7th CSC reacts to disasters during GS'10

By Spc. Glenn M. Anderson, 7th CSC Public AffairsSeptember 2, 2010

7th CSC reacts to disasters during GS'10
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7th CSC reacts to disasters during GS'10
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – 7th Civil Support Command's Incident Management Team members participating in Guardian Shield '10 gather within their respective sections to discuss an inject placed within the exercise. An Inject is a sudden problem that is placed within the exercis... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

KAISERSLAUTERN, Germany - A chemical plant in a foreign country accidently releases a plume of toxic fumes causing panic, sickness and numerous deaths within the city where the plant is located. Adding to all the chaos, the weather makes the situation worse for the citizens who live in the area of direct impact. A call comes from the foreign country for U.S. assistance. Who will go'

Guardian Shield 10, a yearly exercise designed to train the 7th Civil Support Command in conducting consequence management operations in response to a crisis, was conducted Aug 17-20 here at Rhine Ordnance Barracks.

The 7th CSC was alerted and marshaled to Plock, Poland in the scenario. Guardian Shield 10 is one in a series of exercises to help the 7th CSC train for its mission in consequence management and civil affairs.

A relatively new unit having been activated in Sept. 2009, the 7th CSC is unique as it is the only consequence management and civil affairs Reserve unit in Europe. Their sole purpose is to respond to incidents and provide immediate assistance so the effected people or country can return back to normality.

The 7th CSC provides trained and ready, forward-stationed consequence management command and control, civil support teams, and civil affairs capabilities. They also provide immediate response capability as directed by United States Army Europe.

7th Civil Support Command's Incident Management Team members participating in Guardian Shield '10 gather within their respective sections to discuss an inject placed within the exercise. An Inject is a sudden problem that is placed within the exercise requiring solving while keeping the exercise on track. (Photo by Spc. Glenn M. Anderson, 7th Civil Support Command Public Affairs)

"The focus of this one was to conduct command and control," said Capt. Major Robinson, a 7th CSC training officer and the night shift battle captain for this exercise."It is almost like night and day in how much better we were this time around."

What I see is the 7th CSC moving into a real world direction, and it won't be long before we are ready to handle it. "We are headed in the right direction," Robinson added.

Mark Terry, a consequence management defense contractor supporting the Defense Threat Reduction Agency and a GS10 exercise planner / observer controller and After Action Review facilitator, said "The 7th has its own challenges, because of personnel rotations. The beauty of the 7th CSC is that there is a strong desire to do well and to learn and if you have that, you are golden."

These exercises are conducted so that the strengths and weaknesses can be pinpointed and built upon. And as long as there are dedicated people conducting the exercise, the unit will have a really good grasp on how things are done, said Terry.

He then added that from top to bottom, the 7th CSC has a great team that wants to work toward an attainable goal. And of course the DTRA is here to help with the foreign consequence management training.

"GS10 provided some of the most realistic training for the 7th CSC with members of the Polish fire services, the Polish police force, U.S. Air Force and Navy, to give the exercise the feel of a real world event," said James Otto, 7th CSC director of emergency services.

Mother Nature brings fires, tsunamis and earthquakes to different parts of the World. Disaster strikes through accidental chemical releases or explosions. The 7th CSC continuously trains and prepares to respond if called upon.