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    Texas Guardsmen excel at response mission validation

    Texas Guardsmen excel at response mission validation

    Photo By Master Sgt. Daniel Griego | In this image, members of Joint Task Force 136 (Maneuver Enhancement Brigade) conduct...... read more read more

    MUSKOGEE, Okla. - Emergency analyst Patrick Lagadec once said, "The ability to deal with a crisis situation is largely dependent on the structures that have been developed before chaos arrives." For the soldiers and airmen of the Texas National Guard's Joint Task Force 136 (Maneuver Enhancement Brigade), preparatory structures proved instrumental in their certification to continue their FEMA Region VI Homeland Response Force mission.

    From March 1-8, more than 800 Texas National Guardsmen of the Round Rock-based unit trained at Camp Gruber, Okla., in a weeklong external evaluation testing their emergency response capabilities, interagency cooperation, and asset management in prolonged periods of operation.

    The exercise, certified by the Joint Interagency Training and Education Center, included a series of mass casualty scenarios stressing the brigade's personnel in real-time simulations.

    "The EXEVAL is an attempt and a time for us to actually test the experiences in what these guys have been training on all year," said Maj. Gen. Len Smith, commander of the Texas Army National Guard. "As the evaluation part of it goes, it's a great opportunity for them to figure out what they do and don't know."

    The certification authorizes JTF-136 (MEB), also known as the Minuteman Brigade, to respond in support of civil authorities anywhere within FEMA Region VI, which includes Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arkansas, and Louisiana. As a military, state-controlled asset, the brigade would be activated by the governor of Texas to directly support the response efforts of civilian first responders like firefighters and EMS.

    "It's a great exercise," said Maj. Gen. Myles L. Deering, the Oklahoma adjutant general. "It gives these soldiers and airmen out here an opportunity to test their skills, their prowess, to gain confidence and gain understanding of the types of missions they need to do. It gives them an opportunity to work with the first responder community who they answer to in an incident like this."

    These simulated incidents included train derailments, hazardous materials explosions, and contamination of populated areas. Guardsmen specializing in search and extraction techniques, decontamination procedures, and medical triage engaged their scenarios with the same professionalism and sense of purpose that they would a real-life emergency. More than 40 tasks with hundreds of performance checkpoints comprised the overall evaluation, tracking the unit on everything from shift changes and security to interagency communication and media engagement.

    "It's something I've never seen in my 18 years on active duty," said Lt. Col. John Crawson, chief of staff for the Minuteman Brigade. "It's quite a mission. I look at our own city of Austin as a great example. We've got a major highway [with] a major metropolitan area running right down the western side of the city with a train track running through the middle of it and tanker cars that go up and down that track all day and all night long. So the possibility of a derailment of a train on MOPAC in west Austin is something that's very real and very close to home."

    The challenges of the scenarios were enhanced by the week's unusually frigid temperatures, reaching as low as single digits during the training period. Guardsmen accustomed to warmer Texas environments engaged several days of snow, sleet, and ice that highlighted the diversity of the region's vast coverage.

    "Even though we've had bad weather, these guys are doing a fantastic job," said Col. Patrick Hamilton, the domestic operations commander for the Texas Military Forces. "The soldiers are motivated; the airmen are motivated. The support from Camp Gruber is fantastic."

    Ultimately, it was their preparedness that enabled them to succeed in spite of weather difficulties. The Minuteman Brigade conducted four full-scale training scenarios in 2013, two of which took place here at Camp Gruber, to rehearse and perfect their response plan in anticipation for this evaluation.

    "One of the things that has made Texas successful coming into this exercise is that they have put together a very solid road to EXEVAL training plan and they've executed that training plan very well," said Lt. Col. Scott Nelson, exercise director for the external evaluation. "They've really set themselves up for success. For Texas to be able to be that engaged and really give it the full buy-in is one of the reasons they're doing as well as they're doing here."

    This is Texas' second experience conducting an external evaluation for HRF validation, with the first in October 2011 under the banner of Joint Task Force 71. The Minuteman Brigade, formerly JTF-71, adopted the designation of JTF-136 (MEB) after merging with the 136th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade in September 2013 to better meets the needs of this challenging mission.

    "This is our second time through and we're taking care of the basic tasks that we did the last time which they're evaluated on," said Hamilton. "But this time, we've expanded this so that our joint force headquarters and the [joint operations center] back in Texas is involved in the play like it would be normally in a real event, and that's a big take-away."

    Texas' Homeland Response Force mission is one of 10 in the country, with each FEMA Region hosting a designated state custodian of the enterprise.

    "It's a very important mission to the state and the nation," said Command Sgt. Maj. Bradley Brandt, Texas' senior enlisted adviser. "The EXEVAL is just to make sure that these guys and gals know what they're doing, that they can perform the duties that they're supposed to be doing in case of a real-world scenario."

    The Guardsmen demonstrated their readiness and proved their mettle, achieving top marks in operational assessment and rapid decision-making, and validating the Minuteman Brigade for another three years of regional support in the event of disaster.

    "It feels great," said Sgt. Joshua Hill, an assistant team leader with the 236th Military Police Company. "I hope we get to keep it, I absolutely love doing the HRF mission. It's not something that every unit gets to do. It's something that I and lot of other soldiers here enjoy, so we'll just try to keep it as long as we can."

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 03.08.2014
    Date Posted: 03.08.2014 15:48
    Story ID: 121725
    Location: MUSKOGEE, OK, US

    Web Views: 177
    Downloads: 1

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