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 | Feb. 17, 2016

New York Guard ordnance experts train local police in avoiding IEDs

By Sgt. Mike Davis 138th Public Affairs Detachment

CAIRO, N.Y. – "Move, move, move!" was shouted. Then, "go, go, go!" was echoed in response.

Then four police officers dressed in green jumpsuits and body armor - watched by bomb disposal experts from the New York Army National Guard - moved deftly among scattered debris and burned-out cars.

Keeping an eye out for trip-wires, and other signs of an improvised explosive device, the cops finally stood motionless against a cold, steel wall, waiting for the Guard Soldiers to tell them if they had been "killed" by an IED the military EOD experts placed on the course.

The Feb. 2 exercise was the culminating event of two days of training in which Soldiers from the 1108th Ordnance Company (Explosive Ordnance Disposal) taught 20 members of the Columbia-Greene County Shared Services Response Team how to spot and avoid IEDs at the 911 Call Center here.

The training, which was a combination of classroom instruction and field scenarios, involved IED identification and disarming, tactical movements, room and building clearing as well as familiarization with military and civilian equipment.

This was the first time the Shared Services Response Team conducted explosives training with the New York Army National Guard's 1108th. The unit is based in Glenville, New York, near Schenectady.

"Learning how each organization operates and how to work together during training is a huge benefit when we're called to respond during live situations," said Sgt. 1st Class John Gallo III, a recruiting and retention noncommissioned officer who helped to coordinate the training.

"There is no way to duplicate what the Army National Guard can do for and with us," said Sean McCulloch,a Greenville, New York, resident and Marine veteran, who is one of three team leaders of the Columbia-Greene Shared Response Services Team.

Columbia-Greene Shared Services Response Team is a combined specialized force that responds to high-profile crimes and emergencies such as drug raids, hostage situations and manhunts. Formed just six years ago, highly skilled police officers from Columbia and Greene Counties and the city of Hudson compete in physical fitness tests, weapons qualifications, close-quarters combat scenarios and, finally, an in-person board, to be selected to the team.

McCulloch, who has 13 years of law enforcement experience, said he valued the joint training opportunities and deployment experiences the Army National Guard brings to domestic operations.

"We know the terror that is overseas could happen here at any time. We need to be able to learn before loss of life; to keep us and the community safe," McCulloch said.

Michael Madison, a Hudson, New York, resident who has served as the medic for the response team for the past year, is no stranger to the benefit of civilian and military cross-training.

While serving as both a full-time civilian paramedic and the response team's medic, he's also an Army National Guard sergeant with 18 years of service, an Afghanistan veteran, and is currently a medic in the 42nd Infantry Division's Headquarters Battalion.

"My deployment experience allows me to bring real-world experience to our training here at home. We get to share and learn different techniques that can save lives," Madison said.

This joint training didn't only benefit the Shared Services Response Team, it also gave the 1108th EOD an opportunity to learn and hone their craft as well, said Staff Sgt. Jeremy Blackie, a member of the 1108th from Lansing, Michigan.

"They're the assault to target experts," Blackie said. "And we're the bomb disposal experts."

After the training concluded, participants shared how well it went, how much they learned from each other, and how much more could be gained from subsequent trainings.

"It's not a question of if, but when, this type of training is going to happen again," McCulloch said.

 

 

Related Articles
President Donald Trump awards the Medal of Honor to retired U.S. Army Command Sgt. Maj. Terry P. Richardson during a White House ceremony in Washington, D.C., March 2, 2026. Richardson was awarded the Medal of Honor for acts of conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty, Sept. 14, 1968, while he was a Staff Sgt. serving as the Lima Platoon Leader with Company A, 1st Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division during action in the vicinity of Loc Ninh, Republic of Vietnam. (U.S. Army photo by Christopher Kaufmann)
President Trump Awards Medal of Honor to Retired Guard Soldier
By National Guard Bureau | March 6, 2026
WASHINGTON — In a White House ceremony on March 2, 2026, President Donald J. Trump awarded the Medal of Honor to retired Command Sgt. Maj. Terry P. Richardson, U.S. Army, for his heroic actions on September 14, 1968, while...

In June 2021, an MQ-9 participated in the concept-to-theory Establish Fury Exercise at the 188th Wing, in Fort Smith, Arkansas.
Arkansas Airmen Sharpen Information Warfare Skills During Exercise
By Staff Sgt. Joshua Coombes, | March 6, 2026
EBBING AIR NATIONAL GUARD BASE, Ark. – Several Arkansas Guard Airmen from Ebbing Air National Guard Base’s Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance Group recently participated in The One True OMEN, or TOTO, III...

U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Daniel Pau, an information technology specialist assigned to the 1st Battalion, 297th Infantry Regiment, Alaska Army National Guard, operates a high-frequency radio while participating in exercise Arctic Connect at the Alaska National Guard’s Joint Operations Center on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, March 3, 2026. Arctic Connect is high-frequency radio communications exercise conducted across Alaska, designed to validate select Alaska Organized Militia units’ ability to communicate with the Alaska National Guard’s Joint Operations Center and with each other. Photo by Alejandro Peña.
Exercise Arctic Connect Validates Communication Across Alaska
By Dana Rosso, | March 6, 2026
JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska – In a state where communities are separated by vast terrain, and severe weather can isolate regions without warning, resilient communications are essential. More than 30 radio...