Urban Search and Rescue
Mission
To respond to natural and man-made disasters as well as providing search and rescue, medical support, communications and damage assessment.
The Miami-Dade Fire Rescue US&R team, Florida Task Force-1 (FL-TF1) is available 24 hours a day, locally or nationally. In cooperation with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the State of Florida and other agencies, the task force can be mobilized once an affected disaster area exceeds their own response capabilities and officially requests outside help.
Capabilities
FL-TF1 is set up to perform the following operations:
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Conduct physical search and rescue operations in damaged/collapsed structures, flooded areas and transportation accident scenes
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Provide emergency medical care at disaster sites for trapped victims and task force members
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Carry out reconnaissance duties to assess damage and determine needs, then use that information to provide feedback to all agencies involved
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Provide disaster communications support using state-of-the-art satellite systems
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Conduct hazardous materials surveys/evaluations of affected areas
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Assist in stabilizing damaged structures, including shoring and cribbing operations
Resources
The Task Force is supported by a comprehensive equipment cache totaling 50,000 pounds. It provides total self-sufficiency for immediate mission response and includes:
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Rations for 10 days of operations
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Housing and feeding facilities for its members
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Acoustic, fiber optic and video search equipment
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Electric, gasoline, hydraulic, mechanical and pneumatic tools for working on reinforced concrete structures
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Hazardous materials monitoring equipment
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Medical equipment to provide emergency medical care to 10 critical patients, 15 moderate and 25 minor patients
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Satellite, digital phone and radio equipment capable of providing local, regional and global communications of voice, data and fax transmissions. The communications equipment is DOD compatible.
Responses
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Earthquakes
1985 Mexico City
1986 El Salvador
1988 Armenia
1990 Philippines
1997 Venezuela
1999 Colombia
1999 Turkey
1999 Taiwan
2010 Haiti
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Hurricanes / Weather Disasters
1988 Gilbert, Jamaica
1989 Hugo, Eastern Caribbean
1992 Andrew, Miami
1995 Luis, Caribbean
1995 Marilyn, Caribbean
1995 Opal, North Florida
2000 Belize
2004 Charley, Charlotte County, Florida
2005 Katrina, New Orleans, Louisiana
2008 Gustav, Texas
2008 Ike, Miami-Dade County, Florida
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Flooding/Weather Disasters
2000 Mozambique
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Building Explosions
1995 Oklahoma City
1996 Columbo, Sri Lanka
1996 Puerto Rico
2001 Pentagon, Washington, D.C.
2001 World Trade Center, New York
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Airplane Crash
1995-96 Buga, Colombia
1996 ValuJet Crash, Florida
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Communications Support
1989 Romania
1991 Northern Iraq & Turkey
1994 Rwanda
1994 Haiti
1995 Montserrat
1995 Sierra Leone
1996 Bosnia
1998 Nairobi, Kenya
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Building Collapse
2007 Barbados
History
In the early 1980's two fire departments, Miami-Dade Fire Rescue (at that time known as Metro-Dade Fire Rescue) and the Fairfax County Fire & Rescue Department, operated under an agreement with the Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) of the U.S. State Department to provide international search and rescue assistance in times of disaster. During these early years, assistance was provided to the countries of Mexico, Philippines and Soviet Armenia.
In 1991, FEMA incorporated a US&R team concept into a federal response plan. Over 20 teams were geographically chosen throughout the country, with local public safety departments as sponsoring agencies. Today, under the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) there are 28 national task forces staffed and equipped to provide 24-hour search and rescue operations following earthquakes, tornadoes, floods, hurricanes and other natural or human-caused disasters.
If a disaster warrants a national US&R response, DHS/FEMA will initially deploy the three closest task forces. Once notified, each team has a six hour window to mobilize 70 search and rescue specialists to report to a prearranged departure point. The role of FL-TF1 and the other task forces is to always support state and local responders' efforts to locate victims and manage recovery operations.
FL-TF1 is comprised mostly of Miami-Dade Fire Rescue personnel and other outside specialists as needed. Team members are divided into specialized components of the task force that include: a command group, a rescue group, a search group, a medical group and a planning group.
In addition, FL-TF1 currently has 9 FEMA certified canine teams. Each team is composed of a handler and a search dog. These canine teams make up the canine search component of the task force.
Fire Rescue
Raied "Ray" Jadallah
R. David Paulison Fire Rescue Headquarters
9300 NW 41st Street,
Miami, FL 33178-2414
786-331-5000