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    Vigilant Guard - FEMA team creates vital communications link during domestic crises

    FEMA team creates vital communications link during domestic crises

    Photo By Staff Sgt. William Henry | Glen Laber, an information technology specialist for the Mobile Emergency Response...... read more read more

    CAMP ATTERBURY, IN, UNITED STATES

    05.15.2007

    Courtesy Story

    Camp Atterbury Indiana

    By Spc. William E. Henry B Company
    Special Troops Battalion 38th Infantry Division
    Indiana Army National Guard

    CAMP ATTERBURY, Ind.—By land and by air, Mobile Emergency Response Support (MERS) telecommunications vehicles from Denver made their way to Camp Atterbury to provide communications support to the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) joint field office in response to a simulated nuclear detonation during the National Guard's 2007 Vigilant Guard joint military and civilian training exercise.

    "Five MERS locations are strategically placed throughout regions of the country," said Glen Laber, an information technology specialist for the MERS Denver detachment. "They are able to respond to all 10 FEMA regions, providing quick action to disaster areas."

    MERS, a subset of FEMA, can be anywhere in the nation within hours after a disaster and can set up a temporary communications infrastructure, he said.

    "Our job is to be the first on the scene of an incident to provide communications support to an affected area," said Ivan Williams Jr., telecommunications manager for the Denver MERS detachment. "We can talk to just about anyone. We can send and receive cell phone signals, VHF, high frequency, and even talk to pilots of aircrafts if we are on the right frequency."

    MERS sets up satellite links for television, phones and e-mail when normal contact connections are lost. When phone lines are down they link it by using satellites, he said.

    "We hold video conferences from our mobile units and send signals from our unit directly to other units in the area, 'point to point,'" Laber said. "Local, regional and national leaders can communicate via satellite to assess what is needed and where to bring it."

    Each MERS detachment contains 40-50 workers.

    "The Denver detachment mainly covers from Salt Lake City to Chicago," Laber said. "But we'll go anywhere our presence is needed in an extreme emergency situation."

    The MERS team can order pre-packed pallets of multimedia and communications equipment and have them delivered on site when needed, explained Joshua Hruza, a MERS telecommunications specialist. A typical package contains 50 laptops, connection equipment and other needed tools.

    "MERS can turn an empty building or tent into a working office within hours of an incident," he said.

    The exercise has given Hruza and his team a better picture of the larger operation and how it works together, he said.

    "A lot of us (Denver MERS) are actually former military members," Hruza said. "That gives us a good feeling about being a part of what happens nationally."

    MERS is an intricate part of FEMA operations and has responded to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Hurricane Katrina, and countless other U.S. disaster relief missions.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.15.2007
    Date Posted: 05.15.2007 09:45
    Story ID: 10382
    Location: CAMP ATTERBURY, IN, US

    Web Views: 380
    Downloads: 243

    PUBLIC DOMAIN