New York Task
Force One Went to Haiti in January
42 Members of the FDNY, 38 Members of the NYPD, 1 from
Office of Emergency Management and 4 Search Dogs To Leave Early Friday Morning
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg,
Office of Emergency Management Commissioner Joseph F. Bruno,
Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly, and Fire Commissioner Salvatore J. Cassano announced tonight that
that New York Task Force One, New York City's Federal Emergency Management
Agency-sponsored (FEMA) Urban Search and Rescue team made up of
specially-trained personnel from the New York City Police and Fire Departments,
has been activated and will deploy to Marlborough, Massachusetts early Friday
morning in advance of Hurricane Earl, to be in place in the event their skills
are needed. The team, which was deployed to Port-au-Prince, Haiti
following the devastating earthquake in January, will leave from 930 Flushing
Avenue in Brooklyn with 42 members of the FDNY including six Emergency Medical
Technicians (EMTs), 38 Members of the NYPD, one person from the Office of
Emergency Management (OEM) and four search dogs.
"In
New York City
, we have a
special appreciation for the support that others give during times of crisis.
When we got the call from FEMA this evening, our men and women were already
rushing out the door to help," Mayor Bloomberg said.
"New York City has the
finest police officers, firefighters and emergency medical personnel in the
world, and the FDNY, NYPD, and OEM members who serve on New York Task Force One
are the best of the best," said OEM Commissioner Joseph Bruno. "Our team
has demonstrated its expertise around the country and recently beyond our
borders in Haiti, and I am
sure their service to the people of Massachusetts will make New York
City proud."
"Our team has unrivaled
experience and expertise, performing at the highest level possible and dedicated
to saving lives regardless of the challenge or the danger," said Police
Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly.
"As they did months ago in
Haiti, our best trained
firefighters and emergency medical personnel are prepared to again perform
life-saving work - this time in
Massachusetts
- if necessary," said Fire
Commissioner Salvatore J. Cassano.
New York Task Force One is
managed by the Office of Emergency Management and specializes in urban search
and rescue, disaster recovery, and emergency triage and medicine. The team
is equipped with the latest technology and equipment and trained to respond to
catastrophic events involving the collapse of heavy steel and concrete. The team
is also trained in the use of specialized equipment including listening devices
that can detect a heart beat, motion detection devices that can detect the
smallest movements, and thermal imaging and search cameras for use in confined
spaces.
In January, the team was
deployed to
Port-au-Prince,
Haiti
following
that nation's devastating earthquake. In
Haiti, the team members conducted six rescues,
including one within hours of arriving in
Haiti
. New York
Task Force One was previously deployed in 2008 in response to Hurricane's Ike
and Gustav.
The FEMA Urban Search and
Rescue program was originally envisioned as a response system for natural
disasters. Since the program's inception, the task forces have broadened the
scope of its work. Two early activations of the Urban Search and Rescue system
occurred in response to Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and the 1994 Northridge
Earthquake in California. Urban Search and Rescue teams were also activated in
response to the 1995 Oklahoma
City bombing, the
2001 attacks on the
World
Trade
Center
and the Pentagon,
and Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Additionally, FEMA has deployed Urban Search and
Rescue teams for such events as the
Atlanta and
Salt Lake
City Olympic games, the 1997 and 2001
presidential inaugurations, and the
Gulf
Coast
hurricanes in
2007.