By Army Capt. Loyal Auterson U.S. Army Reserve Command
CONROE, Texas, Sept. 4, 2017 — Once the skies cleared after
Hurricane Harvey moved off, the work of cleaning up was hampered by flooding
across various counties. This didn't slow down the tight-knit aviation
community here.
As donors began to send semitrailers of water and supplies
into the area, the Conroe North Houston Regional Airport became the natural
staging point for relief operations.
Two local aviators, Chad Herdrich and Mike Barksdale, began
to negotiate hangar space to store the supplies and called for local pilots to
carry them to flooded communities north of Beaumont. As they began to carry the
cargo, two problems faced the aviators. Their personal aircraft could carry
only a few hundred pounds at a time, and the airspace became congested with
military helicopters trying to locate trapped survivors.
As a solution, the two men reached out to local U.S. Army
Reserve aviators with the 1st Battalion (Assault Helicopter Battalion), 158th
Aviation Regiment. One day later, four CH-47 Chinooks from the 7th Battalion
(General Support Aviation Battalion), 158th Aviation Regiment, each capable of
moving 15,000 pounds of water, took on the mission.
"We kept having semiloads show up, and we just weren't
cutting a dent into it. …The Army Reserve comes in and tackles the issue with
these big CH-47 Chinooks, and God bless them that they came in and helped us
out," Hendrich said.
Critical Capabilities
"We do have the capability to move a massive amount of
cargo to affected areas with four Chinook and three UH-60 Black Hawks,"
said Army Capt. Chris Fishel, an assistant operations officer for 1st Battalion
(Assault Helicopter Battalion), 158th Aviation Regiment.. "Yesterday, we
moved just shy of 100,000 pounds. Safety is always paramount, and airspace
deconfliction is a huge aspect of it."
The Army Reserve provides capabilities critical to Defense
Security Cooperation Agency's response to the hurricane, including search and
rescue, aviation, engineer, transportation, medical and communications support.
The Army Reserve owns a stake in domestic welfare with soldiers and equipment
in more than 1,100 communities across the nation, allowing immediate response
to local emergencies.
"Here's the bottom line for the Army Reserve and for
this unit in particular, the 1st of the 158th Assault Helicopter Battalion:
this community has supported us through the good times, through the bad times
for a lot of years. Having the opportunity to support the community that has
supported us for all those years, is an honor, it's a privilege, and it's a
responsibility that we take very seriously," Fishel said.
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