Oracle Fire Department holds CERT EMS drill; firefighters serve as patients in shooting scenario

Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather
DSC_0022.JPG

See more photos from Oracle CERTS training online at: http://bit.ly/XszMEo.

By John Hernandez

Imagine a group of Oracle local firefighters receiving a call that a 57-year-old woman has been assaulted and has suffered traumatic head injuries. When they respond, they are met by her husband, the assaulter, who has a gun and shoots all of them.

Minutes later, a call is received at the fire department from the Sheriff’s Office that multiple firefighters are down, extent of injuries are unknown, the suspect is in custody and the scene is secure for EMS personnel to move in.

Multiple ambulances have been dispatched and are on the way but they are one hour away. The Oracle Fire Department immediately sent out a page to their Community Emergency Response Team (CERT).

This was the scenario of a drill held on Monday, Feb. 11, by the Oracle Fire Department to test the readiness of their CERT Team in what would be a most difficult scenario, who will show up and what to do when all first responders are down.

The Community Emergency Response Team is a group of volunteers who have completed a number of classes designed to teach skills in first aid, safety procedures incident assistance and other venues that would help the Oracle Fired Department and the community.

CERTs may help in the office or respond to a non-hazardous emergency to assist the first responders.

The drill was not announced ahead of time and Oracle firefighters played the roles of the injured firemen to make the drill as realistic as possible. The CERT was forced to become the first responders as all the firefighters were incapacitated.

The incident scenario included injuries to the firefighters which included a dead firefighter, shock, spinal injury, unconscious, and a walking wounded patient.

“CERT teams promptly and efficiently identified the most critical patients and treated them for life threatening injuries such as bleeding and shock” said Fire Chief Larry Southard. “All objectives of this drill were met.”

The objectives included dispatch procedures, forming into two- and three-person response teams, locating the incident scene, size-up, triage, treating injuries and handing off patients to arriving EMS crews.

“Our CERTS have worked very hard to achieve the training level that they have, and this drill really showed what a valuable asset they are to the Oracle Fire Department and to the community,” Southard said.

Doug Johnson, Captain OFD CERT said the crew hoped to learn of any weaknesses and shortcomings through this drill. “We were pleasantly surprised to see the drill actually became a showcase of our strengths,” Johnson said. “The team demonstrated no major areas in need of improvement. We need to maintain the level of service and response as demonstrated in this drill.”

He thanked the firefighters in participating in the drill. “They role-played extremely well and under especially cold conditions while lying on the ground or sitting outdoors for a long period of time.”

The temperature during the drill was around 38 degrees. It snowed later in the evening.

Ongoing classes are taken annually by CERT members to update and improve their skills. They are there to assist the Oracle Fire department anyway they can. “Oracle CERT is the only group of its kind in Pinal County” said Doug Johnson.

Firefighters that participated as victims in the scenario were: Beau Houston, Bubba Matthews, Albert Ortiz Jr., Gilbert Seballos, and Jared Ortiz.

The CERTs participating were Kevin Armbrust, Susie Cochran, Collins Cochran, Mike Snyder, Rachel Opinsky, Lois Hatfield, Jenine Mayer, and Bob Elder.

Although this scenario may never play out in the community, other similar types of disasters could occur that would call upon the CERT to assist as first responders.

admin (8139 Posts)


Facebooktwitterby feather
Facebooktwitterredditpinterestlinkedinmailby feather

Comments are closed.

  • Additional Stories

    Cradle Roll: Evander Michael Cook

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    Evander Michael Cook was born Oct. 10, 2013 at 10:20 a.m. in Scottsdale, weighing 6 pounds, 14 ounces and measuring 19 1/2 […]


    Miner grapplers prep for sectional tournament

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    By Andrew Luberda San Manuel Miner The San Manuel Wrestling team has been preparing for the postseason by competing against […]


    Miner grapplers prep for sectional tournament

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    By Andrew Luberda San Manuel Miner The San Manuel Wrestling team has been preparing for the postseason by competing against […]


    Sea Lions compete in Yuma’s Polar Bear Plunge Meet

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    Over the weekend of Jan. 24-26, the Sea Lions Swim Team competed at the Polar Bear Plunge Swim Meet at […]


  • Additional Stories

    Couple who held daughters captive in Pima County now facing Pinal County charges

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    A couple accused of keeping the wife’s three daughters captive in Pima County are now facing added charges in Pinal […]


    Medical marijuana dispensary possible for Oracle

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    By John Hernandez San Manuel Miner Around 40 Oracle residents attended a public meeting held at the Oracle Community Center […]


    Postseason is next for Lady Miners after successful regular season

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    By Andrew Luberda San Manuel Miner The San Manuel girls’ basketball team boasts a record of 21 – 5 heading […]


    Oracle Schools to consider moving kindergarten to the Mountain Vista Campus

    February 5th, 2014
    by

    By Dennis Blauser Superintendent, Oracle Schools On Feb. 18 the Oracle School District Governing Board will discuss the idea of […]


  • Copperarea

  • Southeast Valley Ledger