Skip to content


Raw video: U.S. search & rescue teams in action in Japan.

No comments

Previous STATter911.com coverage of U.S. teams in Japan

From WUSA9.com/CNN:

Days after the earthquake and tsunami struck Japan, more than 7,500 people are still missing, and the number could likely rise.

Search and rescue teams are on hand in some areas– helping with the hunt for survivors.

The relieved mayor of Ofunato greets U.S. and British rescue teams as they start their first full day of operations, but his city’s condition could lie beyond their reach.

The tsunami came through Ofunato’s narrow inlet with such force a tugboat was thrown several blocks, and cars were violently scattered for miles.

“The first thing is we find a place to search. We have map grids that are set up by the local emergency managers in the area. They give us an area to search. We split it up. We take coordinates. We go through the buildings, search it building by building- standing up or laying down,” said Fairfax Co. Urban Search and Rescue Capt. Sam Gray.

The teams fan out, through mountains of rubble and teetering buildings, using every tool they brought.

Rescuers got word there was a note posted on a house that there was someone alive inside. They had the dog teams check it out, but the dogs didn’t detect the scene of anyone alive.

“If you can hear me, knock three times!” yelled one of the rescue team members.

Listening devices and audio signal yielded nothing.

Residents who did escape the tsunami are in shock.

It was initially thought Tomuko Shida lost her husband in the disaster, but a translator says, “Her husband already died. She had stored in a box…She put it in a really high place. And when the storm came, she couldn’t reach the box. She ran away first.”

She’s still looking for her husband’s remains.

For those who did lose loved ones in this disaster, the final casualty count here may never be known.

“The way we’re operating now there’s still plenty of opportunity to find live victims. But as time goes on, those opportunities diminish,” says Battalion Chief Chris Schaff of Virginia Task Force 1.

In many of these places, rescuers say they rely on local citizens, flagging them down to come and get a loved one out of a building or out of a pile of rubble.

One team member said that in Ofunato, whole families might have gone missing, and there might not be anyone even looking for them.

Japan update: Fairfax County battalion chief describes operations. Photos of VATF-1 in action. Local rescuers find 70-year-old woman trapped for four days.

1 comment

STATter911.com previous coverage of Japan earthquake & USAR teams

More pictures from U.S. teams in Japan from WUSA9.com

From Emily Cyr at WUSA9.com:

The 74 members of Virginia Task Force 1 deployed to Japan are seeing the devastation first hand.

Fairfax Co. Fire and Rescue Battalion Chief Chris Schaff joined 9NEWS NOW by phone Tuesday morning. He said half the team was resting after searching for survivors, while the other half was preparing to take over.

Click the image above for more of Travis J. Tritten’s photos of VATF-1 in action in Ofunato, Japan and additional details about the team’s initial missions.

“They have us doing search and rescue right along the shoreline where the tsunami came in, and actually working in that grid this morning and afternoon, and we’re going to push further down and closer to the coast tomorrow morning,” Chief Schaff said.

The team was also deployed to Haiti after the earthquake in January, 2010, where they made more than a dozen rescues.

Chief Schaff described how the conditions are different in Japan: “In Haiti, there’s not a whole lot of lumber they used to build, it’s mostly concrete. Here, there is a lot of lumber, so there is a lot of debris washed ashore. There’s houses that have been picked up and moved, as well as a lot of boats, large boats, that we’ve had moved a good distance from the shore, up on top of the houses and collapsed those houses. The crews are working in and around those, doing their search and rescue.”

At this point, they have not had an opportunity to rescue anyone, though Chief Schaff says the team is still very energetic.

Chief Schaff says they are also far enough away for the threat of nuclear radiation not be a concern. “We’ve got hazardous materials specialists that are also working with us from the team, and they’re keeping us abreast of the situation with the hazardous materials in the area we’re working in. That’s not a complication we’re dealing with right now, so we’re not really focusing that direction. However, we do have people that can take care of that should that need arise for us.”

A story from Soma, Japan by Susan Phillips WUSA9.com  and AP:

Rescuers have found a 70-year-old woman alive four days after the disaster struck.

Osaka fire department spokesman Yuko Kotani says the woman was found inside her house that was washed away by the tsunami in northeastern Japan’s Iwate prefecture. The rescuers from Osaka, in western Japan, were sent to the area for disaster relief.

