Florida National Guard rehearses with civilian rescuers

By Staff Sgt. Carmen Fleischmann | Florida National GuardMay 10, 2019

Florida National Guard rehearses with civilian rescuers
1 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – At Cecil Field, each search and rescue team prepares their vehicles for transport during the annual Search and Rescue Exercise. Knowing exactly how to load each aircraft with specific equipment and team members can ensure a speedy response in the eve... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Florida National Guard rehearses with civilian rescuers
2 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – After recovering a casualty during a wide area search, a task force team calls in a medevac and prepares him for transport during a Search and Rescue Exercise which combines Florida's first responders and the Florida National Guard's Chemical, Biolog... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Florida National Guard rehearses with civilian rescuers
3 / 3 Show Caption + Hide Caption – (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

STARKE, Fla. - When disaster strikes, personnel from various civilian agencies across the state unite with members of the Florida National Guard's Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and Explosive (CBRNE) Enhanced Response Force Package (CERFP), forming multiple tactical response teams and task forces.

This week, those same partners, comprised of personnel ranging from Duval to Palm Beach Counties, came together for a Search and Rescue Exercise (SAREX) to fine-tune response efforts for the next large-scale disaster.

"Any time you get with first responders, folks that we are going to respond with like we've done in Hurricanes Hermine, Irma, Michael, that's value added," said U.S. Army Col. Michael Ladd, J2/J3 Director of Military Support. "We're getting best practices from everything they're doing. Not only are we teaching and learning, but these are the response partners that have asked for our support to kind of round out their teams and round out their capabilities."

After completing a swim test Tuesday morning, the Soldiers and Airmen of CERFP joined their civilian counterparts on their respective teams and traveled to Camp Blanding Joint Training Center to complete an extensive area search, structure collapse, and maritime rescue.

In recent years, the SAREX has essentially become an annual exercise that factors in lessons learned from real-world missions during hurricane season. The first year, CERFP realized aviation assets were needed to perform reconnaissance of devastated areas immediately, in order to ensure the teams reach the most critical locations first.

Hurricane Irma was the first time those critical tools were put in place, and Sgt. 1st Class Chuck Morrow, CERFP non-commissioned officer in charge, says once the helos arrived, what would've taken three days with CERFP's land and amphibious vessels took merely three hours.

The following SAREX they decided to test prepositioning the aircraft instead of just calling in support from their base of operations. The success of this planning was demonstrated with how quickly help arrived during Hurricane Michael.

"By prepositioning the helicopter assets in Tallahassee when we knew it was going to hit Panama City, as soon as the wind died down enough for us to get into the birds and do reconnaissance, we were able to do that," said Morrow. "We were able to put the assets where they needed to be on the ground in Mexico Beach, Panama City, no matter what."

Last year's catastrophic Hurricane Michael also helped to identify yet another piece of the puzzle. After the category 5 storm ripped through parts of the Panhandle, communications broke down for nearly every agency. Even with tactical radios, CERFP and their partners had trouble relaying information as fast as possible back to state leadership. Without the updates coming in from ground zero, additional assets standing by at the ready did not know where to go or how to get there, which is why communications is an overarching theme of this years' SAREX.

For this event, communications teams are integrating with CERFP and come hurricane season, this fine-tuned asset will be ready to better support the citizens of Florida.

"The Florida National Guard has taken great strides in having the ability to come to your aid as soon as possible and get you and your family out of harm's way, as quickly as possible," said Morrow. "We have just as much, if not more, capabilities than our first responders to tell the state of Florida, sit tight, we're coming quickly. Much more so than any other state."

Morrow has been a part of this program since it was created in 2004 when Florida was one of 10 states tasked with creating this capability from scratch. Today 17 CERFP's spread across the nation and Morrow believes Florida's is still the best, as he prepares to pass its reigns onto the next NCOIC. He counts the growth of the CERFP as one of his proudest contributions to the FLNG.

"When we responded to Hermine, it wasn't that big but we were the first ones there and we linked with our agency partners. That was a good deal knowing that the state of Florida leadership had finally bought into the program that we had worked hard to legitimize. I have always seen the value in it and I think, four hurricanes later, not only does our National Guard leadership, but our state responder community values us as well."

Col. Ladd echoes Morrow's praise of the program and is adamant that events like the SAREX are instrumental in Florida's unmatched success in disaster response.

"The application of this CERFP asset into hurricane response and maritime search and rescue, into fatality search and recovery, into tactical emergency communications … we just don't get to exercise it that much so this relationship provides the ability to sharpen that sword that's sitting dormant on a shelf. When we have to pull it out, when we have to break that glass, they're ready for primetime and all of those relationships they have with first responders are well rehearsed and they know each other."

These skills they are sharpening are also not just for hurricane response. Fatality search and rescue teams from other states' CERFPs have been utilized very recently in a variety of other disasters, like the mudslides in California and severe flooding in other parts of the south. Maritime missions and wide area searches have both come into play from a downed aircraft. Florida National Guard senior leaders recognize this as well and find it a testament to the caliber of Guard members within their ranks.

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