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    Pennsylvania National Guard: Planning equals successful training

    Observing training

    Photo By 1st Sgt. HollyAnn Nicom | Sgt. 1st Class Thomas Borcky, a member of the Pennsylvania National Guard’s 3rd...... read more read more

    FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, ANNVILLE, PA, UNITED STATES

    05.12.2014

    Story by Staff Sgt. HollyAnn Nicom 

    109th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

    HARRISBURG, Pa. – A unique training event took place at Harrisburg Area Community College, May 12, 2014, when soldiers, airmen and civilian responders came together to react to a fictitious train derailment and apartment building collapse. The training was part of Vigilant Guard 2014, hosted by the Pennsylvania National Guard, with more than 2,500 participants.

    This training was unique because it involved both military and civilian entities.

    “We try to practice inter-operability as much as possible but not to this degree, this is a pretty significant operation and it’s going to involve a lot of responders from a lot of different agencies and we don’t get to practice it at this level on a regular basis”, said Randy Padfield, a Mechanicsburg, Pa., resident and the interim director of fire and emergency management system training at the Senator John J. Shumaker Public Safety Center at HACC.

    The Pennsylvania National Guard had an extremely vital role in the planning and organizing this simulated natural disaster, one of the many events of Vigilant Guard.

    Participants from the Pennsylvania National Guard, West Virginia National Guard, local fire rescue squads, members of the Dauphin County Hazardous Materials Team, local E.M.S. teams and a slew of other first responders were on hand Monday morning for the well-planned realistic training.

    “The site simulated a natural disaster resulting in a train derailment, a hazardous materials incident, a natural gas explosion and a building collapse scenario. This is a very large-scale operation,” said Padfield. The training is a complex scenario that gives responders challenging situations in order to gauge their reactions.

    Padfield added, it’s going to involve multiple role players all partaking in casualty collection points, decontamination of hazardous materials, and search and rescue.

    Planning for the exercise began a year and a half ago for the military and roughly a year ago for the civilian entities involved. It is a rare event that only occurs four times a year.

    This training is vital to first responders and National Guardmembers.

    “It’s continuity all the way. Without continuity you would have a headache at response,” said Sgt. 1st Class Thomas Borcky from Lebanon, Pa. and a member of Pennsylvania’s National Guard 3rd Civil Support Team. “The more we train like this, as much as they train like this, it just gets better and better. It ultimately allows us to move to any state at any time to respond as one posture” he said.

    This training is important because it tests and enhances the relationships among civilian, federal and military partners. If we train in this environment when faced with a real-world disaster we will be prepared, added Padfield.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.12.2014
    Date Posted: 05.13.2014 20:25
    Story ID: 129702
    Location: FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, ANNVILLE, PA, US
    Hometown: LEBANON, PA, US
    Hometown: MECHANICSBURG, PA, US

    Web Views: 272
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN