An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | March 6, 2012

Texas National Guard members support local authorities in emergency exercise

By Army National Guard Spc. Aaron Moreno Joint Task Force 71, Texas National Guard

EL CAMPO, Texas - Soldiers from Joint Task Force 71 received the activation call at 3:45 a.m. following the alleged terrorist incident. Within two hours, the men and women of the minuteman brigade reported to their home station, prepared to travel more than 200 miles to the small town of El Campo.

The Austin-based JTF 71 participated in the El Campo Memorial Hospital Exercise March 3, 2012, a joint interagency training event that tested the alert and response capabilities of the Guard and its civil partners. Although the immediate reaction of Guard Unit was real, the scenario was simulated.

"Things have gone remarkably smooth today," said Chief Terry Stanhill, from the El Campo Police Department. "Communications were outstanding; resources rolled in at an unbelievable rate."

The ECMH Exercise included simulations for a hazardous material attack, an explosion and partial hospital collapse and a remote-site suspicious package incident.

"We need to make sure that everyone understands," said Officer Erik Burse, a state trooper with the Department of Public Safety. "If we don't do these drills, if we don't practice to be perfect, then we are not doing what we are supposed to be doing."

In any emergency scenario, the clock begins once the first call alerts the Soldiers to action. For the ECMH Exercise, this happened well-before sunrise, far from the incident site.

"This is the first time we did a no-notice training event," said Army 2nd Lt. Brandon Wells, a platoon leader for 436 Chemical Detachment. "We all received the alert notification at 3:45 a.m. We reported to home station, consolidated there, conducted movement preparations, then got on the road."

The Texas Army National Guard, local first responders, city officials and other state agencies all have a part to play in an emergency. For the local first responders this is a part of their Emergency Management Drills that are often done to prepare them for a real life incident.

"It's comforting for me to know that we have these resources that can come to El Campo this quickly."

Training events like this afford local departments and National Guard units time to demonstrate their skill sets and share their best practices.

"We work with a multitude of civilian agencies," Wells said, "all the way from [the] Texas Department of Emergency Management, to the local responders at the fire departments [and] police departments.

"Working with them can be challenging in the sense that we are military. We use military vernacular that they may not understand; they use terms and do things that we may not understand, but we try to do these training events with them, collectively, in order to work out some of those kinks, express our capabilities to them as well as learn their capabilities."

With this exercise, the Texas civil authorities and military elements communicated to the public at large that they are prepared to support the community in the event of any natural or man-made threat.

"I think it's a positive message," Burse said." I think the community loves it and understands it and we need to do more of it."

 

 

Related Articles
U.S. Air National Guard Master Sgt. David Torres, Tech. Sgt. Michael Barkman, Senior Master Sgt. Vitaliy Gorbachyk, Staff Sgt. Eduardo Rosado, Staff Sgt. Richard Pyrdol and Capt. Jeffrey McDonald, all members of the 103rd Airlift Wing’s Force Support Squadron, stand together while serving the Air Force Mortuary Affairs Operations mission Sept. 15, 2025. The group fills various roles within AFMAO to ensure respect and dignity for the nation’s fallen.
Connecticut Guard Squadron Assists Mortuary Mission at Dover Air Force Base
By Capt. Jennifer Kaprielian, | Sept. 17, 2025
EAST GRANBY, Conn. - During the last five months, Connecticut National Guard members of the 103rd Force Support Squadron have been deployed to a uniquely impactful tasking at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, where they are...

A New York Army National Guard UH-60M Black Hawk helicopter hovers above The Plain at the United States Military Academy at West Point on August 28, 2025 as Soldiers from the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) fast rope down to the ground during a capabilities demonstration for cadets. The exercise was the culmination of training that Soldiers of the 3rd Battalion, 142nd Assault Helicopter Battalion had been conducting with members of the 101st Airborne in June, July, and August
New York Guard Aviators Show Skills During West Point Demonstration
By Eric Durr, | Sept. 17, 2025
WEST POINT, N.Y.  - Three months of New York Army National Guard aircrews training with the active-component Soldiers of the 101st Airborne Division, the Army’s air assault experts, wrapped up Aug. 28 with a capabilities...

Kosovo Forces Regional Command-East’s (KFOR RC-E) 256th Infantry Brigade Combat Team Medical Evacuation (MEDEVAC) aircrew members trained alongside KFOR RC-E British forces in hot and cold load operations at Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo, Aug. 25, 2025. The exercise familiarizes multinational soldiers with UH-60 Black Hawk procedures and prepares them for potential emergency MEDEVAC missions in the region.
Louisiana Guard, UK Soldiers’ Training Builds Readiness in Kosovo
By Sgt. Laura Bradley, | Sept. 17, 2025
CAMP BONDSTEEL, Kosovo — On the surface, they come from different worlds, one a U.K. combat medic on her first operational deployment, the other a seasoned U.S. Army flight paramedic with hundreds of flight hours under her...