W.Va. National Guard Army Medics Complete Annual Training

The West Virginia National Guard’s Medical Detachment conducted their annual recertification for army medics today at the Center for National Readiness Memorial Tunnel.

Thirty-two medics, four of them women, participated in the training. In addition to a written test, the medics were required to complete seven training exercises, which varied from attending to victims of a car crash to evacuating soldiers from combat.

The scenarios were conducted in the CNR Memorial Tunnel halfway between Charleston and Beckley on the West Virginia Turnpike. Training activities increased in intensity the farther into the tunnel the medics traveled and were designed to simulate the range of situations an army medic might expect to encounter in either a domestic or foreign crisis.

Credit Kara Lofton / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting

  “We try to stimulate all their senses, they are challenged mentally and physically as you saw today,” said Major John Snedegar, the official in charge of today’s training. “We try to provide as realistic a training as possible because that makes them better prepared to deal with real world emergencies.”

National Guard medics participate in the training once a year. The medics from the military program are certified national emergency medical technicians that, if they choose, can also work for civilian emergency services.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Training for Wounds: National Guard Medics Recertify

The West Virginia National Guard’s Medical Detachment conducted their annual recertification for army medics this morning at the Center for National Readiness Memorial Tunnel.

In addition to a written test, the medics were required to complete seven training exercises, which varied from attending to victims of a car crash to evacuating soldiers from combat. 32 medics, four of them women, participated in the training.

The scenarios were held in the CNR Memorial Tunnel halfway between Charleston and Beckley on the West Virginia Turnpike. Training activities increased in intensity the farther into the tunnel the medics traveled and were designed to simulate the range of situations an army medic might expect to encounter in either a domestic or foreign crisis.

National Guard medics participate in the training once a year.

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Benedum Foundation.

Governor Marks 13th Anniversary of 9/11

A light rain fell on the Capitol complex as the governor laid a wreath at the Fallen Firefighter Memorial. From there, he led a procession across the complex to ring the ceremonial bell in the North Plaza.

Governor Earl Ray Tomblin was joined by members of the National Guard and first responders at the state Capitol Thursday to honor the 13 anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks.

After the ceremony, the governor, who was then the Senate President, said he was in Charleston the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, preparing to lead the Senate into a special session.

“I was in the hotel. I remember tying my tie and flipping through the channels and the first plane had hit the World Trade Center, one of the towers. So, I continued to get ready, I came to the Capitol here and we were watching television upstairs before the session started. That’s’ when I remember the first tower starting to crumble and fall down. You know, it kind of sticks in your mind.”

Tomblin said Thursday was a time for West Virginians to remember those who lost their lives, the first responders and their families.

W.Va. Pension Board OKs National Guard Service Credits

  Public employees who also serve in the West Virginia National Guard can count time spent on active duty status toward their state pensions.

They also can receive military service credit for time spent on training missions.

The Charleston Gazette reports that the state Consolidated Retirement Board approved the changes in a ruling issued Wednesday. The ruling came in an appeal by former West Virginia National Guard Adjutant General Allen Tackett regarding his service credits.

The ruling also says National Guard members qualify for a month of military service for any month in which they have 10 or more days on active duty.

Hearing officer Jack DeBolt says Tackett’s appeal is intended to set a precedent to extend benefits to other public retirees with National Guard service.

Technicians returning to work, but National Guard still facing challenges

A majority of the furloughed West Virginia National Guard members and support staff are returning to work this week because of a movement in Congress to extend military pay to reserve members.

But the state’s top-ranking Guard official said a return to work doesn’t mean those members, and the overall safety of the state, won’t continue to be affected by the federal government shut down.

“The Guard in West Virginia will overcome obstacles and we’ll make things happen to take care of our people in this state, but we shouldn’t have to operate this way.”

Adjutant General James Hoyer made his plea to Congress during a press conference at the West Virginia National Guard headquarters in Charleston, saying its time to put an end to the federal government shut down.

