Monday, August 8, 2016

Coast Guard Station Fire Island rescues two after boat runs aground

Coast Guard Station Fire Island rescues two after boat runs aground
NEW YORK - Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Jason Antin from Station Fire Island tends to an individual who sustained injuries following a grounding near Great Captains Island on Aug. 5, 2016. Crew members aboard the 29-foot Response Boat-Small took two people to Station Fire Island to awaiting EMS personnel. (U.S. Coast Guard photo courtesy of Station Fire Island)
BABYLON, NY, UNITED STATES
08.05.2016
Photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Steven Strohmaier 
U.S. Coast Guard District 1 PADET New York

144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise

144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
144th Civil Engineer Squadron firefightersrespond to a simulated fire emergency during a training exercise at the Fresno Air National Guard Base July 10, 2016. The training exercise scenario required multiple agencies to respond to the simulated emergency, to include members from 144th CES explosive ordnance disposal and emergency management flights. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Klynne Serrano)
FRESNO AIR NATIONAL GUARD, CA, UNITED STATES
07.10.2016
Photo by Senior Airman Klynne Pearl Serrano
144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
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144th Fighter Wing
144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
144th Civil Engineer Squadron firefighters use a hydarulic rescue tool to cut through a car during a training exercise at the Fresno Air National Guard Base July 10, 2016. Also known as Hurst's Jaws of Life, this tool is used to help firefighters save lives by freeing people from mangled cars and burning or collapsed buildings. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Klynne Serrano)
144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
U.S. Air Force Senior Airman David Geil, 144th Civil Engineer Squadron firefighter, uses a hydraulic rescue tool during a training exercise at the Fresno Air National Guard Base July 10, 2016. Also known as Hurst's Jaws of Life, this tool is used to help firefighters save lives by freeing people from mangled cars and burning or collapsed buildings. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Klynne Serrano)
144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
A 144th Civil Engineer Squadron firefighter cuts through a windshield during a training exercise at the Fresno Air National Guard Base July 10, 2016. The 144th CES firefighters also had the opportunity to train using hydraulic rescue tools, also known as Hurst's Jaws of Life, during the exercise. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Klynne Serrano)
144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
U.S. Air Force Tech. Sgt. Dennis Barnhart, 144th Civil Engineer Squadron explosive ordance disposal technician, prepares an F6A remote ordnance neutralization system unmanned remote bomb disposal robot for a training exercise at the Fresno Air National Guard Base July 10, 2016. The F6A is a heavy duty robot that uses four cameras and an extending manipulator arm to inspect and dispose explosives. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Klynne Serrano)
144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
144th Civil Engineer Squadron explosive ordnance disposal flight respond to a simulated emergency during a training exercise at the Fresno Air National Guard Base July 10, 2016. 144th EOD technicians utilized the F6A remote ordnance neutralization system during the exercise. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Klynne Serrano)
144th FW Conducts Multi-Agency Exercise
U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Abraham Barragnon, 144th Civil Engineer Squadron firefighter, puts out a simulated fire during a training exercise at the Fresno Air National Guard Base July 10, 2016. The training exercise scenario required multiple agencies to respond to the simulated emergency, to include members from 144th CES explosive ordnance disposal and emergency management flights. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Senior Airman Klynne Serrano)

Service before self: Grissom command chief saves life

Service before self: Grissom command chief saves life
Chief Master Sgt. Robert Herman, 434th Air Refueling Wing command chief, recently saved a woman who was experiencing a cardiac emergency at the Indianapolis International Airport by utilizing an automated external defibrillator (AED). Herman has more than 20 years of experience being an active-duty, Reserve and civilian firefighter/paramedic.

GRISSOM AIR RESERVE BASE, IN, UNITED STATES
08.08.2016
Story by Staff Sgt. Katrina Heikkinen
434th Air Refueling Wing

He was going through the motions of Thursday nights before a unit training assembly, waiting for his baggage, when he saw out of the peripheral of his eye that a middle-aged woman had fallen unconscious. Surrounded by a group of people, with a tone of panic, he heard a woman say “CPR.”

With more than 20 years’ experience being an active-duty, Reserve and civilian firefighter/paramedic, Herman knew time was running out for the woman named Sue.

“The situation changed immediately from a woman who was lying down and exchanging words, to a woman who had become a lifeless body on the floor,” Herman said.

Herman immediately stepped in and assisted another woman helping Sue, a nurse, with chest compressions.

“At this point, only a few moments had passed when police officer brought an AED over,” he said. “I stepped in, analyzed her heart rhythm [with an automated external defibrillator], delivered the first round of energy, started CPR, analyzed her heart and delivered a second round of energy. By the second shock she regained a palpable pulse.”

After Herman had utilized the AED, airport fire crews, including Senior Airman Todd Williams 434th Civil Engineer Squadron fire fighter, responded and assumed care of the woman, who had experienced a cardiac event. She had become their patient; Herman walked away from the event, only providing police officers with his contact information.

“I didn’t hear much after that,” Herman said. “. . . Until a few weeks later when I received a call from Sue, thanking me for my actions.”

Herman said the woman he had saved called after completing rehab and was returning back to work. Thanking him for saving her life, he said he rarely knows what happens to patients after responding to emergencies, let alone receive a phone call.

“Nothing I did was at all heroic,” he said. “Everyone in the Air Force is required to take self-aid and buddy care. Everyone would have and so often do respond in the same way – this just happens to be my occupation.”

