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Always Ready: The Ontario Volunteer Emergency Response Team - P1/2
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Search-and-rescue dogs
serve on the frontlines
locating people missing
after natural disasters,
lost children,
injured hikers and others,
being ready
at a moment’s notice to
bravely endure the elements
and save lives.
Supreme Master Ching Hai,
world renowned
humanitarian, artist
and spiritual teacher,
speaks of her admiration
and concern
for these devoted canines.
And I saw many dogs,
you know, they used
for rescue mission.
Oh, they just walk in
like nothing, but
I feel so bad about them.
The dogs walk in
the sharp, broken glasses
or anything like that,
even chemical leaking
or anything, or germs
or danger.
And these are
precious dogs.
They have been trained
for years.
And they even
lay down their life
for anyone at command.
You have to
protect that dog.
To show Her loving
support for search dogs
and their human partners,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has generously
contributed over
US$80,000 to
search-and-rescue teams
in 18 countries, including
Australia, Belgium,
Canada, Chile, China,
the Czech Republic,
Ecuador, France,
Korea, Malaysia,
Nepal, New Zealand,
Panama, the Philippines,
Slovenia,
the Netherlands,
the UK and the USA.
Today, we’ll meet
one of those teams,
the Ontario Volunteer
Emergency Response
Team (OVERT), which
provides timely search
and rescue assistance
during such events
as natural disasters
in the province
of Ontario, Canada
and elsewhere.
My name is Glen Turpin.
I’ve been a member of
the Ontario Volunteer
Emergency Response team
since 1994.
We’re based in
the greater Toronto area
of southern Ontario.
And we provide
skilled search-and-rescue
personnel to assist
in the location of
lost or missing persons.
And a big component
of that team is
our canine unit, the dogs.
We currently have six dogs
in our team.
And we’re tasked
to assist with the location
of missing children
or persons
and utilizing our dogs
to help us to do that.
The Team’s goal is
“to create a better way
to train and integrate
community volunteers.”
Since its humble
beginnings in the 1990s,
the group has worked
with more than
50 Ontario agencies
during its missions
and has gone abroad
to aid people
in various nations
following major calamities
like earthquakes.
Everybody on the team
are volunteers.
We all have a profession
of some sort that pays
bills day-to-day, and then
we put all our other efforts
into our humanitarian
search-and-rescue efforts.
I would say some people
on this team probably
put more time
into the volunteer side
than they do
their actual professions.
We’re out every week
training with the dogs;
there are obviously
administrative aspects to,
to the team.
And we’re doing
public awareness, and
prevention education
as well.
So we cover a lot of
different areas, and
it’s time consuming,
but, at the end of the day
it’s the right cause.
And people don’t see it
as time consuming.
There’s a hundred members
in the organization,
and we cover
a large geographic area
of close to
5,000 square kilometers
and 4.5 million people
as far as the population
is concerned.
And so within the team
we have a number of
specially trained personnel,
and the dog unit is one of
those specialty units.
This is Barrick
he is a five-year-old
sable-coated
German Shepherd.
We've been partners
together since he’s been
about two years old.
What does it take
to become an
OVERT team member?
We asked Mr. Turpin
for his insights.
We’ll teach the people
basic ground
search-and-rescue
techniques, so how to
search within a team.
We’ll teach them how
to do basic first aid and
CPR (Cardiopulmonary
Resuscitation)
beyond their initial levels,
communications
and so on and so forth.
And then within the team
we have other specialties.
We have our
rope rescue team, so they
can do technical rescue.
We have our canine unit,
our communication staff,
and all those units
have more training
regarding their skills.
So how long does it take
to become trained
or certified?
The basic course is 30
hours for new members,
which would include
classroom and field time,
and then after that
you’re deployable
as a ground
search-and-rescue member.
For the canine unit,
for example,
it’s a 14-week process
for a dog team
to become certified.
Let us now watch
a training exercise
that helps
the search and rescue
canines keep safe
during their work.
So one of the components
of our training
is obedience work.
Having control of
your dog is important.
It’s not
for competition reasons
but just for the safety
of you and the dog,
and your partner.
You may see hazards
out there and
the dog needs to be stopped
or you just need to get
from point A to point B.
So you can see
Jason’s doing
what we call “heeling.”
So the dog is walking
at his side.
He will be taught
to sit, down, heel, recall,
be on-line or off-line.
So it’s all about the dog
working with his partner
in a controlled situation.
