Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Texas National Guard Responds to Winter Storm


By Army Staff Sgt. Jennifer D. Atkinson
Texas Military Forces

DENISON, Texas, Dec. 10, 2013 – Citizen-soldiers with the Texas Army National Guard’s 176th Engineer Brigade provided support to state and local officials during Winter Storm Cleon, as named by the National Weather Service, in north Texas Dec. 5-9.

At the request of Gov. Rick Perry, about 50 members of the Grand Prairie-based brigade suited up in cold-weather gear and headed out in Humvees and Light Medium Tactical Vehicles to help preposition state assets as the storm approached. Soldiers were stationed along the major highways here, as well as in Wichita Falls.

Preliminary reports from the Texas Military Forces Joint Operations Center indicate the deployed soldiers aided more than 120 stranded vehicles, conducted more than 225 welfare checks and assisted with the setup of a Red Cross shelter in Valley View, near Wichita Falls.

“We had a great response when the call went out,” said Army 2nd Lt. Clayton Harrison, an engineer with the brigade’s Lewisville-based 236th Engineering Company. “We were ready to move out less than 12 hours after we got notified that we'd be responding to this storm.”

Although no one was quite certain what the storm would bring, Harrison said he and his soldiers were in contact with the Texas Department of Public Safety.

“According to DPS, we'll assist in vehicle recovery, especially if they end up shutting down the highway,” he said.

On Dec. 6, when the storm had come and gone, the real scope of the job ahead was revealed to Harrison and his soldiers. Although the storm had not dropped much snow on the area, it was the ice underneath that proved to be the biggest challenge for motorists.

“We're from Boise and thought this would be no big deal,” said Jonathan Bilger, a motorist who was passing through to visit family. “We get the snow all the time, but the ice, that's harder to deal with. We're just sliding around like a hockey puck.”

With traffic flow a top priority, members of the Texas Military Forces conducted 24-hour-a-day operations monitoring and assisting citizens along Highways 75, 82, 380 and Interstate 35 near Denison. Simultaneously, personnel from the 840th Engineer Company monitored flow on the icy and slushy roadways of Highways 281, 181, Interstate 35 East and West, and I-20, near Weatherford and Denton.

“Those guys are great,” said Bilger, as he gestured toward several of the soldiers hooking up chains to tow a stranded 18-wheeler. “They're out here helping out, when most of us are just trying to figure out how to get home.”

This view was also shared by the soldiers’ leadership as well.

“These men and women are the epitome of what the Texas Military Forces stands for,” said Army Col. Patrick Hamilton, commander of domestic operations for the Texas Military Forces. “These citizen-soldiers volunteered their time, at a moment's notice, to serve their fellow citizens during a time of need.”

Hamilton added, “It's situations like this that show the caliber of our service members and their ‘Always Ready, Always There’ mentality.”

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