A fire apparatus engineer for the City of Omaha, Nebraska, Herman has learned to dissociate the emotional aspects of being a firefighter/paramedic. His ability to step in can be attributed to the many years of on-the-job experience and external Air Force training that has given him the ability to mentally take every emergency situation as a mental flow chart of “if-then statements.”

“It doesn’t matter that I’m a firefighter,” Herman said. “I responded in this situation because that’s what we – as Airmen – are trained to do. It’s service before self; it’s necessary.”

The 434th ARW is the largest KC-135R Stratotanker unit in the Air Force Reserve Command. Men and women from the Hoosier Wing routinely deploy around the world in support of the Air Force mission.

Stay connected, visit Grissom on Facebook and Twitter.

Friday, August 5, 2016

ATV ride to raise money for scholarships

Mason Storm DeRosier 
By Jamey Malcomb Today at 4:00 a.m.

Mason Storm DeRosier was nervous. He was living in St. Cloud and in his first year of college training for a career as a paramedic at St. Cloud State University and he was wondering if he could handle the stress of being an emergency service worker and even if he would like it. So he did what he always did, he talked to his father.

Mason's father, Richard DeRosier, has nearly 30 years experience as an investigator with the Lake County Sheriff's Office and also as a firefighter in Silver Bay and has seen the uglier side of life as a police officer and firefighter. Richard counseled his son to try to detach himself from the situation and go about his work, a lesson Mason's father said has left him with "a little more hardened, calloused attitude."

Not long after they talked, Mason encountered an accident in St. Cloud and pulled his car over to see if he could help any of the injured victims. He told his dad, even from the small amount of knowledge he had from his courses, the reaction was automatic.

"I didn't even think about whether I could do it, whether I could handle it," Mason told his dad. "I just did it."

Richard said his son was always interested in pursuing a career in public service and doing what he could to give back to the community he lived in. After graduating from William Kelley High School in Silver Bay, Mason joined the Air Force to help pay for his education. After boot camp in San Antonio, Texas, he became a firefighter with the 148th Fighter Wing of the Minnesota National Guard. After returning from a deployment, he started college at SCSU, but in a tragic twist, Mason died suddenly April 9, 2015, just three days before his 22nd birthday.

To honor his memory, Richard and his wife, Lisa DeRosier, are organizing the "Storm the Trails" ATV ride Aug. 20 to raise money for the Mason Storm DeRosier Memorial Scholarship for those interested in pursuing a career as a firefighter or paramedic.

"What we want to do is honor him with scholarships for firefighting and paramedics because that was what he wanted to do and that was his purpose if you will," Richard said. "That was what his whole life was going to be about, that was what his career was going to be and where he was going to make his mark."

Richard said his son was "kind-hearted" and dedicated to a career of service and helping others, saying Mason told him once, "You have to be the change you want to see in the world."

Richard said during Mason's six month deployment to Kuwait at Ali Al Salem Air Base, one of the jobs that became most important to his son was his duty during dignified transfers, which is a procedure honoring the return of the remains of a service member killed in service of the United States.

"At one point he called me in the middle of the night and he said that he did some research on the guy that they had watched over and the guy was married, had two young children, played football and was just 26 years old and it just ruined him," Richard said.

Throughout his deployment, Mason kept in touch with his family through phone calls and Skype video chat. Richard said he would talk to his son at any time, whether he was working or not.

"I'd have him on the phone while I was working on a high speed chase or waiting on a drug bust and he was on the other end of the line," Richard said.

Mason loved his time with the 148th and he loved working as a firefighter with the unit. Richard said the 148th was all his son talked about after he returned and after his death, the outpouring of support from the unit for the DeRosier family was tremendous.

"In the days and moments since he passed away it was unbelievable support," he said. "I can certainly understand where he was coming from after the couple of years he was part of it."

Being a firefighter and a paramedic was part of the fabric of who Mason was as a person and his family wants to keep his memory alive by encouraging others to follow in his footsteps and hopefully alleviate some of the financial burden of becoming an emergency service worker.

The Storm the Trails ride will begin at 9 a.m. Aug. 20 in the Superior Hiking Trail parking lot on Penn Boulevard in Silver Bay. A $30 donation will get riders a barbecue sandwich basket as well as two drink tickets. There will also be a door prize all riders are eligible for and other prizes raffled off or available through a silent auction.

The ride will follow the state ATV trail to the site of Dixie Bar and Grill outside Two Harbors. The bar was destroyed by a fire in June, but owners Scott and Deanna Larson are close friends of the DeRosiers. Instead of the originally planned burger baskets, a mobile smoker will be brought in to cook the meat for the sandwiches.

Riders can purchase tickets in advance by the website the DeRosier family set up, www.masonstormscholarship.com or by going to the Facebook page, Mason Storm Memorial Scholarship Fundraiser ATV Ride. The family will also be at the start of the ride at 8 a.m. Aug. 20 to help register people the day of the event. They do ask riders to contact them through the website or Facebook page so they have an idea of the number of people planning to attend.





Coast Guard alerted to boat fire on Narragansett Bay

Coast Guard alerted to boat fire on Narragansett Bay

NARRANGANSETT BAY, RI, UNITED STATES
08.04.2016
Courtesy Photo
U.S. Coast Guard District 1  

Boat on fire in Narragansett Bay, Rhode Island on Thursday, Aug. 4, 2016. Coast Guard Station Castle Hill boat crew responds as well as Narragansett Bay Marine Task Force.

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