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    Joint Task Force Civil Support hosts federal homeland response leaders

    Joint Task Force Civil Support hosts federal homeland response leaders

    Photo By Brian Dietrick | U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Jeff W. Mathis III, commander, Joint Task Force Civil Support,...... read more read more

    FORT EUSTIS, VA, UNITED STATES

    03.06.2014

    Story by Petty Officer 1st Class Brian Dietrick 

    Joint Task Force Civil Support

    FORT EUSTIS, Va. – More than 50 military leaders and emergency response representatives from across the U.S. met here Feb. 25-27 to discuss how to enhance the ability to rapidly respond in the event of a chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear disaster in the United States.

    The three-day conference, hosted by Joint Task Force Civil Support, allowed military representatives from the Defense CBRN Response Force to review response processes and revise the essential equipment list of gear they would bring with them to save lives and mitigate suffering following a man-made or natural disaster in the U.S.

    “What we are doing here [at the conference] is vital,” said U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Jeff W. Mathis III, commander, JTF-CS. “The discussions we have had here are so important, because if we cannot make the response timeline that the president and the secretary of defense expect us to make, we cannot successfully accomplish our mission.”

    JTF-CS provides command and control of the DCRF, which has 88 different military units located at more than 36 locations throughout the U.S. The response force provides a variety of life saving and sustaining response operations focused around six core capabilities: mission command, hazard identification and detection, search and rescue, decontamination, medical triage and stabilization, and medical evacuation.

    The DCRF is comprised of four different task forces; operations, aviation, logistics and medical. The purpose of the conference was for the task forces to discuss essential equipment they would need to successfully complete their assigned mission. If the task forces lighten their total equipment load and leave non-mission essential equipment back at home station, their response to the incident site could be drastically faster.

    After all, time lost during a response may equate to lives lost.

    “The DCRF cannot get to the incident site fast enough,” said Marine Corps Col. David Olszowy, deputy commander, JTF-CS. “Our units have a very tight response timeline and need to be absolutely critical about the equipment that they are bringing.”

    Simplifying the equipment lists can improve DCRF deployment timelines by preventing the transportation an over-abundance of equipment, some of which may not be absolutely necessary in order to impact the disaster response operations. With the updated task force equipment list, gear that is needed to do the job will be brought with the units and non-mission essential equipment will be brought on at a later date during the response.

    “This is the first of many discussions that we’ll have in the future to further simplify the deployment process and equipment lists,” said U.S. Army Maj. Ben Anderson, future operations planner, JTF-CS. “A field training exercise in the future will allow us to validate the list that the task forces have established as mission essential and we can make changes as necessary.”

    Vibrant Response 2014 will likely be the field training exercise that allows the units to validate their equipment lists. Vibrant Response is the largest DOD confirmation exercise for specialized response forces to validate their capability to execute mission command, perform technical tasks and conduct other life-saving missions. The exerciser will take place in Camp Atterbury, Ind., and is tentatively scheduled to for the end of July.

    For additional information on JTF-CS, visit us online at: www.jtfcs.northcom.mil or www.facebook.com/jtfcs.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 03.06.2014
    Date Posted: 03.06.2014 09:23
    Story ID: 121577
    Location: FORT EUSTIS, VA, US

    Web Views: 175
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN