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    386th Air Expeditionary Wing conducts dorm fire exercise

    Members of the 386th Expeditionary Civil Engineer Squadron Fire Department and 386th Expeditionary Medical Group conducted an exercise simulating a fire in a dormitory building June 22.

    The exercise made use of smoke machines to simulate a dormitory fire and six U.S. Air Force Academy cadets visiting the base as part of Operation Air Force played the role of injured victims to provide a sense of realism for the firefighters and medical personnel.

    Lt. Col. Kelly Kimsey, 386th Air Expeditionary Wing chief of Wing Plans, said the dorm fire scenario allowed first responders to train for an issue people don't normally think about in a war zone.

    "It's predominantly an exercise, not only for the first responders, but for the leadership to run a scenario that we don't think about every day in a forward deployed combat environment but is certainly a legitimate danger," he said. "It's a good scenario to test, a good capability to run a drill for."

    The exercise is different from past exercises in that its focus was on the living areas rather than the operational side of the base.

    "This may differ from recent exercises in that it's less focused on the flightline area and more focused on the living area on the Rock," Kimsey said.

    The wing made use of moulaged "victims" and a smoke machine to give first responders a realistic way to test their skills.

    "Our first responders from the fire department will enter a building where there are obvious signs of a fire," Kimsey said. "Their vision will be obscured. There are going to be a lot of unknowns for them. Are there occupants still in the building? What's their status? What are their injuries? They're going to get to run through their exercise of clearing a building in addition to finding and extinguishing the source of the fire."

    Master Sgt. David Jean, 386th ECES Fire Department assistant chief of operations and incident commander during the exercise, said the first responders performed very well, especially as this was the fire department's first exercise this rotation.

    "Things went outstanding," he said. "There was a lot of hustle, good teamwork. We found the victims and got them out."

    The exercise was an eye-opener for some first responders, whose biggest challenge was working with heavy gear in temperatures over 110 degrees. Jean said the fire department would look at what their Airmen experienced and look for ways to improve.

    "There's always things we can improve on," he said. "It gives us a chance to look at our operation and make the changes we need."

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 06.23.2009
    Date Posted: 06.23.2009 06:22
    Story ID: 35509
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