Posts Tagged Illinois Urban Search and Rescue Team

Illinois fire service news

Excerpts from wgntv.com:

Nearly 70 firefighters from about 30 different departments will be leaving Tuesday morning and heading to Louisiana to help after Hurricane Ida. They are part of a strike team that will help fill in for other fire departments in Louisiana.

On Tuesday night, about 50 area firefighters returned after spending six days in the New Orleans area. They were part of the Illinois Urban Search and Rescue Team and spent about a week in Louisiana after Hurricane Ida hit.

While they were on the ground they helped people get food, water, and oxygen. They also did a lot of surveying of damage so FEMA and the Red Cross would know where to focus their help. They said damage was widespread and the heat was suffocating.

It could be weeks before power is restored in some areas.

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Illinois Task Force 1 deployed after Hurricane Florence

Excerpts from the DailyHerald.com:

A team of 15 firefighters with the Illinois Urban Search and Rescue Team deployed to North Carolina after Hurricane Florence made landfall in North Carolina on Sept. 14. A federal disaster was declared for the state that day. The storm lingered for several days. Hundreds of thousands of people lost power, and steady rains left many towns deep underwater. Emergency personnel from across the country were sent to help.

Illinois Task Force 1 is composed of firefighters from departments participating in a statewide disaster response program. Ten suburban firefighters were part of the North Carolina deployment. They came from Wauconda, Wheeling, Arlington Heights, Downers Grove, Morton Grove, Alsip, Matteson, Naperville, and Rolling Meadows. Firefighters from Chicago and Bettendorf, Iowa, were part of the task force, too.

The group departed Sept. 14 from the MABAS headquarters in Wheeling in a convoy hauling boats, generators, and other equipment. It arrived the next afternoon at an emergency operations center in Raleigh, North Carolina, and was sent to a small town called Whiteville. The team reached Whiteville on Sept. 16 but was redeployed to Riegelwood, an unincorporated community closer to the coastline and near the Cape Fear River, which overflowed its banks because of the hurricane.

The local Acme-Delco-Riegelwood Fire Rescue station was running on a generator when the team arrived — and it was packed with people including several of the displaced firefighters’ families. A National Guard unit and other emergency response personnel set up in the station, too. 

The Illinois group got to work locating stranded residents and getting them to the fire station so they could be taken out of the area by the National Guard. The firefighters also distributed water, food and supplies, checked on people with health issues, and helped put tarps on the roofs of damaged houses.

They often traveled in a military surplus truck that carried an inflatable, motorized boat. When they reached a spot where the water was too deep for the truck, they launched the boat. Some houses were on dry land but surrounded by flooded streets and property. Others became submerged, some to the roofline.

Members of the local fire department accompanied them since they knew the area and the people — as well as the potential dangers from local wildlife. The work was long and strenuous. Fifteen-hour days were common, as were calls at night.

One day they rescued an older couple trapped in a submerged car that had been washed off a road. Firefighters broke a window and pulled the woman out of the car.

The Illinois task force returned home Sept. 26. 

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