 Earlier this year, the National Emergency Management Organization, or NEMO, facilitated training sessions for its new disaster management platform. Disaster Information Management System, or DIMS, is a digital platform that will be used by disaster management stakeholders. The training is now geared at administrators of the platform. This time it's the administrative training so that the persons being trained can assist NEMO with the maintenance of the DIMS. The previous sessions were for the people just using the system, but today the people being trained will be able to help administer the system. So to create user accounts, add user accounts, modify user accounts, configure the system to help it be tweaked as needed. The design of the platform was a collaborative effort of Imagine Solutions and Business Tech Research Incorporated. It's not just your regular system users, volunteers, various persons at NEMO who will be operating the system on a daily basis. This has to do more with the maintenance and the administration of the system on a technical level. So persons managing users, user groups, user permissions, metadata, the core data application, dealing with any bugs or any issues that may be faced by the system and how to record and to report those things to escalate them to higher levels for developers to look at. The platform streamlines NEMO's ability to deploy resources before, during and after a natural disaster. This efficiency will save countless lives in the future. This is Jack Hingson Compton of the Disaster Vulnerability Reduction Project.