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North Carolina Rescue issues

Clay Showalter

Southern member northern landowner
6,689
145
Guilford County
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brock ratcliff

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
25,015
261
Sounds like that guy is a hall monitor that is concerned more about running the show his way vs worrying about getting as many as possible out of harms way.
 

hickslawns

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
40,076
288
Ohio
On a fire scene the officer in charge calls the shots. This situation is a lot different. There is no active fire. The scene is many square miles. Not sure how that works. Maybe some of our resident fire fighters can chime in. Everything was chaos. If I am the chief, I'm using all available resources. That helicopter would have been a blessing.
 

"J"

Git Off My Lawn
Supporting Member
58,359
288
North Carolina
IMG_0015.jpeg
 

triple_duece

Ragin Cajun.
9,336
159
On a fire scene the officer in charge calls the shots. This situation is a lot different. There is no active fire. The scene is many square miles. Not sure how that works. Maybe some of our resident fire fighters can chime in. Everything was chaos. If I am the chief, I'm using all available resources. That helicopter would have been a blessing.
It’s much more complicated than that. I’m sure the chief in charge or unified command has authority to anyone that answers to him or other agencies in the operation. To be quick and to the point, once he became part of the rescue mission through his guys the UC has authority. Therefore the UC has the responsibility of the helo and personnel. Yes early in the event, there is self rescue, people helping people and whatnot. Just like we had the Cajun navy. CN although in good intentions can and will become a problem w the overall mission. We ran the CN out of our parish. Not that we didn’t need help but once they come in and start it can and will be a liability. First responders are trained and have coms w the overall mission to reduce deaths, injuries and casualties. Along with the responders being vetted and covered under the “umbrella”. You don’t know what these people are doing, could be anything from saving lives to looting. It can be that extreme or putting victims in harms way. Like I said, it’s complicated.
 
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giles

Cull buck specialist
Supporting Member
We arrived this evening. From what I've seen so far, shit is fucked. No fuel, no beds or anything. We are sleeping in our trucks tonight. Hopefully some organization comes tomorrow and we get logistics figured out and a work plan. Right now it is a class A clusterfuck. Seems to be plenty of help around but we can't do anything without some rest and fuel.
 

triple_duece

Ragin Cajun.
9,336
159
We arrived this evening. From what I've seen so far, shit is fucked. No fuel, no beds or anything. We are sleeping in our trucks tonight. Hopefully some organization comes tomorrow and we get logistics figured out and a work plan. Right now it is a class A clusterfuck. Seems to be plenty of help around but we can't do anything without some rest and fuel.
Ground zero is always like that sometimes after a week. What did you expect first class accommodations? When being deployed you should be prepared to be self sufficient for a week and not be a burden to the area using resources. It’s a total different situation than one would think. Be thankful if there is any kind of accommodations more than what you brought.
 
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