Resource: Animal Protection: Large Animal Rescue Strike Team | ||||||||
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Category: Animals and Agriculture Issues
Kind: Team |
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Minimum Capabilities (Component) | Minimum Capabilities (Metric) |
Type I | Type II | Type III | Type IV | Other | ||
Personnel | Number of People Per Response | 6-member team consisting of: 1 team leader 5 team members |
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Personnel | Deployment Duration |
Deployment of this team would be for 7 days on rotation. A minimum of three teams should be deployed for 24-hour rescue, one team per 8-hour shift isrameds.com |
Personnel |
Deployment duration | ||||
Vehicle |
3 vehicles: 2 persons per vehicle |
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Equipment | Each vehicle should be equipped with basic animal capture equipment, including, but not limited to, the following: Small and large live traps (1 each) 2 catch poles Leashes (slip leads and clip) Stretcher ID bands Collars and ID tags Cages, carriers, and cardboard cat transports (at least 1 per animal) Appropriately graded NFPA or Cordage Institute Ropes Industrial Lighting Systems and Batteries: (Flashlights to Floodlighting) Barricade tape Maps of areas to be serviced Team communication device (for each team vehicle) (two-way handheld radios with 3-mile transmitting radius) Home base communication device (for each vehicle) (two-way radios capable of transmitting the required distance) Cell phone with extra batteries/remote chargers Human First Aid kit Emergency Euthanasia Options(Gunshot/ Chemical/Physical) Animal Rescue Request forms Animal Impoundment forms Radio/Activities Log form Pens, pencils, permanent markers, paper Clipboards Plastic garbage bags (for bodies) |
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Personal Protection |
Note: Each person should have with them the following items: |
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Training | Team member requirements: Swift Water Rescue Basic Course HSUS/ARC Animal First Aid Course Certified Knot and Mechanical Advantage Training Wildland Fire Training S130 and S190 Emergency Euthanasia Training/Certification FEMA/EMI Independent Study Course: IS-195 Basic Incident Command FEMA/EMI Independent Study Course: IS-10 Animals in Disaster Module A, Awareness and Preparedness FEMA/EMI Independent Study Course: IS-11 Animals in Disaster Module B, Community Planning Technical Animal Rescue Training (Code 3 Associates or other approved training source) 5 years of professional animal care/control/capture experience Team leader should have additional training and/or experience in supervision/management level animal care/control/capture FEMA Livestock in Disasters Correspondence CODE III Big Useful Livestock Lessons (BULL) Equine Cruelty or Rescue Short Course Proper Tailoring and Trailer Extraction Training |
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Personal Maintenance Equipment |
Personal Toiletries |
Comments: This six-member team should be capable of completing an average of one rescue every 30 minutes in a suburban setting and one rescue every hour in rural settings. These times would be semi-dependent on uncontrollable factors such as terrain, weather, road conditions, and distance between rescue sites. Number of teams ordered will be based on number of rescues anticipated. Team members should not show up for a disaster wearing camouflage gear. Camouflage gear not only complicates matters if the person needs to be found, but blends in with other response personnel, such as the National Guard. Suggested clothing: Carhart bib overalls. They are indestructible and will protect from bites, scratches, scrapes, and abrasions. |
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National Mutual Aid & Resource Management Initiative |
Animal Health
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