Kotani said the woman was conscious but suffering from hypothermia and is being treated at a hospital. She would not give the woman’s name.

Her rescue was a rare bit of news for Japanese traumatized by the disaster.

Report from Japan: Virginia & California teams on the ground.

1 comment

 

My friend Ron Gardner (a former and great TV news anchor) in Idaho posted the above video on his Facebook page today. It is one of the many videos from Japan that gives you the close-up ground view as the tsunami obliterated towns. It gives you an idea of the task ahead for the search and rescue teams from the U.S. They are now in Japan. Firegeezer has a bunch more videos for you.

Below are some videos, courtesy of WUSA9.com, of the arrival of Virginia Task Force 1 (VATF-1 out of Fairfax County) and California Task Force 2 (CATF-2 out of Los Angeles County) in Japan. There they have met up with a British team. (Note: I am aware the audio on the last two videos is out of synch. It was fed to WUSA9.com that way.)  

Here is some information contained in a press release from the Fairfax County Fire & Rescue Department:

The team arrived at Misawa Air Base, Sunday, March 13, 2011, by commercial aircraft.  Approximately 31 tons of equipment and supplies, including four inflatable boats, was transported separately by military airlift.

The self-contained, heavy task force of 74 personnel has technical search and rescue specialists, search and rescue canines, structural engineers, a medical component consisting of physicians and paramedics, and other critical support personnel.  VATF-1 will travel to Ofunato, a seaport city of approximately 41,000, and establish a base of operations. 

While enroute to Japan, VATF-1 stopped in Los Angeles, California, and joined with California Task Force 2 (CATF-2) for the trip to Misawa Air Base. Both teams will be working under the direction of the Tokyo Fire Department.

Japanese firefighters in Menlo Park, California for search & rescue training are trying to get home.

No comments

 

In Menlo Park, California, a dozen Japanese firefighters have been learning and practicing search and rescue skills for the past week. Now they are desperately trying to return home and use what they have learned, but getting a flight out hasn’t been easy.  

Excerpts from an article by Diana Samuels, Palo Alto Daily News:  

“I’ve never seen such big damage in Japan,” said Maiku Muramatsu of the Shizuoka City Fire Bureau. “We want to go home as soon as we can.”  

One day after a magnitude 8.9 earthquake and resulting tsunami devastated the northeastern part of Japan, the group in Menlo Park practiced techniques for shoring up collapsing buildings. Appearing relaxed and focused, the firefighters hammered together wooden structures and wedged them between the roof and floor of a small shed.  

The Japanese firefighters came to the Bay Area for a weeklong training program with the Menlo Park Fire Protection District and were originally set to leave Saturday, Chief Harold Schapelhouman said.   

The fire department was working Friday with the Japanese consulate to find flights for the firefighters, Division Chief Frank Fraone said. As of about 5:30 p.m., Schapelhouman said it appeared most of them would have seats on commercial airliners early Saturday afternoon.  

From MenloParkPatch.com:  

One of the firefighters has made contact with his family, but the other has not been able to reach anyone.  

“He’s devastated,” Schapelhouman said. “It’s a stressful time for these guys. They want to be home with their families, working in their communities, serving their countrymen.”  

The firefighters are in touch with the Japanese consulate and will continue training this afternoon as officials help them try to find a way out of the U.S.

Teams from around the world come to Menlo Park’s training facility to learn rescue operations from its staff, which has responded to disasters ranging from floods to earthquakes to terrorist attacks, Schapelhouman said. 

Fairfax County USAR mobilized. Virginia Task Force 1 readying to help out in Northern Japan.

2 comments

 Coverage of VATF1 in Haiti

From WUSA9.com:

The Fairfax County Urban Search and Rescue team has been mobilized to respond to the devastation caused by the earthquake and tsunami in northern Japan.

Dan Schmidt, spokesperson for the Fairfax County Fire Department, says they received word just minutes ago. He says mobilization means the team prepares for deployment, but it does not necessarily mean it will be deployed.

The Fairfax County Urban Search and Rescue team, also known as Virginia Task Force 1, is one of two teams in the nation deployed by USAID to assist countries who have experienced large scale damage due to natural disasters or other causes. The other team is from Los Angeles, California.

Two groups from Fairfax’s team were dispatched after Haiti’s earthquake in January, 2010. They pulled more than a dozen people from the rubble.

Scenes from Japan: Earthquake, tsunami, fires.

No comments