1 / 27

CNCSAR Search and Rescue Intro to Search Management Training and Operations

CNCSAR Search and Rescue Intro to Search Management Training and Operations. North Carolina August 2009. Prepared by: Kim Ringeisen and Jay Royster. Jay Royster President Kim Ringeisen Vice President Randy Young Public Liaison Central NC Search & Rescue.

clay
Download Presentation

CNCSAR Search and Rescue Intro to Search Management Training and Operations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CNCSARSearch and Rescue Intro to Search Management Training and Operations North Carolina August 2009 Prepared by: Kim Ringeisen and Jay Royster

  2. Jay Royster President Kim Ringeisen Vice President Randy Young Public Liaison Central NC Search & Rescue

  3. Central NC Search & Rescue • 8 members, 7 SARTECH II or higher • Specializing in wilderness search • 1 certified dog, 2 others currently in training for scent discriminating, air scent search • 6 members with 7 or more years of search experience • Main callout area is Central NC, however, will go statewide.

  4. CNCSAR Organization County Sheriff County EM State SAR Coordinator

  5. Organizational Priorities • Operations Manager / Captain will be responsible: • SAR Preplanning • Coordinated team incident response • On scene operations • Team Readiness • Fundraising • Inter-agency operations • Training Manager/ Captain will be responsible for: • SAR Training • Community outreach / training • Compliance • Certifications

  6. SAR team operational priorities • Meet FEMA equipment and member compliance for Wilderness Search and Rescue response (personnel and equipment) • Type IV Ready by XX XX XX • Type III Ready by XX XX XX • Type II Ready by XX XX XX http://www.nasar.org/nasar/news.php?id=151 http://www.fema.gov/preparedness/resources/search_and_rescue/wilderness_search_team.htm • Meet supporting role for Canine Search and Rescue Team Type IV, III and II response by xx xx xx • Establishment of SAR team roster • By support, SAR and/or command skills • Update Initial response procedures • County • State-wide Mutual aid • Develop MSAR Response (Mountain Bike and Equestrian) • Update extended response procedures

  7. SAR team training and continuing education • Identify critical training requirements for division • Develop 2009 - 2010 training requirements and plan • Minimum of one training a month (last [weekday]) • Minimum of one Funsar a year • Minimum of one SAR Tech II Test a year • Minimum of one Mock Search a year • Meet Rescue Technician Requirements for “Land Search” • Establish collaboration and cross notification with [team1] and [team2]. • Develop as a county lead for SAR response and training • Identify cross-training requirements for crime scene training and evidence recovery (Disaster and Single Incident) • Identify training requirements for MSAR (Mountain Bike, Equestrian) • Ensure ALL training records are kept on file with the training officer and online. • Keep medical training up-to-date.

  8. County SAR capabilities • Lost person incident (child, hunter, despondent or dementia) • First responders and/or EMT response in rural or wilderness setting. (Patient location, access, stabilization and transport) • Specialized vehicle response (4x4, gator, Mountain Bike) • Access to gated trails and water elements within the county • Disaster Search and Rescue (Natural and/or man-made) • Winter Storm response team to clear vehicles or structures. • Law Enforcement support for initial search of area • Law Enforcement support for evidence search and recovery • Law Enforcement support for Rural/Wilderness navigation • Mapping and pre-planning for parks or trails within the county • Community outreach • National Hug-a-Tree child training • Retirement or care facility training concerning walk-aways • National Be-a-Tree, dog bite prevention training • Youth group support; outdoors safety, skills

  9. A search in Franklin County

  10. Search is an Emergency!

  11. Search is an Emergency! • A SAR response must be rapid and effective. • The subject may need emergency care, may not be able to protect themselves from the environment and may not have the ability to walk out on their own. • An urgent response is required to contain the incident. • The longer it takes to activate a search response, the larger the search area will become. The larger the search area, the higher risk to life. • 1 hour=12.6 Sq miles / 2 hours=50.2 Sq miles, 3 hours= 113 Sq miles @ 2mph

  12. 3 Things to Do: Missing Person • Law Enforcement Investigation (if not already started) • Protect PLS and Missing Persons Room ASAP • Call SAR Teams training in Missing Persons Search

  13. Next Steps • Determine urgency and perimeters. Determine search area and set up containment. • Investigate with missing persons questionnaire. • Begin “hasty searches”

  14. How Do We Search? • Clue detection • Critical spacing • Seeing for the 1st Time

  15. Efficient Search • Describe using critical spacing • Combination of Air Scent Dogs, Trailing Dogs, Ground Teams, and Trackers • Know where you have been and where you have not! • Document, document, document!

  16. Tracking

  17. Medical Ready under any conditions!

  18. MAPS

  19. How to Contact Us • Always call 911 • Direct callout using CNCSAR 1-866-211-7325 • Center at (800) 858-0368 to request SAR • www.cncsar.org

More Related