Wednesday, July 6, 2016

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DODFireNews.Com T-Shirts Fundraiser - unisex shirt design - frontI started DODFireNews.com a few years ago as basically just a hobby. Now it's growing and I would like to make it into something bigger and to expand on what I can give to my readers. DODFireNews.com is a Veteran run news page that brings Department of Defense First Responders related news and information.
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Right now a major challenge is funding. For DODFireNews.com to grow we need to expand on what we can provide to our followers. To expand DODFireNews.com we need to increase our Hosting Capabilities. That way, it increases the Web page's reliability and keeps downtime to a minimum. In addition, this helps us keep our website up to date, assists with Technical Maintenance, and Marketing.


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In the air, on the water, underground: 9th CST radiation drills push the limits

In the air, on the water, underground: 9th CST radiation drills push the limits
Courtesy Photo | The California National Guard's 9th Civil Support Team (CST) tests a platform and hoist system the team designed for the QinetiQ Talon robot during a May exercise in San Diego focused on preventing international smuggling of radiation sources. The Los Alamitos-based CST specializes in responding to incidents involving a chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear contaminant. Photo by Capt. Shane Foss

SAN DIEGO, CA, UNITED STATES
07.05.2016
Story by Brandon Honig
California National Guard

California’s vast terrain includes a 140-mile international border and 840 miles of coastline — that’s nearly a thousand miles of potential illegal entry points. Keeping those points closed to the smuggling of dangerous materials is vital to our national security.

“I ask myself daily how we haven’t had an attack with a bomb or chemical weapon; I like to think it’s because of our vigilance that has stifled would-be attackers,” said Staff Sgt. David Brian of the California National Guard’s 9th Civil Support Team (Weapons of Mass Destruction). “It’s extremely important that different agencies stay vigilant and work well with each other to prepare for these events, because it’s only a matter of time. There’s no limit to what the people who want to hurt this country will do.”

Brian was speaking in April in San Diego, where he was participating in a multi-agency exercise to detect smugglers bringing radiation sources into the country via maritime routes. A month later, the Los Alamitos-based 9th CST was back in San Diego for a similar multi-agency exercise, this time detecting radiation-smugglers in underground tunnels.

“[The CST] are our experts; they’re the top tier,” said Brian Jensen, training lieutenant for the San Diego Harbor Police. “If there were a really bad real-world situation [involving radiation or other hazardous contaminants], we would look to them and say, ‘You’re the subject matter experts, this is your bailiwick.’”


In the air, on the water, underground: 9th CST radiation drills push the limitsMembers of the California National Guard's 9th Civil Support Team gather
sensor readings off a boat near San Diego while aboard an HH-60G Pave Hawk
helicopter from the Cal Guard's 129th Rescue Wing during an April exercise
focused on preventing international smuggling of radiation sources.




Exposing Themselves to Risk
The Harbor Police led the April 25-29 maritime exercise, which included three CSTs, Customs and Border Protection, the FBI, the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office, the Coast Guard and many City of San Diego elements, as well as the California Air National Guard’s 129th Rescue Wing.

The 129th participated in a series of trials to determine if the CST could gather radiation readings off a boat while hovering overhead in an HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopter. In one scenario, hostages were taken aboard a cruise ship, and a SWAT team preparing to breach the ship needed to know what type of environment they were about to enter.

“From where we were up in the helo, with the readings on our equipment, we were able to calculate how much energy was on the boat itself, and that correlates to how long personnel can work in that environment [safely],” said Staff Sgt. Jason Villasenor of the 9th CST. “In a [real-world] situation like this, someone from a responding agency has to be there in the presence of the potential radiation source, exposing themselves to risk. To make that mission a success, we need to make sure the people going in are comfortable relying on us to get them that information without slowing them down.”

Ensuring different agencies are comfortable relying on each other was a main objective of the San Diego exercises. During the hostage scenario, for instance, two CST soldiers integrated into a SWAT team formation and provided the team a real-time assessment of the environmental dangers.

“It’s always good to have opportunities to work with other agencies and get a feel for how they operate,” Brian said. “We’ve done missions where we work side-by-side in a stack with SWAT, and others where they clear the room and then bring us in. Each unit works a bit differently, so it’s vital that we rehearse and get to see how they operate and show them our capabilities and how we operate.”

A Step Ahead
The CST continually works to improve the way it operates, including finding ways to use cutting-edge technologies to increase capabilities. During the May 24-26 tunnel exercise, for instance, the CST used a remotely operated robot to gather readings and employed a multi-laser digital mapping system to create a blueprint of an area inaccessible to GPS.

