Camp Mabry, Austin — Secretary Chertoff, Governor Rick Perry and The Adjutant General Lt. Gen. (TX) Charles G. Rodriguez toured the areas devastated by IKE Sunday and observed plenty destruction, but were thankful that lives were spared.
Texans to a large extent were responsible for their own amazing survival by choosing to heed the call to evacuate which left officials to focus on pre-positioning equipment and personnel. IKE bobbed and weaved for a while but could not outwit the Texas disaster recovery machine.
As part of this massive Texas effort, Governor Rick Perry placed up to 7,500 Texas Military Forces personnel and assets on State Active Duty to outwit an equally enormous storm long before it made landfall.
On Sept. 10, 200 federal, state and civilian assets initiated the transport of medical patients from Corpus Christi and Galveston. Teams involved in the evacuation were: The 6th Medical Group’s Mobile Aeromedical Staging Facility team based out of MacDill Air Force Base, the 59th Medical Wing Critical Casualty Air Transport Team (CCATT) from Lackland Air Force Base, a Disaster Medical Assistance Team (DMAT) from San Bernadino, CA, the 50th Airlift Squadron from Little Rock, AK, the 819th Contingency Response Team (CRT) stationed at McGuire Air Force Base, the FEMA region 6 Incident Management Assistance Team (IMAT) and last but certainly not least the Texas Air National Guard 136th Airlift Wing from Fort Worth. Within 48 hours nearly 400 patients were safely evacuated.
At 8 a.m. Saturday, hours after IKE’s landfall, Texas Army National Guard aviators assisted by 55 aircraft from nine states and the District of Columbia, the Coast Guard and DPS flew 394 air rescues and 470 sorties. These search and rescue flights will continue as long as weather cooperates.
Ground troops rescued 1,554 people and assisted with 639 evacuations. Home and structural damage assessments are ongoing with an early number of 500, but these numbers will undoubted increase in days to come.
To continue damage assessment and recovery efforts, taskforces have spread across the devastated areas in Galveston, Lufkin, Beaumont and Houston. Two local landmarks, the Tulley Stadium and the Ford Center are currently being used to disperse equipment and personnel.
Many roads are still inaccessible to normal traffic because of fallen trees, debris, wires and water and to that end skilled drivers in their high profile vehicles will plow through and bring relief to those who may still be stranded. Local radio stations have taken the initiative to start an ice distribution center, and cars are lining up to take advantage of the service. Texas Military Forces personnel have also establish points of distribution centers at local landmarks and do curb-side delivery of ice, water and MREs.
There is still a lot of work to be done but the affected communities and its people can count on the Texas spirit of volunteerism and their Texas Military Forces.
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