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KANSAS CERTIFIED EMERGENCY MANAGER PROGRAM
[ New Certification ] [ Recertification ]
In
response to a growing movement nationwide movement to provide for methods of
professional certification of emergency managers, KEMA developed a certification
stemmed that would increase the visibility and scope of emergency managers’
positions and the commensurate requirement to ensure that some mechanism was in
place to evaluate persons who occupied these positions.
THE HISTORY OF THE PROGRAM
In
1989, the Kansas Emergency Preparedness Association (KEPA), board of directors
determined that action at the national level (after much discussion and study by
national level organizations such as NCCEM) was not going to be either timely or
address the needs of county level emergency managers in Kansas.
Since certification by private associations was a long-recognized
precedent (e.g. AMA, Bar Associations, etc.), the board placed the proposition
of establishing a certification program on the annual conference agenda for the
fall of 1989. At that conference in
McPherson, Kansas, the membership took action to establish the structure and
procedures to implement certification in the state.
The conference endorsed a proposal that the KEPA president appoint a
committee to devise a certification program and present an amendment to the
bylaws providing for the establishment of a standing certification committee to
the 1990 conference.
The
proposed guidelines were provided to the general emergency management community
in the April 1990 Kansas Division of Emergency Preparedness (KDEP) newsletter
for questions, concerns, comments, etc. The
required notification of the proposed amendment to the KEPA bylaws was made by
the chair of the committee and published in the June 1990 KDEP newsletter.
On
October 4, 1990, the required bylaw changes were unanimously approved by the
general membership at the 1990 KEPA Annual Conference in Salina, Kansas.
On October 6, 1990, the KEPA president appointed the members of the study
committee to the standing committee on standards and practices.
On October 23, 1990, the KEPA board of directors formally adopted the
initial version of the “CEM Guidelines.”
In 1992, the board approved modification of the guidelines to allow for
biannual recertification and changed the requirements for training and education
needed for recertification.
On
January 4, 1994, the Kansas Adjutant General issued Kansas Administrative
Regulation (KAR) 56-2-2 that made certification a requirement for all county
coordinators. The KAR does not
designate which certification programs are recognized by the state; however,
subsequent official correspondence by the Kansas Division of Emergency
Management (KDEM) designated the KEPA/KEMA program as one of the certifications
recognized as meeting the KAR requirement.
In
early 1997, NCCEM registered the “CEM” designation with the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office. In April 1997,
the KEMA board of directors voted to use KCEM (Kansas Certified Emergency
Manager) for their certification program.
Proceed to the
KCEM
Certification Page for more information about program
requirements.
Proceed to the
KCEM
Recertification Page for more information about recertification of your
current KCEM credential.
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