The Kapor Center is a nationally recognized social impact organization based in Oakland — occupying a 40,000-square-foot facility and operating programs centered on social impact and community access across the Bay Area. For an organization whose entire mission is built around those values, the stakes of getting emergency preparedness wrong were unusually high: a plan that didn't account for diverse staff, visitors with access and functional needs, and trauma-informed communication wasn't just insufficient. It was contrary to what the Kapor Center stands for.
TLR was engaged to build an emergency preparedness program from the ground up — not adapt a generic template to a nonprofit context, but build something that genuinely reflected the Kapor Center's values and operational reality.
The engagement produced a site-specific Emergency Operations Plan with inclusive design at every level — from evacuation routes that account for mobility limitations, to communication protocols that don't assume staff speak a single language, to an after-incident reporting structure that centers staff wellbeing alongside operational documentation.
TLR established a Volunteer Safety Team and built a semi-annual training and drills program to keep that capacity active. A tabletop exercise tested two scenarios — workplace violence and earthquake — with 22 participants drawn from across the organization.
The Kapor Center came back. Phase 2 focused on compliance: a Cal/OSHA Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) under Title 8 CCR §3203, and a 7-hazard Emergency Protocol Manual to extend the Phase 1 EOP into real-time procedures staff could actually follow during an incident.
TLR trained 20+ staff on-site and established a quarterly drill cadence. All work was completed to achieve full Cal/OSHA compliance by the July 2024 deadline — on time, no extensions needed.
The Kapor Center met its Cal/OSHA compliance deadline — on time, no extensions — with documentation and protocols built specifically for their facility, not adapted from a generic template. The Volunteer Safety Team is in place and maintaining a quarterly drill cadence that doesn't require a consultant to keep it running.
Phase 2 happened because Phase 1 worked. That's the metric that matters most in nonprofit safety planning: the organization trusted the work enough to come back for more of it. The return engagement validated not just the deliverables but the approach — mission-aligned preparedness that holds up when leadership has to actually use it.