Here are two emails forwarded to all members via National Headquarters, Maxwell AFB Ala.
This gives a clear picture of what CAP is doing to help out SC. Keep in mind we are volunteers and we do not get paid to do our job. The Air Force is paying for our fuel but that's it.
Much like the Minuteman of the Revaluation War, we do this as a sense of duty to our country.....
Good evening, everyone.
Another
good day working for the good citizens of the Palmetto State. At the
moment, we have flown approximately 20 sorties and 46 hours.
The taskings for today were more focused. Over the last two days, we have flown a LOT of get out there and see what's happening type sorties. With all of the grids we flew, we had a lot more activity in the sky yesterday.
We
are still prominent today, but flew about half of the hours because the
areas of concern are now more specifically identified. The Georgetown
area is of major concern starting right away, as floodwaters are
cresting further and further downstream.
Be clear on this:
we are not responding to a disaster that has occurred. We are
responding to a disaster that is still in progress. Major flooding is
still occurring and will continue to occur through the weekend. This is
even more dangerous because people are seeing the blue skies and
assuming that all is okay. This is resulting in many, many stranded
people.
Today
CAP performed Impact Assessment and SAR flights over the most affected
rivers and in flood prone areas. Unfortunately, most of the flood prone
areas are very large in the flatlands, and water is literally running
over the ground from river to river in some areas. We have no real way
of knowing if we saved lives today, but I'm betting we did. CAP aircraft
identified a number of flooded and isolated areas, noted where there
were vehicles in distress, located two unsafe bridges that had no law
enforcement or other barricades, and provided hundreds more in the way
of IA photos. We also flew roads in and out of Georgetown helping SCEMD
folks plan for evacuations and areas that are likely to flood and thus
close roads needed for those evacuations. We are again getting real time
information to the EOC from the air and help is getting to the right
places.
We had
three new (in the original wrapper) camera systems arrive from the NOC
today. These are small Garmin cameras that attach to a wing strut and
take "straight down" photos on a particular flight profile. We'll
be taking a look at the first sortie using those cameras tonight - we
have high hopes but we are the test case for sure. If we had good
success, weÂ'll be flying all three of them tomorrow.
Today,
we flew aircraft from SC, NC, VA, and MD wings, with thanks to the two
aircrews from Georgia that were ready to come at a momentÂ's
notice. This is allowing our aircrews and mission base staff to be
rotated out a bit for some badly needed and well earned rest. We
appreciate you, and hopefully we'll see you in the next few days. Our
mission base staff was augmented by a GA-8 and several van-loads of
cadets from Lowcountry, Columbia, and Lexington, as well as senior staff
from North Carolina and Maryland. We set up a debriefing section in the
main meeting room at SC Wing HQ, and have support personnel in that
section to help get WMIRS populated with complete and meaningful
debriefing information. That information is also being cross-decked
quickly to the EOC. We are taking advantage of our fiber connection to
the internet here to upload photos to FEMA at rates about 30 times
faster than typical high-speed internet.
We
are very fortunate to have had donations or steep discounts from
vendors who have brought us food, water, and soft drinks. We are well
cared for here!
Tomorrow
we will be flying affected and likely affected roads, possibly with the
new camera system, both early and late in the day. We also expect to
receive a long list of photo targets (spot targets) along 4 or 5 of the
affected rivers. We won't receive those until in the morning, but that
list will be completed in the morning and repeated in the afternoon for
comparison purposes. We won't be launching the majority of our aircraft
(or don't expect to) until after 9am, which is a welcome short break.
Again, so very blessed to have had great assistance from everyone involved. Thank you all for your continued efforts. You are making a difference.
SC Wing and friends:
Today
the Civil Air Patrol really got spun up as part of the SAR and disaster
relief effort in South Carolina. The weather was great in some areas,
good enough in others, and unfortunately almost good enough in a few
places. Our priority has been on flying and identifying locations that
need or will shortly need SAR assets and getting rescue to those
locations. Right behind that, and sometimes simultaneously with that, we
provided impact assessment reports and photography. Even now, there are
CAP members that are compiling reports and continuing to plan for the
next operational periods. WeÂ'll kick off again early in the morning.
In
the roundest of numbers, we had approximately 100 personnel involved,
flew 14 aircraft, and logged about 85 hours in the air today. We expect
similar numbers tomorrow. We have received all of our taskings and have
planned and sorted those amongst several aircrew. Kudos to everyone
involved in our operations from the mission base staff to the aircrews
to the communications operators stationed all over the state. We have
had incredible work by Col Lindler and his helpers at our state EOC for
the past 72 hours or so - truly an integral part of the response effort
being put forth by all levels of government. Outstanding work by the
members of Columbia and Lexington Composite Squadrons who were called
and showed up within minutes yesterday to prepare and staff our
headquarters. They were back today making sure everyone had what they
needed, no one went hungry, or didn't
have a place to stay. Mrs. Kim Phillips, our Wing Administrator worked
(approved) overtime - well above and beyond the call of duty. There are
so many names out there deserving of commendation and recognition - we'll definitely get to that.
Included
in all of this, we have two aircrews and aircraft each from North
Carolina and Georgia flying with us right now. A GA-8 airvan and an
aircrew from Maryland arrived today, and are tasked first thing in the
morning. We have a Cessna 206 coming from North Carolina tomorrow. Every
bit of support we have asked for we have received without hesitation.
This is the concept of No Borders, No Boundaries in action, and it is
working better than you could ever imagine for the citizens of the
Palmetto State. Thanks to everyone who is here, who will be here later,
or who just volunteered to come. Kudos to Lt Col Jay Langley, the
MER/DO, who simply answered the phone, heard my request for him to "just handle" coordination of all out-of-wing assets, and said, "I got it."
Tomorrow we will start the day with more SAR runs in flooded and flood-prone areas. We'll
then continue to work on Aerial Photography and Impact Assessment
missions. As was so prevalent today, we will also have a couple of
aircraft and aircrews set aside to fly federal, state and local
officials that need to see what they're dealing with.
Please be sure your minds are on safety as we continue forward. It's
very easy to get your mind so wrapped around what we need to do that we
forget about the little things that can cause incidents and accidents.
We have mission requirements and we need to meet them, but remember to
plan your response so that you can respond to those needs safely,
effectively, and efficiently (in that order.)
I am immensely proud be a leader and a servant in the Civil Air Patrol today. You should be too.
Semper Vigilans,
2 comments:
Nice!!!
Can we mount twin 50's on those aircraft when the time comes? :)
I don't know about that but you could toss small bombs out like they did in WW2
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