The 9th is the first of the nation’s 57 CSTs to experiment with a QinetiQ Talon robot, which can climb stairs, drag 300 pounds through water and survive explosions. Most importantly, it keeps human team members out of harm’s way.

"We’re the guys that suit up, go downrange and do the hands-on operation to bring back samples from inside the hot zone,” said Sgt. Taylor Coe, of the CST, during an exercise late last year. "Why not send a robot in, instead of having two of our guys risk their lives?”


In the air, on the water, underground: 9th CST radiation drills push the limitsStaff Sgt. Zachary Liles of the North Carolina National Guard's 42nd Civil
Support Team (CST) uses a QinetiQ Talon robot to detect non-hazardous
radiation sources planted in a tunnel in the San Diego area for a
multi-agency exercise focused on international smuggling May 26. The
California Guard and New Mexico Guard also contributed to the exercise with
CSTs, which specialize in responding to incidents involving a chemical,
biological, radiological or nuclear contaminant. Photo by Capt. Shane Foss


In San Diego the CST found creative ways to insert the Talon into different locations, including using a winch-and-pulley system to hoist it onto the Midway aircraft carrier and welding a platform to lower it into a tunnel with a 70-foot vertical drop. Once in the tunnel, the Talon’s sensors successfully located multiple radiation sources that had been planted for the exercise and relayed accurate information to the CST via radio.

“The robot is a good tool,” said Maj. Drew Hanson, deputy commander of the 9th CST. “The proof of concept [for using it in the CST] has been established.”

In the air, on the water, underground: 9th CST radiation drills push the limits Sgt. David Brian of the California National Guard's 9th Civil Support Team
(CST), right, and Sgt. 1st Class Damien Silva of the D.C. National Guard's
33rd CST examine sensor readings April 28 aboard a boat in Mission Bay, San
Diego, during an exercise to prevent international smuggling of radiation
sources.




Test to the Limits
Unlike the Talon, which the 9th has trained with for about a year, the Enhanced Mapping and Positioning System (EMAPS) made its first appearance at a CST exercise in May. A soldier carried EMAPS in a backpack while walking through a tunnel under a water treatment plant, enabling the 4-pound system to build a digital representation with each step.

EMAPS uses a laser scanner to measure distances to walls and other objects, and a second laser can be added to collect those data in 3D. The resulting map is highly detailed, including elements such as columns and ceiling panels. Additional sensors can map the location of radiation sources or other toxic materials.

“We can go in somewhere where nobody knows what it looks like, do a quick site survey and get a blueprint of the whole target,” said Capt. Shane Foss, operations officer for the CST. “Once you bring that out [of the site], we can develop a plan based on the blueprint you developed.”

The team also tested their communications vigorously, using the Mobile Field Kit and Android Tactical Awareness Kit (MFK/ATAK) to share data remotely. The 9th CST and Massachusetts’ 1st CST pioneered the use of the MFK/ATAK package, researching the technology and partnering with the Defense Threat Reduction Agency to bring it to reality.

“Without the MFK, a survey team member would need to gather their readings, get out of the hot zone and go through the decontamination process before we could begin analyzing the data,” Hanson said. “With the MFK, sensor readings, radiation spectra and pictures can be sent to the command post in real time, allowing the science team to analyze information and provide assessments before the entry team even gets out of the hot zone.”

Based on the 9th and 1st CSTs’ research and successful tests of the MFK/ATAK package, it soon will become a standard part of all CSTs’ equipment.

Hanson said every 9th CST exercise stretches the team’s technological capabilities to evaluate their performance in disparate environments.

“We don’t set ourselves up for failure, but we design each exercise to test every piece of equipment we have to the limits,” he said. “We’ve got to know what’s feasible and what’s not.”

Unified Effort
When disaster strikes, the strength of all our responding agencies may be needed, and they’ll need to work seamlessly to minimize damage. The 9th CST covers roughly half of California (with the Cal Guard’s 95th CST managing the northern half), requiring coordination with agencies all over the map.

“We are here to augment and support them when they need us — not to supplant, but to support,” Hanson said. “Becoming good partners with police and fire, FBI, the Department of Energy, Border Patrol, and all the other agencies, sometimes comes down to figuring out ways to get integrated with them and make sure they realize we can be a tremendous asset for them as needed. That’s why we exist.”

Hanson said the CST’s integration with agencies in Southern California improves every year. The San Diego maritime exercise, for example, showed a “true unified effort” between the various responding agencies.

