How CERT is incorporated into your community is entirely up to the community leaders and their emergency planning.
I volunteer in a very active group and we train with first responders.
You can only make your community better by not only doing CERT but by participating in local plans and additional training.
Here is a bit of my part in a local training event at the beginning of the month.....
WMD drill, Edmonds , Snohomish County Washington 3/10/2005We had a multi-agency terrorism drill. The drill included a number of agencies from local police and fire to county bomb and SWAT teams, ATF, Coast Guard, School district, community Emergency Operations Centers, local water district and many surrounding community police and fire responders.
The basic scenario was a radiological IED going off in the locker room at the High School which had 33 students in it, one was killed outright, the rest injured. A secondary IED was hidden on the grounds, a terrorist shot and killed some of the responders and escaped into the local hospital grounds. SWAT and the terrorist were involved in a chemical spill requiring decontamination.
My role was as a RACES (Radio Amateur Civil Emergency Services) “Radio Shadow” to the Fire Department Emergency Medical Service (EMS) along with CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) triage and EMS. That is, I was assigned to a Fire observer and I was to stick by him and communicate any drill specific information to him or ask questions of the DrillMaster. I was also an observer not a player.
Here are a few images from my bit. Some of these pictures of the victims are sort of graphic, but remember it was all a drill and the gore is not real…even though they did a very good job of it.
My wife was a Radio Shadow with SWAT. Each shadow got a good view of their area, but so much was going on that no one could see it all. Overall, I think it was a very good drill with some lessons for each of the groups and for the radio volunteers also. We have our debrief next week.
Couple of Hams (not my photo).

First Responders entering the locker room, the tall gray haired Fire is who I am shadowing.

Entry

Scene, initial triage. Here victims are assessed rapidly, given a black, red, yellow, or green ribbon (Dead, Severe, Moderate, Walking) to indicate their condition.



EMS outside. As the victims are being removed from the locker room they are piled up for reevaluation and application of medical care.
Relocation of outside medical services. The secondary IED had been discovered and it was near the initial evacuation site, so these kids are being moved to a safer area.

EMS resorting and screening.

CERT and Fire reassigning this kid from yellow to red. She did a very convincing job of changing initial condition….actual vomit from this player.

Mixed teams evacuating the victims, CERT, Fire, Police and School teachers shared the initial load under the direction of Fire EMS.

More organization, Red, Yellow, and Green tarps were spread; victims were reassessed as more Fire EMS teams arrived, sorted for transport and various field care administered.
[img]
http://img146.exs.cx/img146/8877/ems34924om.jpg[/img]
And finally transport by Fire.
[img]
http://img43.exs.cx/img43/7969/ems34972ur.jpg[/img]
CERT EMS teams had a fairly good role in the drill, both in support for evacuation of the locker room and in field care prior to transport. (Not my image).
[img]
http://img153.exs.cx/img153/4409/dgcertems9kt.jpg[/img]
The locker device was radiological and all victims had to go to decontamination prior to arrival at the ER or release from the site. This aspect was problematic in the drill.
And my final image the ATF truck.
[img]
http://img239.exs.cx/img239/6696/ems35050va.jpg[/img]
Many folks wonder how CERT RACES etc will work but wondering gets you and your community nowhere. Volunteer and find out how it works rather than figuring it will not.