The Greater Orlando Aviation Authority received a 鈥済old seal鈥 in January to become 聽the first airport operation to earn full accreditation by the Emergency Management Accreditation Program.

鈥淓mergency management is essential in the aviation world,鈥 says Keila Walker-Denis 鈥07, assistant director of airport operations in emergency management for the Greater Orlando Aviation Authority, which oversees Orlando International Airport and Orlando Executive Airport. 鈥淲e demonstrated that we have a sound foundation for an emergency-management program.鈥

Walker-Denis, whose background is in emergency management, says the process was an opportunity to take the airport where it needed to be, especially now in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. 鈥淭his event has further highlighted the importance of communication, cooperation, coordination and collaboration,鈥 she says. The accreditation program used 64 industry standards to determine the top rating.

Her industry contacts 鈥 such as Osceola County Emergency Management, Orlando Health, Florida鈥檚 State Medical Response Team, the Central Florida Intelligence Exchange, and the Incident Management Team for Central Florida 鈥 have proven valuable in her current role.

‘We may not be the experts in any one area, but we know a lot about everything and where to get resources.’ 鈥 Keila Walker-Denis

鈥淲e may not be the experts in any one area, but we know a lot about everything and where to get resources,鈥 Walker-Denis says.

The airport authority鈥檚 emergency management team has been assigned with tasks such as collecting and analyzing information related to COVID-19; ensuring personal protective equipment is provided to necessary employees; supporting local, state and federal executive orders; and a host of other responsibilities to maintain the safety, health and wellbeing of employees and passengers, Walker-Denis says.

Beyond the coronavirus, her role always includes a lot of planning and preparing, ensuring all teams and decision-makers at the airports work together effectively and communicate the same message.

鈥淥nce we identify what hazards we are prone to, the goal first is to try and prevent them. And if we can鈥檛 prevent them, the next step is to identify how to mitigate or lessen the impact to our operations,鈥 Walker-Denis says. 鈥淥f course, our ultimate goal is to keep flying.鈥

Before her career in emergency management, Walker-Denis started at 激情快播 in the business program but switched to major in public administration because she was intrigued by the process that went into decision making during emergencies, such as for hurricanes when she was a child in Miami.

During an internship with the Osceola County Emergency Management Department, she participated in emergency operations during tropical storm Ernesto in 2006. Witnessing the controlled chaos of agencies, community stakeholders and departments coming together 鈥渋gnited that passion, that flame,鈥 she says.

鈥淚t all opened my eyes and ignited the fire I had back then to do what I do today. It鈥檚 truly a passion. It鈥檚 the best thing. It鈥檚 a very rewarding career field, mentally and emotionally, knowing that you鈥檙e able to make a change.鈥

Walker-Denis also serves on 激情快播鈥檚 emergency-management advisory board, which helps ensure 激情快播 courses teach up-to-date content and expose students to the realities of the emergency management world beyond the classroom.

鈥淪omeone did it for me when I was in college, as far as that internship,鈥 says Walker-Denis. 鈥淚t opened my eyes, and I want to do the same. It feels right to do the same, to pay that forward.鈥