“We are starting to experience degraded readiness in the West Virginia National Guard as a result of this. There are 53 other National Guard organizations across the country that are experiencing the same problems,” Hoyer said Tuesday, “so if you look a that in a holistic approach, we’re starting to really effect our ability to protect our nation and our homeland.”

Money, he said, is a major part of that problem. Money to pay for employees, facilities and supplies.

As Congress prepared for the federal shut down last week, they passed House Resolution 3210 to continue to fund the military; however, Hoyer said the resolution was interpreted by the Department of Defense to mean only active duty members.

In order to keep some 389 military authority employees working, or state employees whose salaries are reimbursed by the federal government, Hoyer and his team began postponing infrastructure maintenance projects around the state and shifting the money to cover those salary costs. Those costs have added up to around $300,000 a week.

 “I’ve only got a $16 million dollar state budget and the longer they go, the longer I wait for the reimbursement,” he said. “So, we can only to a certain threshold of pain.”

“Right now we can go to the 16 at noon unless we sit down and come up with another project that we push back.”

After the 16 and without another source of funding, should the federal shut down continue, Hoyer said the state may have to furlough those workers.

As for the 1,150 federally funded civilian technician positions who were furloughed beginning October 1, Hoyer said nearly 1,000 of those returned to work this week. That return came after Congress lobbied for the federal Department of Defense to loosen the restrictions on that same House Resolution.

Guard and reserve employees will now also receive pay for their return to work that began Monday, but Hoyer said, again, until a budget is passed, he has no idea how long it will take for that money to actually come.

On top of salary issues, Hoyer said his Guard members haven’t been able to train, keep up with vehicle and air craft maintenance, and provide services to active duty families and veterans.

Without keeping up on all of these, he said should an emergency occur, it will take the Guard longer to prepare and respond.

“One way or the other, West Virginia Guardsmen will be where they need to be to take care of the people of West Virginia,” he said. “Now, it might be in a different fashion and it’s going to be a hell of a lot more painful for us in the Guard to get to where we need to be.

“Is that fair to the men and women who go out and do that? That we have to put them in a position that they have to go the extra above and beyond when we don’t have to be in this position?”

Hoyer added there are three new military helicopters for the Guard that should have been picked up on October 1 to replace aging state equipment.

As of now, there are no funds to move those helicopters, leaving the Guard in short supply should there be an emergency.

That and similar issues, Hoyer said, will lead to delays in response as they try to come up with new ways to deliver supplies or conduct rescue missions.
 

Delegate and Guardsman proposes law to vote while on active duty

As an officer in the Air National Guard, Boone County Republican Delegate Joshua Nelson is headed to his second mandatory service training in two years.…

As an officer in the Air National Guard, Boone County Republican Delegate Joshua Nelson is headed to his second mandatory service training in two years. In a press conference, Nelson announced new legislation he will introduce allowing military members like himself to participate in legislative votes while away for training or on active duty.

Nelson’s “Warrior/Legislator Act” would allow legislators who are members of the military to vote by electronic teleconferencing, either using new video technology like FaceTime or Skype or by telephone.

According to the bill, members of the Armed Forces or National Guard would be allowed to participate in both the proceedings of his or her chamber and vote on any issue to come before the body.

Nelson said he hopes enacting this type of legislation will encourage more members of the military to run for state office without having to worry about missing their legislative duties when called to serve, as he had to during the 2013 legislative session.

“I think you’re going to see more and more members of the military step forward to pursue this role and I do believe that we need to make it easier for them to be legislators,” Nelson said Thursday.

“Employers do this. They allow for members to be away to serve their country and I believe it is important that we as a legislature do the same and that they are still able to represent their districts properly.”

Nelson said the idea, however, is not completely new for West Virginia. While on active duty in Afghanistan, Kanawha County Senator Eric Wells voted for Senate President Jeff Kessler after Earl Ray Tomblin was elected governor.
 

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