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NEWS | Oct. 2, 2018

Transporters, aviators return from support missions in the Carolinas

By Cotton Puryear | Virginia National Guard Public Affairs Office

Virginia National Guard transportation Soldiers returned from supporting Hurricane Florence flood response operations in North Carolina Sept. 24, 2018, and a team of VNG aviators and Chesterfield County rescue technicians returned from South Carolina Sept. 27.
 

“Please accept my genuine expression of sincere pride and gratitude for your contributions that proved seminal to ensuring the safety of my fellow North Carolinians and our fellow Americans,” wrote Maj. Gen. Gregory A. Lusk, the Adjutant General of North Carolina in an email to Maj. Gen. Timothy P. Williams, the Adjutant General of Virginia. “On behalf of Governor Roy Cooper, myself, and my fellow North Carolinians thank you! The pride you should share and embrace is the knowledge that you, as a pivotal member of Guard-Nation, the non-federalized forces of our military, carried the load and performed magnificently.”

Lusk wrote that more 3,000 Guard personnel were on duty in North Carolina in support of Hurricane Florence response operations as well as nearly 200 active duty Soldiers from as far away as Fort Campbell, Kentucky, and Fort Drum, New York, joined in on the support effort.

“Make no mistake about it, they did the selfless and courageous work,” Lusk wrote. “They were an instrumental part of the response team and they integrated onto the team in accomplishing many vital mission assignments through storm and flood-ravaged portions of North Carolina. Join me in saluting all of those who left families, possessions and homes behind to tend to the needs of others as their first priority while many were victims of the very storm they were responding to.”

A Virginia National Guard aviation crew of four Soldiers and a team of three Chesterfield County Fire and Emergency Medical Services Scuba Rescue Team members departed Sept. 22, 2018, from Chesterfield County, Virginia, to support the South Carolina National Guard with recovery operations after Hurricane Florence caused serious flooding across the state. The VNG aviators and Chesterfield rescue technicians form the Virginia Helicopter Aquatic Rescue Team to provide rotary wing aviation rescue hoist capabilities that can conduct aerial rescue evacuation in situations where there is a potential loss of life, limb or eyesight or significant property damage. The HART remained on standby in South Carolina to provide rescue capabilities until the most severe flooding threat ended.

“The HART has been on standby since Hurricane Florence threatened the East Coast so they could rapidly respond if needed,” explained Brig. Gen. James W. Ring, Virginia National Guard Director of the Joint Staff. “Once we received the request from the South Carolina National Guard, they were quickly able to conduct the final preparations and depart on short notice. This is a great partnership between the Virginia National Guard and Chesterfield County Fire and Emergency Medical Service, and the personnel train together frequently to ensure a high state of readiness.”

Requests for assistance from other states are processed through the Virginia Department of Emergency Management as part of a national system that allows states to share resources to fill capability gaps during times of need, Ring said.

The HART deployed to Texas in September 2017 to assist the Texas National Guard with response to Hurricane Harvey.

 

The Virginia National Guard staged more than 1,500 personnel Sept. 12, 2018, at key locations across the commonwealth to support local and state emergency management officials with possible response to Hurricane Florence, but most were not needed when the storm turned further south. When Governor Ralph Northam authorized Virginia’s resources could be redirected to North Carolina, the VNG sent approximately 40 Soldiers and 20 light medium tactical vehicles to support with recovery efforts where the hurricane caused widespread flooding. Soldiers assigned to the Virginia Beach-based 1173rd Transportation Company, 529th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion, 329th Regional Support Group used their 5-ton tactical trucks to transport supplies for shelter operations and first responders conducting health and welfare checks in flooded neighborhoods.

“We are incredibly fortunate that Hurricane Florence seems to have missed Virginia, so now we will turn our attention to supporting our neighbors to the south,” Williams said. “I am incredibly proud of the great team effort that enabled us to have personnel and equipment ready to respond here in Virginia, and we welcome the opportunity to lend a hand in North Carolina. We know they would do the same for us if we needed the help.”

During domestic operations, the VNG receives missions through the Virginia Department of Emergency Management and responds as part of a multi-agency team. In advance of the hurricane, the VNG received nearly 80 mission requests including liaison officer, staging locations, high water transportation, interoperable communications, rotary wing search and rescue, debris reduction and requests for assistance with stage-managed shelters.

While most of Virginia was spared the impacts of Hurricane Florence, VNG personnel provided assistance in several localities that did see severe weather. Soldiers cleared roadways and transported first responders in Independence, helped recover a man trapped in a vehicle and cleared debris from roadways in Floyd, provided staging for FEMA search and rescue teams in Pulaski and South Boston and helped rescue a dog from rising flood waters while conducting damage assessments in Grayson County.

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