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Disaster
Preparedness
For the first
time, human and animal search and
rescue teams will team-up to safely
rescue human and animal ‘victims’ in
a water-borne flood scenario using a
combined force of local, state and
federal assets. Our response
partners,
Code 3 Associates, will
also be joining us in the technical
exercises. “Operation
Lilypad” will take place on
September 20, 2006. The release
below was issued by the lead agency
for human search and rescue efforts,
the Louisiana Department of Wildlife
and Fisheries.
For Immediate Release:
MULTIPLE AGENCIES JOIN FORCES
IN OPERATION LILYPAD SEARCH AND
RESCUE EXERCISE
(09/15/06)
Several governmental agencies will
partake in a search and rescue
simulation called Operation Lilypad
in the New Orleans area on Sept. 20.
Water rescue exercises will take
place in the southern parts of Lake
Pontchartrain to help replicate a
flooded New Orleans.
The Louisiana Department of Wildlife
and Fisheries (LDWF) Enforcement
Division’s Lt. Col Keith LaCaze will
oversee Operation Lilypad. LDWF
agents will join in the exercise
with the New Orleans Police and Fire
Departments, New Orleans Emergency
Medical Services, Louisiana National
Guard, U.S. Coast Guard, Louisiana
Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Animals, FEMA, Louisiana
Urban Search and Rescue, Gulf Coast
Recovery, Governor’s Office of
Homeland Security and Emergency
Preparedness, Louisiana Department
of Agriculture and Forestry, and
Louisiana State Police.
Operation Lilypad allows rescuers to
practice search and rescue methods
developed as a result of experiences
in a flooded New Orleans following
Hurricane Katrina. During that
flood, there were many high ground
spots in the city in between flooded
areas that created “lilypad”
locations suitable for search and
rescue dropoff points.
At lilypad locations, rescuers can
provide flood victims with security,
food, water and emergency medical
attention while they wait for
vehicle transport to the New Orleans
Convention Center. At the Convention
Center, the rescued would be
processed and taken on buses out of
the city.
During the operation, commanders
will relay locations of boat launch
sites, a forward command post and
lilypads to participants. The
forward command post will notify
search and rescue teams of the
locations of people and animals in
need of rescue. The “victims” of
Operation Lilypad are role players
from participating agencies.
Once the rescues are underway,
victims will be pulled from flooded
areas by boats and helicopters and
taken to the lilypads. After victims
are collected at lilypads, trucks
will be dispatched to take them to a
nearby location that will represent
the New Orleans Convention Center.
“We want this exercise to be as
close to the real thing as
possible,” LDWF Enforcement Division
Lt. Col. and Operation Lilypad
Commander Keith LaCaze said. “With
this exercise, we will be able to
practice working efficiently with
multiple organizations and make
future search and rescue missions
better for both rescuers and
victims.”
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