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    Firefighters learn rope, rappelling skills during technical rescue training at Fort McCoy

    Firefighters learn rope, rappelling skills during technical rescue training at Fort McCoy

    Photo By Scott Sturkol | Firefighters with the Directorate of Emergency Services (DES) Fire Department practice...... read more read more

    Ten people with the Directorate of Emergency Services (DES) Fire Department completed 40 hours of training in the Ropes Rescue I course for technical rescue.

    The firefighters completed training on towers at the installation’s Air Assault Course on the cantonment area.

    The course is the first of many for the firefighters in technical rescue training, said Assistant Fire Chief Jeremy Olivier.

    “This is a very important foundation course because everything learned in Rope Rescue is applied in other technical rescue courses,” Olivier said. “It involves using ropes and rappelling in high- and low-angle environments.”

    According to the National Fire Protection Agency (NFPA), the training includes understanding, directing, and operating simple rope-lowering systems.

    It also includes safely ascending and descending a fixed-rope system in a high-angle environment and understanding and operating a rope-rescue system intended to move a load horizontally in a safe and controlled manner.

    “These are skills we’re teaching all of our personnel,” Olivier said.

    The DES Fire Department stepped up the department’s training in technical rescue in 2014. Technical rescue is defined as those aspects of saving life or property that employ the use of tools and skills that exceed those normally used in firefighting, medical emergency, and rescue, according to the NFPA. These disciplines include rope rescue, confined space rescue, trench and excavation rescue, and more. 

    “Those who finished Rope Rescue I training then go into Rope Rescue II training,” Olivier said.

    “Each piece of training builds on all previous training and continues to build more skills.”

    Instructors with the Regional Emergency All-Climate Training (REACT) Center at Volk Field, Wis., taught the course. Olivier said having trainers come to Fort McCoy to do this training saves time and money.

    “It costs more to send our folks off somewhere to get this training, so having the ability to have people who can come from Volk Field, which is so close to us, is a definite plus for us,” Olivier said.

    The REACT Center specializes in providing training required for “a safe and successful response to natural and manmade disasters to both military and civilian responders,” states the REACT Center web page, react.wi.gov.

    The REACT Center is located on a 15-acre site at Volk Field.
    Olivier said the DES Fire Department will continue to work with the REACT Center for future training.

    Learn more about Fort McCoy online at www.mccoy.army.mil, on Facebook by searching "ftmccoy," and on Twitter by searching “usagmccoy.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.23.2018
    Date Posted: 05.23.2018 16:43
    Story ID: 278162
    Location: FORT MCCOY, WISCONSIN, US

    Web Views: 186
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN