Tennessee Emergency Management Agency: Disaster Preparedness and Response

The Tennessee Emergency Management Agency (TEMA) functions as the state's primary coordinating body for disaster preparedness, mitigation, response, and recovery operations. This page covers TEMA's organizational structure, its operational authority under Tennessee law, the categories of emergencies it addresses, and the boundaries that define when state-level intervention supersedes or supplements local and federal action.

Definition and scope

TEMA operates under Tennessee Code Annotated § 58-2-101 et seq., which establishes the Tennessee Emergency Management Act as the statutory foundation for statewide emergency management. The agency sits within the executive branch and works in direct coordination with the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security.

TEMA's mandate covers all 95 Tennessee counties, extending preparedness infrastructure to county-level Emergency Management Agencies (EMAs), which are required by state law to maintain local emergency operations plans. The agency administers federal grant funding distributed through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), including Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP) funds and Emergency Management Performance Grants (EMPG). EMPG funding nationwide totaled $355 million in federal fiscal year 2023 (FEMA EMPG Program).

Scope boundaries and coverage limitations: TEMA's authority is bounded by Tennessee state law and applies exclusively within Tennessee's geographic and jurisdictional limits. Federal disaster declarations under the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act (42 U.S.C. § 5121 et seq.) supersede or parallel state authority when the President formally declares a major disaster. Nuclear facility incidents on federally licensed sites fall under joint jurisdiction with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and are not exclusively within TEMA's scope. Interstate compacts, including the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC), define mutual aid obligations between Tennessee and other signatory states but are governed by separate interstate agreement terms. Detailed information on the broader executive branch framework within which TEMA operates is available on the Tennessee Executive Branch page, and the full Tennessee government landscape is accessible through the Tennessee Government Authority site index.

How it works

TEMA's operational structure follows the National Incident Management System (NIMS) and the National Response Framework (NRF), both administered federally by FEMA. The agency activates the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) in Nashville at one of three operational levels:

  1. Level 3 (Normal Operations): Routine monitoring, training, and grant administration. No active incident requiring centralized coordination.
  2. Level 2 (Partial Activation): Specific agencies and Emergency Support Functions (ESFs) activated to address a localized or developing event. County EMAs may be engaged but incident command remains distributed.
  3. Level 1 (Full Activation): Complete SEOC staffing across all 18 Emergency Support Functions. This level corresponds to events requiring statewide resource mobilization or a gubernatorial emergency declaration.

A gubernatorial emergency declaration under T.C.A. § 58-2-107 authorizes the suspension of specific regulatory statutes, activation of the Tennessee National Guard, and the request for federal major disaster or emergency declarations. The Governor may declare a state of emergency for up to 60 days without legislative concurrence; extensions beyond 60 days require General Assembly approval.

TEMA coordinates with the Tennessee Department of Health for public health emergencies, the Tennessee Department of Transportation for infrastructure damage assessment, and the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation for hazardous material releases and environmental remediation.

Common scenarios

Tennessee's geography and population distribution produce a recurring set of disaster categories that TEMA plans for and responds to:

Decision boundaries

The triggering thresholds that determine when TEMA escalates from monitoring to active state coordination are structured around resource exhaustion and legal authorization:

References