Civil Support Teams assisted interagency partners during the 58th Presidential Inauguration

By Sgt. Jennifer AmoJanuary 26, 2017

Civil Support Teams Assist Interagency Partners in Emergency Response for 58th Presidential Inauguration
1 / 4 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Sgt. Solomon Acevero, a survey team member for the District of Columbia National Guard 33rd Civil Support Team, helps to direct a vehicle for an emergency response, in Washington D.C, Jan 18, 2017. During 58th Presidential Inauguration, the District... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Civil Support Teams Assist Interagency Partners in  Emergency Response for 58th Presidential Inauguration
2 / 4 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Members of the Civil Support Team discuss logistics on how to utilize equipment to mitigate threats, in Washington D.C., Jan. 18, 2017. During 58th Presidential Inauguration, the District of Columbia National Guard's 33rd Civil Support Team (CST) sup... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Civil Support Teams Assist Interagency Partners in  Emergency Response for 58th Presidential Inauguration
3 / 4 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Sgt. Solomon Acevero, a survey team member for the District of Columbia National Guard 33rd Civil Support Team checks his equipment for indication of a hazard, in Washington D.C., Jan. 18, 2017. During the 58th Presidential Inauguration, the District... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Civil Support Teams Assist Interagency Partners in Emergency Response for 58th Presidential Inauguration
4 / 4 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Sgt. Solomon Acevero, a survey team member for the District of Columbia National Guard 33rd Civil Support Team checks his equipment for indication of a hazard, in Washington D.C., Jan. 18, 2017. During the 58th Presidential Inauguration, the District... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The District of Columbia National Guard's 33rd Civil Support Team supplemented by over 1,200 Soldiers and Airmen from CSTs across the country, and supported interagency teams during the 58th Presidential Inauguration.

Chemical Biological Radiological Nuclear Explosive requests encompass a large array of things from Hazmat with dangerous chemicals to CBRNE situations.

Approximately 26 National Guard CST teams from Maryland, West Virginia, New Hampshire, Delaware, North Dakota, New Jersey, Washington, Nevada, and Guam, augmented the main taskforce.

"CST teams actively working in joint interagency teams will respond to suspicious packages, anything they deem out of the ordinary during the presidential inauguration and will escalate the requests through different echelons of government for the response," said Task Force CBRNE commander Maj. Drew Smith.

According to Smith, there is a Joint Hazard Assessment Team that will direct teams and the operation system will be connected to FBI Washington field office, D.C. Fire Operation Center and U.S. Capitol Police.

Different teams roving in the secured and unsecured areas of the city, decrease response time and increase speed.

"Speed is everything in our business and the quicker we can mitigate the incident the more lives we can save," Smith said. "We bring in mass casualties decontamination units and medical triage units because if there is a release, we want to get them decontaminated quickly and they have a better likelihood to survive".

CST teams can be deployed with different suits that range in usage from chemical reconnaissance to decontamination, said Staff Sgt. John Ewasko, a team leader in the Delaware National Guard's 31st CST.

"Our involvement is extremely important because it helps the local responders in the area to quickly identify whether it's an unattended backpack or bomb, which determines if it's safe or an actual threat," Ewasko said.