“This is an important step toward us becoming a comfortable piece in their regional operations,” Hanson said. “The Harbor Police understands how quickly resources would get eaten up in a real-world scenario like this, and we are a strong partner with some great capabilities.”

Back Road Bandits: Unique Teams Provide Essential Support During Flooding

CAT Team
Spec. Ryan White and Spec. James Neesmith consult with a Department of Highways worker while traveling the back roads of Kanawha County.
WV, UNITED STATES
07.05.2016
Story by Sgt. Zoe Morris
153rd Public Affairs Detachment

CHARLESTON, W.Va. - In a state known for back roads that wind over mountains and up hollows, the West Virginia National Guard is deploying unique teams for immediate, boots-on-the- ground information during the June flooding and aftermath, according to Sgt. Nicholas Rhodes, Liaison Officer (LNO) Coordinator for the WVNG Joint Operations Command.

Community Assessment Teams perform a wide variety of essential duties, Rhodes said. They are often the first presence of the National Guard in communities. Comprised of two vehicles and four personnel at a minimum, they do everything from data collection, supply delivery, search and rescue, route reconnaissance, and evacuee transport.

Spc. Ryan White, a combat engineer with 111th Engineering Brigade, leads CAT Team One. He has been on the ground since the first day of flooding and has seen almost every aspect of flood duty.

The team started by working hand-in-hand with the WVNG Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and Explosive Enhanced Response Force Package (CERFP) Soldiers and the Clendenin Fire Department Swiftwater Rescue Team.
“We had a good number of people trapped in Clendenin, across the river,” White said. “We were first tasked to find a place to put in the [swiftwater rescue] boats, and as the water receded, we were still trying to get people out while the current was massive.”
“Within a couple of hours we were able to drive the vehicles close enough, and it turned out there was a high number of elderly people and infants,” he said. “We were able to load them up into LMTVs [Light Medium Tactical Vehicles] and safely take them to Capitol High School.”

According to Capt. Will Hargis, with the CERF-P team, more than 60 people were rescued from critical situations by Friday evening.

The CAT Teams moved three truckloads of civilians.

“I’ve never seen anything like that first day we were here,” said Pfc. Travaris Holmes, also on CAT Team One. “We carried trucks of people that lost their homes, vehicles and everything to the flood. It felt good being able to help those people, especially the elderly. I think just being here for some of those people makes a difference.”

From there the teams were moved to more rural roads, performing reconnaissance around Kanawha County. With cell towers and phones lines out, the team got much of their information from people they met on the road or while doing house-to-house visits.

They were able to communicate information immediately back to the JOC, providing that on-the-ground information that was needed, Rhodes said.

While driving out one road White said a resident commented on the smell of natural gas that was further up the hollow. White and Holmes are both volunteer firefighters and familiar with the effects of a gas leak. They did smell gas and an investigated confirmed there was a broken pipe and large leak next to three houses.

“We knocked on their doors and explained we couldn’t make them get out, but that we highly recommended it,” he said. “The fumes can be dangerous to breathe, and they definitely didn’t need to light up a cigarette.”

“For us here in the Joint Operations Center, [the CAT Teams provide] everything from numbers of displaced persons, businesses that have been destroyed, and homes that have been destroyed,” said Rhodes. “Also they assist in the communities by delivering not only supplies from the military - like MREs (Meals Ready to Eat) and water, but also supplies from the donation centers. Search and rescues also part of their mission. If you had a family member that no one had heard from yet, or even an area that no one had been out yet, the CAT Team can go out and assess the area and determine how impassible it is and if anyone in the area needs assistance.”

“We love when people wave us down,” White said. “It means they need something that we can help with, or need something we can get, or want to tell us something, share information.”

White, a combat engineer, is able to do swift recons of bridges and roadways. Driving a six-ton LMTV, he had to be aware of the safety for himself and others coming behind him. If anything seems dangerous, he can call the information in so a more thorough assessment can be made.

CAT Teams are made up Soldiers or Airmen with a variety of specialized jobs. It’s a volunteer duty and their units usually identify the troops. A lot of people on this duty have done flood duty in the past, Rhodes said, and are very qualified for this job.

Being that they cover a lot of miles - more then 800 this past week, according to White - and have a lot of face time with residents, White and another team member, Spc. James Neesmith, try to keep informed about available resources.

“I think that's what sets this state apart,” Neesmith said. “The amount of response in a time of need. I’m amazed at all the different teams set up.”

