Special to the Herald
The Coastal Health District’s top emergency preparedness official has achieved top status within FEMA’s Emergency Management Professional Program. Todd Wyckoff, the District’s emergency preparedness director, recently graduated from FEMA’s National Emergency Management Executive Academy, one of only 380 individuals to receive this recognition in the past decade.
The Executive Academy is for senior emergency management executives at the pinnacle of their careers. Students enroll in four resident courses at the Emergency Management Institute in Emmitsburg, Maryland. The curriculum provides an opportunity to sharpen decision-making skills, work collaboratively, and participate in exercises with other senior leaders facing similar challenges.
Wyckoff has more than 15 years of public health emergency preparedness experience with over 200 certifications from FEMA, Homeland Security, and emergency management agencies. Throughout his career, Wyckoff has managed multiple tropical events on the Georgia coast, helping coordinate evacuation of vulnerable populations residing in six counties. He previously worked in the private sector industry of Disaster Response and Restoration for more than six years and responded to the Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, as well as the floods of 2008 in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Most recently, Wyckoff led the eight-county Coastal Health District through the emergency response to the COVID-19 pandemic, including coordination of the district-wide COVID testing program. He continues to work with community partners around the district and throughout the state to facilitate emergency exercises, refine and coordinate emergency plans, and ensure the district is well prepared to protect the health of its residents in a future emergency response.