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    106th Rescue Wing teams with local responders for hurricane exercise

    Guard members team with local rescuers for hurricane exercise

    Photo By Master Sgt. Monica Dalberg | U.S. Air Force Staff Sergeant William Henderson, a firefighter in the New York Air...... read more read more

    MONTAUK, NY, UNITED STATES

    10.14.2017

    Story by Tech. Sgt. Monica Dalberg 

    New York National Guard

    Members of the 106th Rescue Wing trained with Suffolk County's Urban Search and Rescue Task Force at Montauk County Park on the east end of Long Island during an simulating a hurricane, October 14 and 15.

    The training exercise required participants to search for and rescue victims of a notional hurricane that hit the eastern twin forks of the island, putting local people at risk.

    “A good thing with this exercise was the size of the area we were working in,” stated Senior Master Sgt. James Nizza, 106th Rescue Wing Fire Department Fire Chief and exercise task force leader.

    Instead of doing all the rescue training at one location, the scenario required the Airmen to respond to incidents in different spots, he explained.

    “The fact that it’s spread out so much is what we’re going to see in an actual event," he added.

    The south shore of Long Island is vulnerable to hurricane storm surges because a landfall would first occur there and water would move inland due to the low elevation, according to experts.

    When Superstorm Sandy slammed the island in 2012, utilities were taken out, roads were washed away and thousands were left homeless.

    “We train all the time in various aspects of rescue…It’s been escalated since Sandy,” Nizza said.
    .
    The combined training with local Suffolk County task forces encompassed:

    • the pre-deployment people and equipment;
    • movement of equipment;
    • debris clearance necessary to reach and accomplish rescues in water, structures, confined spaces;
    and communicating with each other.

    Scenarios included victims trapped in collapsed buildings; canines searching the areas for trapped people; victims stranded on bluffed beaches with an incoming tide; and the transportation of victims.

    According to Nizza, the media commonly depicts victims being pulled from rubble, but shoring and breaching canbe key elements of such rescues, as the tasks are often required to safely reach trapped victims.

    Shoring is the construction of temporary supports to aid in stabilizing collapsed structures, while breaching is essentially making a hole through an obstacle. Exercise members trained in shoring and breaching in mock-ups of collapsed structures, complete with toppled furniture and a mannequin under heavy metal debris.

    Communication is another vital element in operations and in command and control of equipment and personnel allocation.

    According to Chief Master Sgt. John Bellissimo, chief of 106th Communications, setting up “on the road” by trees, valleys, hills, cloud coverage, and even noise interference from high voltage powerlines can be complicated.

    Maintaining connectivity requires constant monitoring, he said.

    “The timely coordination of the search and rescue of a victim – the response time - can be the difference between life and death for someone,” said Bellissimo “We provide the backbone for communication to happen.”

    Rainy conditions during the training added a real-world element to the training. “Although we can plan for an exercise, we can’t plan for the weather to fit the scenario as well as it did this weekend,” Bellissimo added.

    Training together is beneficial for both Guard and Suffolk County task force members, Nizza said.

    “If this were an actual event, these are the people we’re working with. They’re getting to know what we can do, and we’re getting to
    know their capabilities," he said.

    "When an actual event occurs, we’re not meeting for the first time on an incident and it’s asmoother process to get things moving. This is part of an ongoing relationship with local responders; we are not simply integrating into their operations, we have become part of their team," Nizza added.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 10.14.2017
    Date Posted: 11.07.2017 11:14
    Story ID: 254416
    Location: MONTAUK, NY, US
    Hometown: WESTHAMPTON BEACH, NY, US

    Web Views: 37
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN