Coast Guard, FEMA Conduct Load-Out Exercise

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  • Members of Coast Guard Air Station Sacramento guide a FEMA vehicle up the ramp of the HC-130 for a Load-Out exercise at the air station on McClellan Air Force Base, Calif. (U.S. Coast Guard/Lt. j.g. Scott Handlin)
    Members of Coast Guard Air Station Sacramento guide a FEMA vehicle up the ramp of the HC-130 for a Load-Out exercise at the air station on McClellan Air Force Base, Calif. (U.S. Coast Guard/Lt. j.g. Scott Handlin)
  • Members of Coast Guard Air Station Sacramento load a pallet of cases and luggage for FEMA onboard the HC-130 for a Load-Out exercise at the air station on McClellan Air Force Base, Calif. (U.S. Coast Guard/Lt. j.g. Scott Handlin)
    Members of Coast Guard Air Station Sacramento load a pallet of cases and luggage for FEMA onboard the HC-130 for a Load-Out exercise at the air station on McClellan Air Force Base, Calif. (U.S. Coast Guard/Lt. j.g. Scott Handlin)

MCCLELLAN AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. — The Coast Guard and the Federal Emergency Management Agency participated in a Load-Out exercise for disaster response preparation at Coast Guard Air Station Sacramento Wednesday.

HC-130 Hercules aircrew members and FEMA's National Incident Management Team West experienced how to systematically load team and personal equipment into IMAT vehicles, safely convoy to a predetermined loading site, correctly palletize the team's deployable equipment, secure the stacked items with heavy-duty netting and complete the process by weighing the fully loaded 3,100-pound pallet. The exercise also featured an opportunity to safely load a 7,800-pound IMAT vehicle into an HC-130 aircraft.

Before loading the van, team members received a detailed briefing about the HC-130's capabilities and features from Chief Petty Officer Matt Burgess, an aviation maintenance technician and loadmaster, and then toured the aircraft from the cockpit to the loading ramp. The exercise scenario provided the team with a keen dose of reality, as the use of an HC-130 packed with team equipment, supplies and vehicles, is one real-world option that can be used to quickly deploy the IMAT to a disaster area.

"The importance of conducting these partnership exercises is to discover any potential issues that may delay a quick response to an actual incident," said Burgess. "Working out hazmat issues, equipment weights, and loading procedures before an actual event, is essential to completing a safe and successful mission. The exercise also provided a unique opportunity to work with our interagency partners."

As part of FEMA's mission to enhance preparedness and resilience, FEMA conducts trainings and exercises for a wide variety of threats and hazards. The purpose of these trainings and exercises is to test team capabilities to prevent, protect against, respond to, recover from, and mitigate the impact of disasters.

When not deployed, IMATs are responsible for building and maintaining close relationships with regional, state, tribal, and local emergency management officials, federal partners, and the private sector to support planning, training, exercising, and other activities in preparation for disaster response.

"We learn by doing, and exercises like the Load-Out helps our team to better understand what it means to be expeditionary," said N-IMAT West Team Lead Roger Laferriere. "When it's time to deploy in support of survivors, IMAT West and our partners will be ready to respond at the highest level!"

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