Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Cal Guard activates for Carr Fire

Cal Guard activates for Carr Fire
REDDING, CA, UNITED STATES
07.29.2018
Photo by Staff Sgt. Edward Siguenza
California National Guard 

Military police from the California Army National Guard supported law enforcement late July in Redding, California, after the Carr Fire erupted and destroyed 500 structures and torched nearly 50,000 acres within a week. Sgt. Jesus Valencia and Spc. Cameron Hodges of Cal Guard’s 270th Military Police Company, 185th Military Police Battalion, 49th Military Police Brigade, update a California Highway Patrol at Redding’s Keswick Dam. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Eddie Siguenza)

Responders Train for Aviation Disasters

Pa. Guard, Civilian First Responders Train for Aviation Disasters
WICONISCO, PA, UNITED STATES

07.21.2018
Photo by 1st Lt. Travis Mueller 
28th Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigade  

Emergency personnel from Dauphin and Schuylkill counties responded to a simulated aviation disaster scene at Wiconsico, PA, July 21, 2018.

Portrait of Fireman Dallin Matthews

Portrait of Fireman Dallin Matthews
CAPE MAY, NJ, UNITED STATES
07.30.2018
Photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Richard Brahm
U.S. Coast Guard Training Center Cape May 

U.S. Coast Guard Fireman Dallin Matthews, a member of the Coast Guard Fire Department stationed at Coast Guard Training Center Cape May, poses for a photo in front of fire engine 31 at the Coast Guard Fire Department at Training Center Cape May, July 30, 2018.

Matthews pulled a female that crashed her car into a tree at high speeds out of her smoldering vehicle near Higbee's Beach.

Official U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Richard Brahm.

Monday, July 30, 2018

Pa. Guard, Civilian First Responders Train for Aviation Disasters

Pa. Guard, Civilian First Responders Train for Aviation Disasters
Photo By 1st Lt. Travis Mueller | Civilian first responders from Dauphin and Schuylkill counties perform emergency care on a mock casualty of a simulated aviation disaster at Wiconisco, PA, July 21, 2018.  
WICONISCO, PA, UNITED STATES
07.22.2018
Story by 1st Lt. Travis Mueller 
28th Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigade  
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WICONISCO, Pa -- Soldiers with the Pennsylvania Army National Guard’s 28th Expeditionary Combat Aviation Brigade joined civilian first responders from Dauphin and Schuylkill counties for a helicopter familiarization and emergency response drill here July 21, 2018.

The training was conducted to instruct first responders on special considerations during an aviation accident.

“The training is to familiarize those civilian emergency responders with the helicopters we use in the military and broader aviation community,” said 1st Lt. Travis Mueller, spokesman for the 28th ECAB. “Our soldiers, our people, are our most treasured resource in the 28th ECAB and we go to great lengths to make sure they are safe doing their job. However, if our soldiers are ever involved in an aviation accident we want to ensure that they would be under the best care possible and that first responders know how to handle the unique nature of those accidents.”

First responders were present from Wiconisco Fire Company No. 1, Lykens Liberty Hose Company No. 2, Williamstown EMS, Wiconisco Township Police and Pennsylvania State Police. 

A CH-47 Chinook and UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter, operated by soldiers with the 28th ECAB, took off from Fort Indiantown Gap in the morning and parked at the Wiconisco Fire Company. They were joined by helicopters and flight crews from the Pennsylvania State Police, Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, and Geisinger Health System.

The flight crews briefed the first responders on aircraft orientation, hazard identification, safety considerations, removing injured flight crew members from the aircraft and emergency fuel and battery shut off procedures.

After the briefing portion of the event, the local first responders participated in a helicopter disaster drill. Another flight crew operating a CH-47, from the 28th ECAB’s 2-104th General Support Aviation Battalion, landed on a field east of the fire company and simulated a crash scene and major injuries. Local first responders then rushed to the scene and performed triage and emergency medical care on the mock victims.

“We were happy to have our aircrews involved in this training,” said Lt. Col. Michael Girvin, commander of the 2-104th GSAB. “If we ever run into any emergencies in this area, that civilian emergency personnel could be the ones responding to the scene. This training involves ensuring emergency crews know how to care for aircrews in a downed aircraft.”

The event was originally planned to occur in the fall of 2017 but was rescheduled so 28th ECAB soldiers could participate in hurricane relief efforts in the southern United States. 

“Aside from the training, we wanted to build and foster relationships with the civilian agencies here today. We are all partners in assisting and protecting our community,” said Chief Warrant Officer 5 Joe Sandbakken, safety officer for the 28th ECAB. “The civilian responders here are experts at what they do and, after today’s training, we have no doubt that if anything were to happen to us that we’d be under top-notch care.”

Chief Warrant Officer 3 Danielle Watkins, safety officer for the 628th Aviation Support Battalion, worked with Ron Pinchorski, Wiconisco Fire Chief, along with other soldiers and community members, for over a year to coordinate the event. Coordination included identifying landing and parking areas for the participating aircraft, invitations to other emergency agencies and finding an area to conduct the simulated disaster scene. Planning for the event included coordination with the county dispatch service to have them participate in the drill and ensure they know the appropriate people to contact in the Pennsylvania National Guard in the event of an Army aviation-related emergency.

The 28th ECAB hopes to expand this training in the future and includes first responders from other communities and cities, citing the value of the training for their aviators as well as civilian first responders. 

“Safety is at the forefront of our minds in everything we do. This training ensures that if we do get into an accident that we would be in good hands,” said Watkins. “You cannot put a price on that.”

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Firefighter egress training JBSA-Lackland

Firefighter egress training JBSA-Lackland
SAN ANTONIO, TX, UNITED STATES
07.24.2018
Photo by Staff Sgt. Derek Davis
149th Fighter Wing (Texas Air National Guard) 


Fire Fighters with the Joint Base San Antonio Fire Department conduct their quarterly in-flight egress training with the 149th Fighter Wing at JBSA-Lackland, Texas, July 24, 2018. The training being conducted is to familiarize the Fire Fighters with the aircraft types most prevalent on their respective base, for JBSA-Lackland this would be the F-16 Fighting Falcon and the C-5 Galaxy. (Air National Guard photo by Staff Sgt. Derek Davis)

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