NODS Begins Nationwide Audit to Strengthen Antigua and Barbuda’s Disaster Preparedness

Antigua and Barbuda has initiated a sweeping evaluation of its national disaster resilience framework. The National Office of Disaster Services (NODS), in a strategic partnership with the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA), has commenced a Comprehensive Disaster Management (CDM) audit. This critical, cyclical assessment represents a foundational effort to meticulously gauge the nation’s preparedness across the four essential pillars of disaster management: preparedness, response, recovery, and mitigation.

Under the direction of NODS Director Sherrod James, the audit is designed to deliver an objective analysis of the country’s current operational standing. The initiative will pinpoint requisite resources and strategic initiatives necessary for a substantive enhancement of national disaster strategies. To facilitate this process, CDEMA, in collaboration with the University of the West Indies (UWI), has procured a local consultant to develop a specialized audit instrument—a structured questionnaire deployed to a wide array of national stakeholders.

The collated data from these engagements will yield a holistic and unbiased overview of existing capabilities. All compiled intelligence will be integrated into a centralized, standardized database. This repository will serve as a critical benchmark for measuring the nation’s advancements and setbacks in disaster management over recent years.

This systematic review is expressly engineered to identify operational deficiencies, chronic challenges, and nascent threats, thereby informing a proactive and forward-looking national strategy. The ultimate objective is to utilize the audit’s findings to comprehensively upgrade NODS’s existing multi-year work program. This endeavor is poised to culminate in a significantly more robust and resilient national apparatus, capable of confronting future disaster scenarios with enhanced efficacy and coordination.