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• Complete
Coverage Of New York Terrorist Attack & Recovery
• Complete
Coverage Of Pentagon Terrorist Attack & Recovery
• Information
on US&R Task Force Participation Washington, D.C.
September 18, 2001
-- The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon have
thrust FEMA's Urban Search and Rescue (US&R) teams - and rescue teams
in general - into the spotlight. Their important work has transfixed a
world, brought a surge of gratitude and support, and raised many questions.
Below are some answers to questions being asked about US&R and the
rescue efforts.
Q. What is FEMA's National US&R
response system?
A. This system
is a framework for structuring local emergency personnel into integrated
disaster response task forces. These task forces, complete with necessary
tools and equipment, and specialized training and skills, are deployed
by FEMA in times of catastrophic structural collapse.
Q. How many FEMA US&R teams
are there?
A. There are 28 teams: one from Arizona; eight
from California; one from Colorado; two from Florida; two from Virginia,
and one each from Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah
and Washington State.
Q. How are FEMA US&R teams
different from other search and rescue teams?
A. FEMA teams organize existing search and
rescue capability into a national program that can quickly deploy to an
event. They have additional training, and must be able to deploy within
six hours and to sustain themselves for 72 hours. They must also have
a roster that fills 31 different positions with at least two people for
each position. To receive the FEMA certification, the team must be approved
by a US&R oversight board that includes leaders in the field and FEMA
officials. One of the difficulties in obtaining the certification is being
able to staff a complete roster of at least 62 trained individuals.
Q. What kind of positions make
up the 31 in each team?
A. First, all team members are trained and
certified emergency medical technicians. Then positions fall into roughly
four categories: search and rescue; medical; technical and logistics.
The search and rescue positions include engineers with expertise in shoring
up, bracing, evaluating, breaching and lifting structural components,
rescue specialists, and search specialists who use trained and credentialed
search dogs, cameras and listening devices. The medical positions include
physicians, EMTs, nurses and others who can set up and staff a mobile
field hospital. Technical positions include hazard materials specialists
and communications specialists, among others.
Q. What are the first steps the
teams take when they arrive at a site?
A. The FEMA US&R team meets with the field
incident commander - the local firefighter or emergency specialist who
is in charge of the site. After a general situation update and briefing,
some team members set up a base of operations at the site, including tents,
equipment and a stage areA. Meanwhile, search and rescue specialists and
structural engineers inspect the site. They look for major problem areas,
likely areas to search, the condition of the collapse and hazardous materials.
Also at this time, logistics team members are contacting local vendors
to obtain heavy equipment, shoring materials, food, portable toilets and
other supplies.
Q. Then what happens?
A. The search and rescue specialists being to gently and carefully
move into the structure into areas that are not in imminent danger of
collapse to get a better idea of the damage. They will have looked at
blueprints of the building to understand its layout and will mark areas
that need bracing and areas where victims can be seen. During this preliminary
search, if any victim is found alive, the survey halts and stabilization
efforts are concentrated there to get the victim out. After this preliminary
search, the detailed search begins with dogs, cameras and listening devices.
Medical services are given to any victims who are found alive, so they
are treated while they are being extricated.
Q. What comes next?
A. Major shoring up is the priority at this point, as additional
search is not possible until the site is safe. Shoring up will take place,
often, in many different places on the site and searches will be conducted
simultaneously. As more and deeper parts of the structure are shored up,
the searchers are able to penetrate deeper into the collapsed structure
and are not seen from the outside. The search continues as long as it's
possible that victims remain alive.
Q. What makes the task so difficult?
A. Essentially the teams have to "de-layer" the site.
Layers of slabs "pancake" on top of each other during a collapse.
Within each layer are potential safe areas for victims. But the site has
to be dug out from the top to the bottom and from the outside to the inside
or the pile will collapse further, threatening rescue workers and potentially
killing buried, but alive victims.
Q. Is that why rescuers don't
dig from underneath the structure to reach people?
A. Yes, to do so is impossible without injuring or killing rescuers.
Q. Why do rescuers use "bucket
brigades" to remove the debris rather than heavy equipment, such
as bulldozers or cranes?
A. Heavy equipment can't get close enough to the core of the site.
The equipment is blocked by twisted steel and slabs, at a minimum. Plus
using heavy equipment would destabilize the structure, risking the lives
of rescuers and victims buried in the rubble. Only by hand can the pulverized
concrete, glass, furniture and other debris be removed. In a large site,
such as the World Trade Center, the bucket brigade has to span a long
way across potentially unstable parts of the structure to firm ground
that can handle large trucks to haul it away. The site itself spans four
square city blocks and seven different collapsed buildings.
Q. In the World Trade Center,
for example, what amount of debris are we talking about?
A. In the first five days after the collapse of the towers, 30,000
tons of debris had been removed by hand; there are 600,000 tons left.
Q. Do bulldozers or cranes ever
help?
A. Yes, when it is determined that the rescue effort is over and
that no one remains alive in the structure, large equipment can be moved
in to remove debris.
Q. Since water is necessary to
keep trapped victims alive until they are rescued, why don't rescuers
shower the site with water in the hopes it will reach them?
A. Water creates significant problems for rescuers, slowing down
the rescue process and potentially destabilizing the site because of run-off.
Q. How often are the US&R
teams rotated?
A. The teams work 12 hours on and 12 hours off. They may rotate
members within the team - remember each position has at least two members
- or they may rotate complete teams. Typically, no team stays on site
for more than seven days before being rotated out.
Q. Since there are so many teams,
why are there only eight at the World Trade Center and four at the Pentagon?
A. It has to do with space limitations at the site. You can only
have so many workers "attacking" the structure at one time before
it becomes too dangerous. Also, the FEMA US&R teams augment the skilled
and determined local rescuers as well, so there are sufficient numbers
of rescuers at any time.
Q. What kind of risks do the US&R
teams face?
A. Of greatest concern, of course, is being crushed by a structural
collapse. Rescuers also get cuts and scrapes, broken bones, respiratory
injuries due to hazardous material \ fumes, dust and carbon monoxide,
and burns. They are also susceptible to diseases such diphtheria, tetanus
and pneumoniA.
Q. How are the teams paid?
A. When they are activated by FEMA, they are paid by FEMA. Otherwise,
they work their regular jobs.
Q. Who funds their equipment?
A. FEMA funds the equipment. Each team has about $1.7 million worth
of equipment, and team member may each carry as much as 60 pounds of equipment
and protective clothing on their body.
Q. How long will they stay at
a site?
A. Until it is determined that no victims could possibly be alive.
In Oklahoma City, the teams stayed for 15 days.
Q. Does FEMA hire members of the
US&R team and how can I apply?
A. FEMA does not hire team members; FEMA credentials teams that
meet the stringent criteria and are approved by the US&R oversight
board. The training is extensive and the commitment required is significant.
For more information, go to
www.fema.gov/usr/usrtask_info.shtm.
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