Being able to down
or stop your dog
at a distance is critical,
especially in some of
the disaster situations
or if you’re working
in a, dangerous
or hazardous location,
to ensure
the safety of the dog.
You notice Justice’s focus
on his partner, on Jason;
he’s looking for that
interaction and direction
from his partner.
Again, at the end of it,
it’s always a positive,
fun experience.
Every training session
that we do
is all about having fun.
Good boy Justice!
Here is the valiant Justice
honing his skills in
finding missing persons.
So what Clint will be doing
is hiding behind a tree,
so that Justice
can’t see him, and then
he’ll be required
to use his nose
to follow Clint
to where he is.
He’s just going to tuck in
behind a tree over there.
And when Justice
finds Clint,
he’s going to go in and
he’s going to sit down
and he’s going
to bark at him,
not out of aggression, but
because he wants his toy.
We basically teach the dogs
to speak for the toy.
And then
once the partner gets to
where our victim would be,
then he’s rewarded
for finding that victim.
Initially, OVERT was
only a ground
search-and-rescue team.
Over time the organization
evolved and now
can provide assistance
in a wide range of
situations such as floods,
fires, evacuations, fast
water search operations,
extreme heat and cold
alerts and others.
So how do you guys
keep ready?
We train
on a regular basis.
We have scheduled training
throughout the year,
with that
we work on the skills
that you were
originally trained with to
keep those to the forefront.
We may go months
without a call-out,
but we still have to
keep our skills
at the highest level, so
that when we’re deployed
to look for somebody
who’s lost,
we’re bringing the best
that we can to the table.
So what keeps your team
together?
What is the driving force
to keep it together?
I would say
it is a true desire
to help their community,
to help their fellow man.
Some of the team members
are emergency
service personnel,
but most are not.
So this is a very tangible
way to contribute
to the community
in very desperate
circumstances.
What is your mindset when
you hear of a disaster?
What goes through
your mind and how
do you prepare the dogs?
We started as a ground
search-and-rescue team,
but we started seeing that
our skills could be used
to assist in disasters,
and we essentially
evolved into that area.
So one of the areas
that we look at
is searching for
missing persons, whether
it’s in collapsed structures
or as a result of
landslides or
other devastations
that happen to the region.
So the first thing
you’re thinking about is,
“How badly affected
are the folks
that are in this area,
and what resources
do they have to help them?”
A lot of countries
that we go to
don’t have a lot of
internal resources,
and so I think
it is incumbent upon us
to respond to help them.
And so having the skills,
the abilities, the dogs and
the technical capability,
it sits on your mind
quite a bit when
you hear of these disasters
that we can go and help.
Getting there
sometimes is a problem
due to finances.
We are again a
charitable organization,
so we have to finance
all the travel ourselves,
our teams over there.
So we’re starting
to get together
our equipment that
we are going to require
in that country.
What hazards
may be there, whether
it’s natural hazards,
it’s environment,
weather, or disease,
so we have to
prepare for those
and the dogs as well.
Are we going to be
dealing with heat,
or is it going to be cold?
So we have to
prepare our equipment
and look at those
different components.
What are some of
the places in world
the Team has
previously traveled to
in order to provide help
following
a natural catastrophe?
The first international
deployment that we did
was to Peru in 2007,
as a result of
the earthquakes
in that area.
It was my first time
being exposed
to catastrophic disaster
in a community.
It was a very, very
significant earthquake.
So we assisted in
search-and-rescue
operations there
and delivering of
humanitarian aid,
water systems,
purification units,
medicine, to the Peruvian
community at that time.
And then I’ve also been
to Myanmar or Burma
after Cyclone Nargis.
We actually trained
persons in Thailand
on the border
to get them water systems
in that area.
Then I was in Haiti in 2008
after the three hurricanes
that went through that area
that devastated
the community.
So we were down
in that country
for 10 days.
In October of 2009,
we were in the northern
part of Sumatra Island
(Indonesia),
the city of Padang, and
that region was affected
by massive earthquakes.
Glen Turpin
and all human and canine
OVERT members,
we laud your large-hearts
and readiness
to help humankind
in times of need.
May Heaven always
bless and protect you
during your missions.
Valued viewers,
please join us
again tomorrow on
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
for the second and
final part of our series
on the Ontario Volunteer
Emergency Response Team,
where we’ll meet
more members
of this fine group and see
other training exercises
conducted by
the canine unit.
For more details
on the Ontario Volunteer
Emergency Response Team,
please visit
Thank you for joining us
today on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May the love of Heaven
always fill your life
with peace and happiness.
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