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    Leadership Tours Search Dog Foundation

    Leadership Tours Search Dog Foundation

    Photo By Senior Chief Petty Officer Lowell Whitman | 150709-N-HA376-344 SANTA PAULA, Calif. (July 9, 2015) - Service members and a search...... read more read more

    SANTA PAULA, CA, UNITED STATES

    07.09.2015

    Courtesy Story

    30th Naval Construction Regiment

    SANTA PAULA, Calif. - Local civic, reserve and active duty military leaders toured the National Disaster Search and Rescue Dog Foundation’s (SDF) National Training Center (NTC) to see first-hand the naval construction efforts there, July 9.

    SDF was founded in 1996 to help strengthen disaster response capabilities by training rescued dogs and then partnering them with firefighters and other first responders to help find people buried in rubble following a disaster.

    The tour highlighted the capabilities of the training facility, the search dogs and their handlers that the foundation serves, as well as the Seabees’ ongoing construction projects.

    Naval Mobile Construction Battalions (NMBCs) 4, 18 and 22, along with support from Naval Construction Group (NCG) 1 and 1st Naval Construction Regiment (1 NCR) are working under the Department of Defense Innovative Readiness Training Program (IRT) and alongside a general contractor to construct various training facilities at the center. The facilities simulate realistic disaster scenarios for search dogs.

    Leadership got a chance to look at “Search City,” a 1-acre area consisting of homes and businesses that have been designed to reflect the damage that may occur in a disaster.

    “All of these buildings that we’re building are the only kind in the entire world,” said Lt. Justin Perry, project officer-in-charge. Perry added that the buildings will have a unique scent system, built with piping to allow the smell of trainers acting as simulated disaster victims to travel throughout the city.

    Additionally, the mock city includes a convenience store, a house with an 11 degree tilt, 11,000 cubic yards of earth work, three facades simulating collapsed houses, as well as observation areas and trails.

    “The Seabees are getting advanced builder skills and advanced equipment operator skills,” said Perry. “(The reservists) can take these skills that they’ve learned and not only apply it to their civilian employment. but also apply it to overall attainment in the construction battalions as well. They get a very diverse type of training and it’s something they may not see for a long time.”

    Commander, Navy Reserve Forces Command Rear Adm. Eric Young attended the tour and spoke about the importance of the projects.

    “One of the reasons that we’re ready— you know, anytime, anywhere— is because of projects like this. It’s two things: building relationships and being able to train,” said Young. “And it allows the Seabees in this case to be ready and train to accomplish any mission they may have.”

    Serenity Nichols, an executive assistant at the foundation, said her first contact with the Seabees started when they volunteered at the training center, constructing a retaining wall in their off time. And it was through those interactions that she learned of the IRT program.

    Nichols echoed the collaborative relationship between her organization and the Seabees.

    “They’re getting the training that they need to become deployment ready or (to help) a community in need, and we are getting the training props built for our search dogs, so it’s a win-win partnership,” she said.

    Future work at the foundation is expected to include a climate controlled dome to simulate weather conditions, a collapsed bridge, a rappelling tower, and road work.

    “It’s been a great project,” said Perry, adding that he hopes the success of Search City would be followed in kind by the success of a nearby industrial park under construction.

    “In the end it’s not going to matter if the reserve or active duty built it,” said Perry. “It’s going to be the Seabees who built it, and it’s going to (leave) a lasting impression for future generations.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.09.2015
    Date Posted: 07.14.2015 11:59
    Story ID: 169972
    Location: SANTA PAULA, CA, US

    Web Views: 254
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN