Monday, July 25, 2016

Wareham firefighters helping with 20-acre brush fire on Joint Base Cape Cod land

A helicopter drops water at the fire site.
Photo by David G. Curran A helicopter drops water at the fire site.

SANDWICH, Mass. —A large brush fire that has been burning near Joint Base Cape Cod since Saturday morning is being attack from both the ground and air.

The fire broke out around 10 a.m. and has been contained to about 20 acres on base property, Sandwich officials said.

A Massachusetts State Police helicopter has been dropping water on the fire from above while numerous fire crews work to contain the blaze from the ground.

A military Black-hawk helicopter is also assisting fire crews.

Witnesses report seeing smoke from the large fire from at least 20 miles away. No homes are currently threatened by the fire as strong winds are pushing the fire away from Sandwich.

There is a lot of smoke in the area, however.

No injuries have been reported.

Coast Guard aircrew medevacs logger near Newport, Ore.

Coast Guard aircrew medevacs logger near Newport, Ore.
CHITWOOD, OR, UNITED STATES
07.22.2016
Photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Ali Flockerzi
U.S. Coast Guard District 13

An MH-65 Dolphin helicopter crew from Coast Guard Air Facility Newport, Ore., lowers a rescue swimmer during the medevac of an injured hiker in Chitwood, July 22, 2016. The aircrew was assisting at the request of the Lincoln County Technical Rope Rescue Team, which is comprised of members from several fire departments that work together to perform technical rescues all over Lincoln County. (Photo courtesy of Larry Robeson with the LCTRRT.)

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Fire personnel drill for air-water rescue with National Guard

By Rosalind Essig ressig@jessaminejournal.com
Jessamine County Maj. Steve Proffitt, far right, watched as the medevac crew demonstrated a hoist.

By Rosalind Essig
ressig@jessaminejournal.com

Last week, on a day so hot you could break sweat standing in the shade, a half-dozen guys dressed head-to-toe in navy blue stood in the middle of a field in Jessamine County. Shielding their eyes from the sun — and from the brush being whipped up around them — they watched a helicopter hover perfectly in place while a crew member was repeatedly lowered and brought back up to the aircraft.
The medevac crew demonstrating their skills, as well as a second helicopter and crew, had flown in from Frankfort earlier that day as part of a training program being developed by one in their ranks, who also happens to be a former Nicholasville firefighter.

About 30 men and women from the air and ground crew of Detachment 1, Charlie Co., 2nd Battallion, 238th Medevac of the Kentucky National Guard spent the last week in Jessamine County doing flood and swift-water rescue training with firefighters involved in the Bluegrass Emergency Response Team (BERT). The eight firefighters involved in the training were from the Jessamine County Fire District, Nicholasville Fire Department and Lexington Fire Department.
This week, the whole group went to the Muscatatuck Urban Training Center at Camp Atterberry in the Columbus, Indiana, area.

At the end of the two-week training, Staff Sgt. Jeremy Lowe will have his hands full fine tuning the program so he can present it to his superiors and state emergency management officials. A 10-year veteran of the Nicholasville Fire Department, Lowe saw a disconnect between resources at the National Guard’s disposal — such as the UH-60L Black Hawk helicopters hovering over the county last week — and the emergencies handled by departments like Jessamine County.
When a disaster like a flood hits in Kentucky, a fire department might not know how the Guard can help or, if the Guard is called out, the crew might not have had the training to handle that scenario.
“When I joined this unit, I started realizing that we had this platform and an asset with the state that really wasn’t being utilized,” Lowe said. “... I started deploying with this unit and really working with them, but the flood rescue part of it was something our state desperately needed. We went out to this mission a few times — to go out to Paducah and things like that — and we had never trained on it.”
Lowe’s project is to develop a training program that could be used across the state to open lines of communication between local first responders and the Guard, as well as to share technical skills for flood and other types of rescues.

As Lowe and the crews stood sweating by the camp they had made in a field on Fire Chief Mike Rupard’s farm, it had been “almost a year to the day” since the planning began. Lowe said it also took a year before that to pitch his idea and get approval, making the two weeks of training the culmination of two years of work.

He said bringing his idea to Jessamine County fire was an easy decision because of his experience training with them during his time with the Nicholasville department, but also because the department serves as the technical rescue hub for BERT.

Lowe said BERT was created when U.S. Department of Homeland Security funds were made available to the states in the wake of the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, and Hurricane Katrina. Central Kentucky counties came together to form BERT and each county specialized in preparing for certain types of emergencies. He said, for example, Versailles specializes in hazmat and Lexington in medical.

Jessamine County specializes in technical rescue, such as swift water and rope rescues, and acts as a training hub for those skills.

During the first week of the training, the firefighter trainers demonstrated rescue skills, such as rope skills and how to, from a roof, rescue someone trapped in an attic. When the helicopters were brought in, the firefighters watched and listened in headsets to the crews demonstrate hoists, including landing accurately on a roof or a car.

Lt. John Kerr said they were doing as much hands-on activity as possible, but at this point the goal wasn’t to train firefighters to do what the Guard does or vice versa. He said it’s the beginning stages of developing a way to improve what’s already there by sharing resources and communication.
The Guard works a lot with local law enforcement, but Kerr said this kind of integration in search and rescue isn’t common and the crews need to be able to talk to one another.

“The biggest one is communication. We want to be able to be, in our operations center, so that the fire department can help liaison — because the military speaks differently from the fire department. Ultimately we are there for the same goal,” he said. “… It’s really about building relationships.”
Public Affairs Officer Maj. Steve Martin said the kind of relationship Lowe’s program aims to develop is new for the Guard.

“Really partnering at this level with the fire department is new ground for us,” he said.
In Indiana this week, the group will be able apply some of the information they learned in Jessamine County and practice handling different scenarios. That includes real flood simulations, because the training center has a low-lying area with structures that can be flooded, Martin said.

