San José is the 10th-largest city in the United States and among the most linguistically diverse. Spanish, Vietnamese, Tagalog, Mandarin — and dozens more. When an emergency happens in San José, official crisis communications have to reach all of them. That's not a translation problem. It's a planning problem.
The city's Crisis Communications Annex had a structural gap: it hadn't been built around C-MIST (the Access and Functional Needs framework that accounts for Communication, Maintaining Health, Independence, Safety, Self-Determination, and Transportation). It also wasn't fully aligned with Bay Area UASI Joint Information System standards or federal FCC and ADA accessibility requirements. Crisis communications that only reach part of the population aren't crisis communications — they're communications for some people, with the rest left to figure it out.
TLR used the C-MIST framework as the organizing structure for the Crisis Communications Annex — embedding AFN planning throughout rather than treating it as a supplement. C-MIST ensures that the full range of resident needs (communication barriers, health maintenance requirements, independence constraints, safety vulnerabilities, self-determination, and transportation access) are built into how communications are designed and distributed, not assessed after the fact.
We developed pre-scripted EPIO (Emergency Public Information Officer) message templates for multiple hazard scenarios — ready-to-use language that activation staff can deploy under pressure without improvising from scratch. Accompanying EPIO checklists structured the activation sequence, so the communications function runs consistently whether it's a senior EPIO or a backup staff member running the desk.
The annex was then realigned with Bay Area UASI JIS standards — ensuring San José's crisis communications would integrate with the regional joint information system rather than operating in isolation — and brought into compliance with FCC accessibility requirements and ADA obligations.
San José's crisis communications infrastructure now reflects the city's actual composition. EPIO staff have pre-scripted templates to deploy during activations — tested language that doesn't require improvisation under stress. AFN considerations are built into the plan's structure, not footnoted at the end.
The annex meets federal accessibility standards and integrates with the Bay Area's broader emergency communications framework. When the next event triggers a JIS activation in the region, San José is connected to it — not operating its own parallel system. That's what interoperability actually requires: consistent standards built before you need them.