Katrina help: Illinois Incident Management Team to support
Mississippi emergency management personnel
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Two IEMA employees part of 11-member team
[SEPT. 3, 2005]
SPRINGFIELD -- Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich today
dispatched an 11-member Incident Management Team (IMT) to George
County, Mississippi to help emergency management personnel dealing
with one of the largest natural disasters in U.S. history.
“We continue to look at ways that we can help with the desperate
situation in the Gulf coast,” Gov. Blagojevich said. “In addition
to the 52 Illinois Medical Emergency Management Team members and
more than 300 National Guard personnel that have been deployed, we
now have these 11 emergency management professionals who responded
quickly to our call for assistance and are preparing to take off
this afternoon. I am very proud of the way Illinoisans are stepping
forward to help our fellow men in need.”
The 11-member IMT team includes two Illinois Emergency Management
Agency (IEMA) employees and nine local emergency management managers
from around the state. The group will be departing from Springfield
Friday afternoon and stopping in Madison County to pick up a mobile
command vehicle, which was purchased through a grant from the
Illinois Terrorism Task Force for Homeland Security Region 16. The
specially-outfitted command vehicle provides space for up to 12
decision makers at a field location, along with communications
equipment to aid with emergency communications. The vehicle was
presented to the Madison County Emergency Management Agency in June,
with the provision that it could be used anywhere it is needed.
The team is being deployed for 14 days, and a replacement team will
be deployed in about 13 days to take over their mission. The IMT is
taking along provisions to sustain them for 14 days, including water
and Meals Ready to Eat (MREs).
On Wednesday, Gov. Blagojevich authorized the Illinois National
Guard to send up to fifty military vehicles and 300 soldiers to
Louisiana to assist in Hurricane Katrina cleanup efforts. The
soldiers assembled in Springfield and left for Louisiana this
morning. Also today, 40-person Illinois Medical Emergency Response
Team (IMERT) members are heading to Louisiana to assist with massive
numbers of sick and injured victims from Hurricane Katrina. This new
team will join an 11-member IMERT team, which left Wednesday
morning, in Baton Rouge.
On Thursday, the Governor ordered Illinois public schools to waive
residency requirements and enroll any child displaced by Hurricane
Katrina who relocates to live with family, friends or in a shelter
in Illinois. Hundreds of thousands of children in the Gulf States
were displaced by the devastating storm and many schools may not
re-open for months, if not the entire school year. In addition, the
Governor opened the Illinois’ Community College system to any
student from Illinois who attends college in the Gulf States and
needs somewhere to continue their education.
The State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC) continues to be fully
activated with representatives of more than a dozen state agencies
and IEMA personnel who are assessing assets their agencies could
provide to assist disaster response and recovery efforts. The SEOC
is in continual contact with Emergency Management Assistance Compact
(EMAC) officials in the affected to states to coordinate requests
for assistance with assets Illinois can offer.
“We’re very fortunate to have such dedicated, well-trained liaisons
in our SEOC that are working feverishly to get critically-needed
assistance to these devastated states,” said William C. Burke, IEMA
Director.