Long-term, Lowe’s goal is to make the Guard available as an asset. But that’s not to say an aircraft would be called upon in any rescue situation, said Jessamine County Fire Maj. Steve Proffitt. Flash floods, for example, are over too quickly. On the other hand, if the Kentucky River flooded and trapped residents in southern Jessamine County, Proffitt said “they’re literally a phone call away.”
“I think the biggest benefit from this training … is just the releationship that’s built,” he said.
Lowe said the two weeks of training ending this week would serve as proof of concept and they will refine the procedures they developed before presenting it to state emergency management officials. He hopes to be able to take the Jessamine County trainers to work with departments in other counties or regional groups.

“Being a former firefighter/rescuer — and now being a full time National Guard as a rescuer and a medevac  — it’s a no-brainer to me,” Lowe said.

See more right here.
Flight for your life: Fire personnel drill for air-water rescue with National Guard



Mission, history come alive at base open house

Mission, history come alive at base open house
Senior Airman Logan Utt and Airman 1st Class Justin Clifford, 90th Civil Engineer Squadron firefighters, fire muskets brought to the annual F.E. Warren Air Force Base, Wyo., open house, Fort D.A. Russell Days, by members of Vision Heirs, an American Revolutionary War re-enactment group. Hands-on history presentations give people a glimpse into the past. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Jason Wiese)
F.E. WARREN AIR FORCE BASE, WY, UNITED STATES
07.22.2016
Story by Senior Airman Jason Wiese
90th Missile Wing Public Affairs

Airmen from across the wing, under the leadership of Paula Taylor, Warren ICBM & Heritage Museum director, are showcasing the ICBM mission and history of the base for the general public.

Events include living history displays, battle re-enactments, period-style dances and several military static displays with Airmen standing-by to answer mission-related questions.

“Fort D.A. Russell Days is a throwback to the first Cheyenne Frontier Days, when the base hosted re-enactments of the Indian Wars,” Taylor said. “Now we show demonstrations and history from the Colonial days up to the modern era.”

Fort D.A. Russell Days is scheduled around Cheyenne Frontier Days to give more people the chance to learn about the Mighty Ninety mission and heritage.

For the next two days, visitors may tour the base as long as they have a government-issued ID.

Participants today got a chance to see “living history” performers who camped out and demonstrated skills used by settlers in the mid-to-late 19th century, including blacksmithing and horse riding.

“I think it’s fantastic,” Said Laura Volz, open-house visitor from Overland Park, Kansas. “For me not to be much of a history person, I was very intrigued by all the living history.”

She said there is not much of a military presence where she is from, so seeing military vehicles like Humvees and helicopters was a great experience.

“You see things like that in the movies,” she said, “so it’s really cool to see it in person.”

In one historical presentation, Vision Heirs, a re-enactment group, acted out an American Revolution battle for the spectators and hosted numerous displays of clothing, encampments and tools.

“It’s fun to talk to people and enlighten them on their history,” said Ethan Rivera, Vision Heirs member. “It’s a lot better to feel things with your hands instead of just reading about them in a book.”

There is even more to see Saturday and Sunday, including tours of missile training areas, where missileers train to respond to real-world scenarios they may face in a launch control center, and a training launch facility, where maintenance Airmen learn to fix and upgrade missile components.

There will also be tours of historic brick homes built around the late 1800s and early 1900s, as well as static displays of military equipment with Airmen who use them every day to explain their purpose and capabilities.

This year there are shuttle busses running tomorrow and Sunday from the CFD Park along 8th Avenue to the D.A. Russell grounds on base. Shuttles will be running from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. More information and a complete schedule of activities can be found at http://www.warren.af.mil/Home/FortDARussellDays.aspx.


CAMP PENDLETON, CA, FIRE

Roblar Fire 2016
Helicopters fill up with water from Lake O’Neill to assist Camp Pendleton Firefighters during the Roblar Fire on Camp Pendleton, Calif., July 22, 2016. The Roblar Fire has burned 2,000 acres and currently at 30% containment. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Tyler S. Dietrich)

CAMP PENDLETON, CA, UNITED STATES
07.22.2016
Video by Lance Cpl. Cody Woods
Marine Corps Installations West- Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton Combat Camera
Helicopters intake water from Lake O'Neill to extinguish the Roblar Fire while CalFire and Camp Pendleton firefighters prepare at the Lake O'Neill staging area on Camp Pendleton, Calif., July 22, 2016.  The Roblar Fire has burned 2,000 acres and currently at 30% containment.
Roblar Fire 2016
Civilians with Camp Pendleton Fire Department fill up a cooler with water and ice during the Roblar Fire on Camp Pendleton, Calif., July 22, 2016. The Roblar Fire has burned 2,000 acres and currently at 30% containment. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Tyler S. Dietrich)
Roblar Fire 2016
Civilians with California Fire and California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation unload boxes of water and bags of ice during the Roblar Fire on Camp Pendleton, Calif., July 22, 2016. The Roblar Fire has burned 2,000 acres and currently at 30% containment. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Tyler S. Dietrich)
Roblar Fire 2016
Helicopters fill up with water from Lake O’Neill to assist Camp Pendleton Firefighters during the Roblar Fire on Camp Pendleton, Calif., July 22, 2016. The Roblar Fire has burned 2,000 acres and currently at 30% containment. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Tyler S. Dietrich)
Roblar Fire 2016
Helicopters fill up with water from Lake O’Neill to assist Camp Pendleton Firefighters during the Roblar Fire on Camp Pendleton, Calif., July 22, 2016. The Roblar Fire has burned 2,000 acres and currently at 30% containment. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Tyler S. Dietrich)

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