Under theNational Incident Management System (NIMS)and theIncident Command System (ICS), theIncident Action Plan (IAP)is the document that formally records the incident-specific objectives for a given operational period.1NIMS defines an objective as a statement of what is to be accomplished during an incident. These objectives must beSMART: Specific, Measurable, Actionable, Realistic, and Time-bound. The IAP ensures that all responding personnel, regardless of their parent agency, are working toward a unified set of goals.2
The IAP is typically developed during the "Planning P" cycle. The Incident Commander (or Unified Command) sets the overallStrategic Objectives, which are then translated intoTactical ObjectivesandWork Assignmentswithin the IAP. While anEmergency Operations Plan (EOP)(Option A) provides the general framework and policies for a community's response, it is a static document. The IAP is a dynamic document that is updated fo34r every operational period (e.g., every 12 or 24 hours), reflecting the changing "ground truth" of the disaster.
In theCEDPcurriculum, the IAP is seen as the primary tool forManagement by Objectives. The IAP includes not just the objectives, but also the organization chart (ICS 203), the medical plan (ICS 206), and the safety message (ICS 208). By formally documenting these objectives in the IAP, the command structure ensuresAccountabilityandUnity of Effort. Every responder who checks into an incident receives an IAP (or a briefing based on it), ensuring they understand exactly what is expected of them and how their tasks contribute to the overall stabilization of the incident and the safety of the public.