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Home : News
NEWS | June 8, 2020

West Virginia Guard task force keeps supplies flowing

By Edwin Wriston West Virginia National Guard

POCA, W.Va. – More than 100 Soldiers and Airmen of the West Virginia National Guard (WVNG) assigned to Task Force Sustainment are supplying Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and provisions to first responders and medical professionals.

In early March, when the COVID-19 pandemic began to sweep across the United States, one of the first lines of effort identified was to rapidly push much-needed stock supplies of PPE to first responder agencies and medical professionals around the Mountain State. To assist with this effort, the WVNG established Task Force Sustainment.

Headquartered at the Rock Branch facility in Poca, the task force began daily distribution of PPE supplies to all 55 counties in the state. Working with their counterparts from other state agencies, Soldiers would arrive at the Rock Branch facility early each morning, load their vehicles with supplies that had been sorted and packaged the previous night, and then head out in a spider web of delivery points from Wheeling to Martinsburg to Bluefield and all points in between.

“At the very beginning of the pandemic, there was a need to distribute as much PPE as possible to each county, every day, as existing supplies were in critical demand,” said Sgt. Maj. David Lucas, with task force leadership.

“At that point in standing up our operations, we were also gathering as much details and data as possible on total needs for each community around the state in order to provide rapid response to any potential outbreak locations that might have seen a spike in COVID-19 cases,” he said. “So, having our folks on the ground in each county every day helped us to have greater immediate and overall situational awareness in order to maximize and streamline our efforts.”

This need for comprehensive deliveries to every county, many in the northern and eastern panhandles that are up to six hours drive time one way from the Rock Branch facility, meant long days on the road in military vehicles for WVNG members.

“Driving our large family of Medium Tactical Vehicle trucks can take its toll on you. They are bumpy, don’t have a lot of cushioning, and are maybe a little on the slow side to drive,” chuckled Spc. William Perry of the 1092nd Engineer Battalion. “But they get the job done, and when citizens see them out there on our West Virginia country roads, they immediately know the Guard is there and that we are there to help.”

Since the initial daily push to all 55 counties, operations have become more streamlined, Lucas said.

“We are now delivering supplies to counties based on six established regions,” he said. “Instead of drinking from the firehose of all 55 counties every day, we are now into a fluid battle rhythm that allows us to target deliveries on a regional basis more efficiently.”

To request supplies, local responders and medical professionals work with their local county health departments, who then work with their county emergency manager who submits the full county request through the state emergency management agency’s online management system, e-Team. Those requests are then compiled from around each region and vetted against existing stock and for targeted need by the West Virginia Division of Emergency Management and Department of Health and Human Resources personnel. Authorized orders are forwarded to Task Force Sustainment, where the required items are compiled, packaged and prepared for shipment and delivery.

“Now, we will receive authorized orders from Region 1 and 5 let’s say on Monday, pick, package and prepare everything for shipment Tuesday, and the full regional orders will be delivered to local county emergency management agencies on Wednesday,” said Lucas. “...We still have the ability to surge if a certain area spikes and has an immediate demand for additional supplies, but the regional schedule is logistically a win-win for everyone involved.”

Task Force Sustainment has delivered 167,497 N95 respirators, 770,901 surgical masks, 82,660 isolation gowns, 1,378,271 sets of nitrile examination gloves, 33,384 sets of Tyvek coveralls, 5,778 (containers/gallons) of hand sanitizer, medical testing kits and swabs, and driven over 125,000 miles during the ongoing pandemic response.

Members of Task Force Sustainment have also provided critical staffing at food banks since March. More than 332,050 meals have been packaged and distributed.

“Task Force Sustainment was able to rapidly deploy Guard members across the state to make sure food banks could maintain operations and handle overwhelming surge demands,” said Lucas.

“Our Soldiers and Airmen are incredibly grateful and proud to be doing such important missions that benefit our fellow West Virginians,” Lucas added. “While they may not be on the actual front lines, their logistical support efforts, all the packaging and driving and delivering of critical-needed items from PPE to food, are keeping those on the front lines sustained and able to meet their missions. Together, we will be able to overcome this moment and this pandemic and keep our state and her citizens both safe and West Virginia Strong.”