Crime & Safety

NEW VIDEO: Fairfax County Rescue Team in Japan

Lorton man among those helping earthquake victims

Updated with new video Thursday 6 p.m.

Updated Tuesday 6 p.m.

Fairfax County's urban search and rescue team joined with a team from L.A. and the U.K. to search for earthquake and tsunami survivors in Ofunato, Japan on Tuesday. 

Find out what's happening in Lortonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Working with the  fire department, the team spent the day picking through the wreckage of the city, searching for survivors. They found none. About 200 people are still missing from the city, according to Stars and Stripes.

“Time is the enemy,” Joe Knerr, task force leader for the Fairfax County Search and Rescue team, told Stars and Stripes. “On the fifth day, survivability [of missing victims] drops significantly. On the seventh day, it becomes remote.”

Find out what's happening in Lortonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

---------------------------

The United States Agency for International Development activated their Fairfax County-based search and rescue team to aid in rescue efforts in Japan following an earthquake Thursday.

The team, composed of firefighters from Fairfax County Fire and Rescue, received the call from USAID just after noon Friday, said Capt. Will Bailey, spokesman for the county agency. He said 72 of the more the 200 members of the team will travel to Japan at some point soon along with six search and rescue dogs. The team started assembling at the county’s fire academy with their equipment Friday afternoon.

Among those going to Japan with the team is Lorton resident, Barry Maham. According to his wife, Amber, Maham was scheduled to arrive in Japan this morning.

“Each team member has three hours to report once they have been called,” Bailey said. “If someone can’t make it, the agency calls the next person on the list until they have everyone they need.”

According to AOL News, this was the biggest earthquake to hit Japan in almost 150 years. A Google application has been developed to help locate Japanese residents who may have been separated from their families by the disaster. The rescue team from Fairfax County will be taking cameras, breaking tools, listening devices and swift water boats to search for people who may still be living under debris, said Capt. Ramiro Galvez, lead officer for the planning section of the rescue team. Bailey said the team’s heavy equipment has been packed into a trailer and is ready to be transported to Japan.

Rescue members arrived one by one Friday afternoon, hauling large sacks of equipment and clothing they’ll take with them to Japan. Each rescuer placed their sacks atop a scale for a weigh in. Galvez said each person is allowed to take 60 pounds of gear and equipment total. For the 14-year veteran with the team, deployments like this always come down to time.

“Hopefully we will get there in time to really help the Japanese government find people who may still be alive,” Galvez said. “We still haven’t worked out all of our travel yet.”

Bailey said it could take the team up to two days to get their travel together. He said some times, like with the deployment to Haiti in 2010.

Among those going to Japan with the team is Lorton resident, Barry Maham. According to his wife, Amber, Maham was scheduled to arrive in Japan on Sunday morning. He also was deployed to Haiti in 2010.

The rescue team is one of two in the nation that is trained to respond to international natural disaster rescue missions. One is in Los Angeles County and the other is the Fairfax County team. The Urban Search and Rescue teams deployed from the U.S. are trained to excavate people trapped under rubble, in the water and just about anywhere else people need to be rescued from. USAID pays 100 percent reimbursement for any deployment by either of the two teams in the U.S.

Click here for more information on the Fairfax County Technical Rescue Operations/Urban Search and Rescue teams.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

To request removal of your name from an arrest report, submit these required items to arrestreports@patch.com.