Written by Capt. Joe Trovato, Wisconsin National Guard
Two recent domestic operations exercises have left the Wisconsin
National Guard better prepared to fulfill its role as Wisconsin’s first
military responder.
The annual Statewide Interoperable Mobile Communications
exercise known as SIMCOM, was held May 18-19 in Neillsville in Clark County.
More than 150 participants from 20 various agencies participated in the annual
communications exercise at the Clark County Fairgrounds.
Over the course of the exercise, participants conducted
radio checks and established reliable data, phone and Internet capabilities to
ensure interoperability.
The National Guard has a unique dual-mission as the primary
combat reserve of the Army and Air Force, but also as the first military
responder in an emergency here at home, so Guard units must ensure that their
military networks and communications systems are interoperable with civilian
communications systems to fulfill that mission.
"Sometimes people ask, 'Why do this?'" said John
Ross, Clark County Emergency Management Director. "We do this so that we
can work through the planning, work through the preparation, have the
conversation, find out where some of our challenges and variables are going to
be in a controlled environment where we can stop and fix the problem rather
than experiencing it when the world is falling apart around us, and we're
trying to do our other tasks in that response.”
"Wisconsin is one of the only states in the U.S. that actually
does a cross-agency exercise like this," said Capt. Allen Nielsen, a
Wisconsin Air National Guardsman who works in Wisconsin's Joint Operations
Center and helped plan the 2016 SIMCOM exercise. "Other states try to
emulate this [exercise], but they don't have anything near the size or scope
that we do."
Lessons learned at SIMCOM were on display just weeks later
as thousands of first responders and National Guard personnel responded to
devastation caused by severe weather, hazardous materials releases, domestic
terrorism and other scenarios during a major exercise at Volk Field, Fort
McCoy, Wisconsin’s Emergency Operations Center, and other sites around the
state June 5-9 as part of the Miles Paratus exercise.
Interoperability and establishing reliable communications
were once again a focus of the exercise.
If such a scenario had occurred in real-life, seamless
communications interoperability between each agency — from National Guard
aircraft and response forces, to local sheriff and police departments, EMS,
fire departments, Wisconsin Emergency Management, the FBI and others — would
have been critical to the overall response.
The hope is that exercises like SIMCOM and Miles Paratus
create opportunities for the many different agencies that might be involved in
a real-world response to identify their problems and shortcomings in a
controlled, simulated environment, rather than when disaster strikes for real.
Todd Nehls, the deputy director of emergency police services
with Wisconsin Emergency Management, coordinated WEM’s mobile communications
center. Nehls explained that in a hypothetical response to a terrorist
incident, the local sheriff's department, police, fire, EMS, along with various
state and federal law enforcement agencies, and the National Guard all might be
called to the scene.
“The challenge is they’re all on different bands, and they
can’t talk to one another,” he said. “I can get the bands on their radios, go
in the back [of the mobile communications center], and I can patch radio
networks together so they can talk to one another.”
Testing those capabilities and networks in regular exercises
like SIMCOM and Miles Paratus are vital to ensure the state’s first responders
are ready when needed in a real emergency.
Exercise Notebook: The Wisconsin National Guard awarded
Capt. Christopher Robbins with the Meritorious Service Medal for his efforts as
the co-project planning officer for the Miles Paratus exercise. Fellow
co-project planner and civilian agency lead, Mr. Kevin Wernet, from Wisconsin
Emergency Management, was awarded the Wisconsin Department of Military Affairs
Meritorious Medal for his contributions to planning the five-day exercise.