CBIRF Marines conduct lane, skills training during Exercise Scarlet Response 2015
US Marine Corps News
By Lance Cpl. David Staten | July 23, 2015
The Search and Extraction Platoon, made of Marines and sailors with Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, II Marine Expeditionary Force, put on their gas masks and suits in the sticky heat, July 21, for training to prepare them for disasters around the world.
The platoon is participating in Exercise Scarlet Response 2015 at Guardian Centers in Perry, Georgia, July 21 - 25. The Search and Extraction Platoon is one of the six main sections of CBIRF. If a chemical or biological incident occurs, the platoon is tasked with responding to the incident, conducting searches and extracting any victims.
The beginning the exercise consisted of lane training and skills led by instructors from Spec Rescue International, a privately owned company that specializes in technical rescue.
Spec Rescue has conducted disaster response operations around the world for more than 20 years. Most of the instructors come from fire services and are involved in urban search and rescue programs.
During lane and skills training, the Marines learn and practice skills in different scenarios. Each scenario gets more intense throughout the exercise. Marines start on a basic level to gain proficiency by the end of the exercise.
"We our taking the knowledge base that we have and transforming it into training lanes to help the Marines be able to meet the objectives that they need to do when they are called up.," said Woody Landgrover, an instructor with Spec Rescue International.
The platoon reviewed protocols and techniques used when searching and clearing a building such as markings, clearing with rope and using thermal imaging.
The platoon use marks like a backslash (\), an (X) and (V) to help identify if a room or building has been searched, if there were any victims (dead or alive), and the time the team went in and out.
When clearing with a rope, the platoon anchors it to a member or members of the team or a sturdy object. Clearing helps to cover a much larger area, which also provides them with a way to egress if the building is dark and smoky.
"We went out there today and were able to expand our search range from the usual five to six feet to up to a hundred feet using the rope," said Cpl. Terry Wagenhauser, a member of the Search and Extraction Platoon. "It helps everything go a lot quicker, and we clear a much larger area."
Later in the afternoon, the platoon went through forcible entry techniques such as learning how to breach through cinder blocks. Spec Rescue helped the Marines to learn how to identify, size up and take down a cinder block wall so they can easily create openings to get victims out or enter an area.
Some of the senior members on the Search and Extraction Platoon participated in Exercise Scarlet Response 2014, but for many Marines and sailors it is their first time.
"I feel like it's really good training for the Marines who just got here," said Sgt. Austen Clark, the hot zone controller for the platoon. "It's good inclement weather training. They get to learn from experienced men from Spec Rescue, and it's such a big that they are bound to get better from this experience."
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