen an increase in hostile attacks across all sectors, including events. These attacks have come in a variety of methods. Performing Arts and Cultural Heritage organizations must be prepared for all scenarios and need to be able to react to all emergencies. This webinar will cover the types of attacks to prepare for, as well as the training you should consider for your venues and staff. Our instructor, Emma Stuart, also presents the “Safety and Security for Performing Arts,” “Road to Recovery: Performing Arts During COVID,” and the “Pandemic Response for Performing Arts Organizations” webinars for the PAR project. Instructor: Emma Stuart
Risk Assessment for Performing Arts Organizations, Wednesday, March 19, 2025, 2:00-3:30ET Description: Natural disasters, local emergencies, and other disruptive events can have devastating effects on all sizes of performing arts organizations. This webinar will focus on mitigating risks at institutions, to prevent disasters from happening and to reduce the impact of unavoidable disasters. The session will clarify the need for risk assessment as a part of an organization’s disaster preparedness strategy, provide basic information on risk assessment tools and practices, and address how risk assessment can benefit performing arts organizations. The instructors will also present case studies as a part of the session, so participants can learn from actual disasters in performing arts organizations. Instructor: Tom Clareson
Networking for Disaster Management in the Performing Arts, Thursday, March 20, 2025, 2:00-4:00ET Description: Emergency response and preparedness for performing arts organizations can be a difficult task for individual organizations. This free 2-hour webinar will demonstrate how working with multiple organizations in a network for disaster management can be accomplished. The history of networking for improved emergency preparedness in the cultural heritage, arts, and government sectors will be examined, with an exploration of existing networks. Case studies of the Pennsylvania Cultural Resilience Network and CultureAID in New York City will be presented to help guide you on how to start your own, or join an existing, cooperative disaster network. You will learn how to use the Cultural Placekeeping Guide to direct your networking efforts. Instructors: Tom Clareson and Amy Schwartzman
Health and Safety in the Performing Arts, Tuesday, March 25, 2025, 2:00-3:30ET Description: Safety in the theater extends to crews, casts, and audience members as well as the venue. This includes performance and rehearsal spaces, shops, and other work spaces. It requires awareness, common sense, and perseverance to eliminate hazards and guard against carelessness. The goal of this free webinar is to ensure that a safe, healthy environment is maintained at all times. This includes the control and minimization of all known and potential hazards associated within creative, artistic, and performance development. These risks can be minimized and controlled through proper training, equipment, and use of appropriate precautions, restrictions, and established safe-work practices. Instructor: Ellen Korpar Community Recovery Through Arts and Culture, Thursday, April 3, 2025, 2:00-4:00ET Description: Arts and culture—through the artists and organizations that bring them to life in communities -- have a vital role to play in recovery from disasters. Whether connecting people through music, dance, theater or other experiences; providing moments of respite, joy and humor; allowing people to tell their personal stories of the disaster through visual, verbal or other means; or even just providing a place to congregate, gather information or grab a cup of coffee, arts and culture and the organizations that produce them enable us to move from victimhood to personhood, even if only for a moment, and help us rebuild the social infrastructure of our individual and community lives. In this webinar, we will focus on how artists and arts organizations can engage in this work. We will provide background in basic disaster management principles, share good practices, give guiding principles and brief how-tos, leave you with resources for further study, and answer any questions you may have. Rebuilding social infrastructure strengthens communities’ abilities to move forward after disasters. Learn how to be part of the process and gain a seat at the table in your community’s recovery. Instructors: Mary Eileen Fouratt, Amy Schwartzman, Mollie Quinlan-Hayes
Reposted from EMR-ISAC
LiDAR has been around since the 1960s and uses laser pulses to measure distance with great accuracy. The new study, led by Edinburgh’s Heriot-Watt University with scientists drawn from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, MIT, and the University of Glasgow, added something that could obtain highly detailed 3D data from up to one kilometer away.
As reported in Popular Mechanics, the creation uses an ultra-sensitive sensor called the superconducting nanowire single-photon detector (SNSPD). The system, co-developed by NASA and MIT, can trace a single photon to an accuracy of 13 picoseconds (13 trillionths of a second). It can also see through fog and smoke and could have many applications including security, monitoring and remote sensing.
On Jan. 15, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) released new National Behavioral Health Crisis Care Guidance (National Guidance).
The launch of the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline in 2022 catalyzed a rapid expansion of crisis services around the country. SAMHSA identified the need for ongoing guidance for states, tribes, territories, and other local partners to provide the needed oversight, integration, and sustainability to care for people throughout and after a crisis episode.
SAMHSA identifies three essential elements of a behavioral health crisis system: crisis call lines, mobile crisis response, and emergency and crisis stabilization services. These elements work together to improve outcomes for individuals and families while reducing reliance on emergency departments and law enforcement for the care of those with urgent or emergent behavioral health needs.
The National Guidance consists of three documents:
Emergency medical services (EMS), 911 telecommunications, and law enforcement have roles in a crisis care system. Communities aiming to implement or improve their behavioral crisis care systems will benefit from this guidance.
On Jan. 17, SAMHSA released a Community Opioid Overdose Reversal Medications (OORMs) Planning Toolkit. The toolkit provides guidance for community leaders, public health professionals, first responders (including EMS and law enforcement), to create effective overdose prevention and response strategies to improve local overdose reduction outcomes.
Access the National Guidance, OORMS Toolkit and learn more about how to submit written comments on the draft Mobile Crisis Toolkit at SAMHSA.gov. Comments are due by Friday, March 21, 2025, at 11:59 p.m. ET.
The Wildland Fire Lessons Learned Center (LLC) has released its Annual Incident Review Summary and Year End Infographic for 2024.
The Annual Incident Review Summary is based on more than 196 wildland fire incident reports and lessons shared with the LLC in 2024. The Year End Infographic is a 2-page snapshot of the 2024 fire year. It highlights selected lessons learned and provides summary statistics on reported fatalities, near miss incidents, and injuries.
The information in these two documents may be used to inform wildland fire training and discussion and prepare for the 2025 fire year.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) will host a series of weekly Lunch and Learn webinars every Thursday, beginning February 20 and concluding on March 6.
These sessions will focus on FEMA's updated Radiological Emergency Preparedness Program Manual, which provides planning and assessment guidance for state, local, Tribal Nations and territorial partners located near commercial nuclear power plants.
Each webinar will cover a different topic:
Visit FEMA’s Radiological Emergency Preparedness page to learn more about the program, including training opportunities, the standard operating guide, reference library, after-action reports and the national public information map.
On Feb. 4, the Center for Internet Security (CIS) released Episode 121 of its “Cybersecurity Where You Are” podcast. The episode, The Economics of Cybersecurity Decision-Making, discusses the role of economics in cyber risk quantification and cybersecurity decision-making.
Highlights include:
The MAP application deadline is February 15, 2025.
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