Neesmith said he has had people come to him asking how to properly dispose of American flags and said he was humbled in this time of crisis that West Virginians were still concentrating on things like that. The team got in contact with a local Veterans of Foreign War post and now has a drop off point for proper disposal of American flags.

“It's all those little details that are making people's lives easier,” Neesmith said.

With a possibility of flooding in the northeastern part of West Virginia, the JOC once again turned to CAT Teams. By the evening of July 4th, there were eight LMTVs and 16 personnel deployed in three counties around the eastern panhandle - standing by, ready to roll out those back roads.

Monday, July 4, 2016

At least 6 dead after Russian plane on fire-fighting mission crashes in Siberia

image
At least six people have died after a Russian plane on a fire-fighting mission crashed in Siberia, Russian news agencies reported on Sunday.

Rescue teams have found the bodies of four of the crew members from an Ilyushin Il-76 aircraft that crashed in the Irkutsk Region on June 1 while taking part in operation to extinguish vast forest fires.

Considering the “scale of devastation,” it is assumed that there were no survivors, the emergency operations center stated, adding that the Emergency Ministry’s aircraft, which was equipped with water tanks, was almost completely burnt out, apart from its tail. The center confirmed that rescuers have found one of the plane’s black boxes. It is believed that the plane crashed into a mountain while in the midst of highly concentrated smoke coming from the fires below.




CERFP External Evaluation 2016

CERFP External Evaluation 2016
Photo By 1st Lt. Aaron Ritter | Sgt. Paul Born, of Washington, Illinois with the Illinois National Guard’s Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and High Explosive (CBRNE) Enhanced Response Force Package (CERFP) repels down to rescue a casualty during the teams External Evaluation June 22-24 at the Marseilles Training Center in Marseilles, Illinois. They were tested on their ability to effectively respond to CBRNE emergency incidents. 

MARSEILLES, IL, UNITED STATES
06.24.2016
Story by Sgt. Robert Adams
Joint Force Headquarters- Illinois National Guard Public Affairs

“We had a lot of veteran members and new members on the team and we integrated very well,” said Army Lt. Col. Wesley Strain of Acworth, Georgia, the commander of the 44th Chemical Battalion based in Macomb, Illinois. “For the Soldiers, it gives them an additional duty that comes with certification and a unique task set.”

The two day evaluation tested the team’s ability to conduct victim extractions, mass casualty decontamination, emergency medical triage and treatment, command and control and fatality search and recovery missions. The team supports civil authorities by providing a disciplined, trained and equipped team, which supplements local, state, and federal efforts during CBRNE incidents, when ordered by the Governor.


Strain said the civilian involvement in the exercise benefits the service members and the community alike.

“The civilians get a true sense of not only the capability, but also the dedication to the community for the preservation of life, property and the environment based on what we do to stop threats,” said Strain. “These are our fathers, sisters, brothers, mothers and this gives an opportunity for us to showcase and reveal not only the resources that we have available to them, but also our skillsets to preserve lives.”

The CERFP had 206 personnel on its roster for the external evaluation this year from both the Illinois Army and Air National Guard.

“We pulled together as a team and all the elements worked together, hand-in-hand, to complete the mission,” said Air Force 1st Lt. Maria Cochran with the Peoria, Illinois based 182nd Airlift Wing, who served as officer in charge of the fatality search and rescue team.

Army Sgt. Eric Malmstead of Orion, Illinois, team chief for concrete breach and break team, said the team is re-evaluated every three years.

“We have to maintain our drills, skills and our readiness,” said Malmstead, a member of the Galesburg, Illinois based 444th Chemical Company. “In the CERFP, there is always room for improvement. I always tell my troops that you don’t have to be better than everyone else, just better than you were yesterday.”

Sgt. 1st Class William Reed of Paducah, Kentucky, line leader for technical decontamination with the Shiloh, Illinois-based 445th Chemical Company, said it’s a very important mission and real threat in today’s Army.

The Joint Interagency Training and Education Center (JITEC) evaluated the servicemember’s abilities to complete the tasks.

“The Illinois folks are really aggressive and have taken every opportunity they can to train,” said Pat Schey with RescUSA, an evaluator with JITEC. “I am very impressed with how they have handled everything.”



CERFP External Evaluation 2016
Members of the Illinois National Guard’s Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and High Explosive (CBRNE) Enhanced Response Force Package (CERFP) use large pry bars to lift a concrete slab a mock casualty is trapped under during the teams External Evaluation June 22-24 at the Marseilles Training Center in Marseilles, Illinois. They were tested on their ability to effectively respond to CBRNE emergency incidents.

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