1 / 51

Aloha!

Aloha!. Oli Aloha Onaona i ka hala me ka lehua He hale lehua no ia na ka noe O ka`u no ia e `ano`i nei E lia`a nei ho`i o ka hiki mai A hiki mai no `oe Hiki pu no me ke aloha Aloha e, aloha e. Aloha e Mau!. Hawaii’s Regional ARFF Training Center Pacific Aviation Directors Workshop

brosh
Télécharger la présentation

Aloha!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aloha! Oli Aloha Onaona i ka hala me ka lehuaHe hale lehua no ia na ka noeO ka`u no ia e `ano`i neiE lia`a nei ho`i o ka hiki maiA hiki mai no `oeHiki pu no me ke alohaAloha e, aloha e

  2. Aloha e Mau!

  3. Hawaii’s Regional ARFF Training Center Pacific Aviation Directors Workshop April 5-7, 2005 State of Hawaii Department of Transportation Airports Division Hawaii District Chauncey Wong Yuen, AIR-H

  4. Hawaii Island • Geography: • 4038 square miles • 93 miles long • 76 miles wide • 266 miles of coast • Twice the combined size of the other main Hawaiian islands Upolu Waimea-Kohala Kona Hilo

  5. Hilo International Airport

  6. Waimea-Kohala Airport

  7. Upolu Airport

  8. Kona International Airport

  9. Kona International Airport at Keahole • Served by Aloha, Hawaiian, Japan, IslandAir, United, American, Northwest, Air Canada & North American. Start-ups: American Trans Air, Visionaire, FlyHawaii • Index D Airport; largest aircraft serving the airport include the B747-400 and B777. • 2004 Passenger Enplanment/Deplanment Activity: 2,239,411 • 2004 Aircraft operations: 122,354 • Non-stop operations from KOA to HNL, LAX, SFO, NRT, DEN, OAK, SNA, ORD, SEA, OGG

  10. Why A Regional Training Facility? • Environmental compliance issues resulting in temporary closure of neighbor island burn pits. • ARFF personnel dedication & desire • Kato & Yamabe, Kukushima • Spillover effect, engaged and excited • Emergency response community interest • We don’t do it alone • Just 6 guys • We’re gonna respond anyway • My personal experience • Volunteer firefighter • The station manager • The dreaded phone call

  11. Why Kona International Airport? • Most of the 3450 acres available consists of barren lava fields. • Sufficient distance from residential, resort and commercial/industrial areas. • An existing burn pit is already available.

  12. Response Agencies Training Together to Respond Together County Firefighters from HFD Station 7

  13. Response Agencies Training Together to Respond Together At the table during ICS training: HPD Captains Hickox & Fukui, HFD Captain Kojima, Wackenhut Manager King, ARFF Captain Kato, DLNR Chief Nahale, & Tower Chief Dawson.

  14. Response Agencies Training Together to Respond Together State & County Fire Trucks

  15. Incident Command Training

  16. Incident Command Training Professor Stacy Rogers at work

  17. WMD Briefing & Training Agent Tim McHugh, U.S. Customs Service

  18. More Extra Curricular Training • NTSB & Hawaii Healthcare Association Workshop & Tabletop Exercises – April 26, 2005 • Nicole Charnon – NTSB • Toby Claremont – Hawaii Healthcare Association • Stacy Rogers – Honolulu Community College

  19. Training Facility Endorsements • County of Hawaii • Mayor Harry Kim • Chief Darryl Oliveira • U.S. Army, Pohakuloa Training Area • Chief Eric Moeller

  20. Agencies That Have Participated in Airport Sponsored Training • County of Hawaii Agencies • Police, Fire, EMS, Civil Defense • State of Hawaii Agencies • Civil Defense, DOH, DLNR, HCC, DOT • Federal Agencies • U.S. Army Hawaii, USCG, DHS, TSA, USDA, FBI, DMORT, CUSTOMS, INS, FAA • American Red Cross • Kona Hospital, North Hawaii Community Hospital, Hilo Hospital • Hawaii Funeral Directors Association • Air Carriers: AA, AQ, HA, JL, NW, UA, WP, FEDEX • Airport Security: Securitas

  21. Featured Instructors & Speakers • Stacy Rogers, Associate Professor, HCC, Fire & Environmental Emergency Response • Mack Humphery, ACSI, FAA • Lance Peterson, Director, Weber County Emergency Management & Homeland Security • The Honorable Harry Kim, Mayor, County of Hawaii • Debbie Kimokeo, ASI, TSA • Judith Akamine, Supervisor, Public Health Nurses, DOH • Dr. Tony Manoukian, Deputy Commander, Region IX, DMORT • Bert Freeland, Region IX, DMORT • Mitchell Dodo, President, Hawaii Funeral Directors Association • Ken Lee, Disaster Mental Health Lead, American Red Cross • Ray Lovell, PIO, Hawaii State Civil Defense • Tim McHugh, SA, U.S. Customs

  22. Need Classroom Space • Average attendance for ICS classes: 60 • Largest class, Mass Fatalities Workshop: 120 • Larger classes are often preferred to extend instructor reach and optimize expenses. • Air conditioned CAP & ARFF buildings an with aircraft air conditioner. • Need kitchen/dining facilities due to remote location and restricted access to airport facilities. • Audio visual equipment are sub-standard.

  23. Live Fire Training

  24. Live Fire Training

  25. Live Fire Training

  26. Live Fire Training

  27. Burn Pit Remediation • Neighbor island pits temporary closed due UST concerns and issues with associated piping. • Current remediation status unknown. • Burn pit remediation presents opportunity to enhance facility.

  28. Vision Statement To equip and develop firefighters and fellow emergency responders with the skills, competence and confidence to respond to aviation disasters to minimize loss of life and property.

  29. Mission Statement To plan, design and construct a regional ARFF training facility at Kona International Airport within the next five (5) years.

  30. Facility Features • Burn area; rehabilitate & utilize existing burn pit • ARFF vehicle maneuvering area; training course • Control/command observation tower • Command center • Fixed mock ups with situations for : • Brake & wheel well fires • Engine fires • Structural fires • Multi-purpose building; gymnasium; RUPP® or Sprung® structure; double as disaster shelter • Dorms • Kitchen facilities • Classrooms • Open field • Fitness pool with deep dive tank • Network ready

  31. Goals & Objectives • Meet Part 139 requirements. • AC5200-31A; rewrite AEP • Water rescue plan; boater education component, MOU’s • Wildlife hazard management plan; birdstrike database • Establish an AEP team • Improve formal coordination among Hawaii county’s, state and federal emergency response agencies. • Provide opportunities for joint response agency use and education. • Develop a business plan for self-sustenance. • Fee-based education • Maintenance cost-sharing • Grants & loan programs • Develop training curriculum. • Mandatory training • Extra curricular training

  32. Values • Education • Preparedness training • Fitness • Fellowship • Respect & appreciation for each other, the unique traditions of our people and for where we live.

  33. Potential Facility Site Location

  34. Potential Facility Site

  35. Site Terrain

  36. Next Steps • Determine burn pit remediation status. • Refine vision, mission & goals. • Galvanize Airport Division support for facility. • Galvanize response community support for facility. • Get preliminary cost estimates. • Write a business plan for the facility.

  37. Sunset at Kona International Airport at Keahole

  38. Mahalo!

More Related