52nd CST ready for mission aiding civil authorities

By Staff Sgt. Michael Carden | Ohio National GuardOctober 16, 2020

52nd CST ready for mission aiding civil authorities
1 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Members of the 52nd Civil Support Team (Weapons of Mass Destruction) decontaminate survey team personnel after exposure to an unknown agent during an exercise on Sept. 28, 2020, at the Fairfield County Airport, in Carroll, Ohio. Each of the nearly 60 congressionally mandated civil support teams across the country is evaluated and validated every 18 months to ensure the team’s skills are up to the task of helping keep communities safe and protecting the homeland. (Photo Credit: Staff Sgt. Michael Carden) VIEW ORIGINAL
52nd CST ready for mission aiding civil authorities
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Members of the 52nd Civil Support Team (Weapons of Mass Destruction) discuss the plan to evaluate a suspected contaminated building during an exercise on Sept. 28, 2020, at the Fairfield County Airport in Carroll, Ohio. Each of the nearly 60 congressionally mandated civil support teams across the country is evaluated and validated every 18 months to ensure the team’s skills are up to the task of helping keep communities safe and protecting the homeland. (Photo Credit: Staff Sgt. Michael Carden) VIEW ORIGINAL

CARROLL, Ohio – Two FBI agents in the hospital with strange symptoms, radioactive materials missing from a local research facility, and a nearby building shooting. It’s a recipe for disaster and a scenario that keeps first responders and counterterrorism experts awake at night. Enter the Soldiers and Airmen of the Ohio National Guard’s 52nd Civil Support Team (Weapons of Mass Destruction).

Within 90 minutes of receiving the call, they are headed to the site to give federal, state and local responders insight into the hazard and handle it. This time, on a beautiful fall day at the end of September, they are showing up to a training exercise to practice their real-world skills while being externally evaluated by the experts from U.S. Army North.

“This unit represents the tip of the spear of our nation’s response to terrorist use of chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and explosive agents,” said Derrick Johnson, a team chief with Civil Support Training Activity, U.S. Army North, and one of the evaluators for the exercise. “We’re here to assess the training program and to see if it’s successful.”

The 52nd CST members had to be creative with their training plan amid a global pandemic, finding ways to keep their skills sharp while following social distancing guidelines and COVID-19 safety measures while on scene.

“Initially, COVID took us to a screeching halt; this exercise was originally scheduled for the end of April,” said Lt. Col. David Foster, the commander of the 52nd CST. “That didn’t keep us from training. We just honed our tasks. From there, we were able to jump into our collective training. We have trained hard, and these exercises will take us from good to great.”

While the exercise may not be dangerous, the team approaches it as if it were. From the moment they show up, they plan the next step to locate and identify the threat.

One of those stepping into the unknown first is Tech Sgt. David Hurst, a survey team chief with the 52nd CST, finds preparedness the best defense against nerves.

“That’s when I’m the calmest,” Hurst said. “Because our team does so much training. We do 300 to 400 hours of training per year. We’re going to the best schools that the Department of Defense offers, FBI and CIA. We’re the absolute best when we do go down range and it’s real.”

The civil support teams are a congressionally mandated program to provide identification, analysis and mitigation resources to first responders. Each of the CSTs across the country — there is at least one in every U.S. state and territory — is evaluated and validated every 18 months to ensure the team’s skills are up to the task of helping keep communities safe and protecting the homeland.

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