Community Corner

Fairfax County Rescue Team Arrives in Japan

Web site tracks progress

UPDATE (Monday, 4:30 p.m.): We've updated this story with photos of the team.

From the team's update on Monday: The team arrived safely in Sumita and will be housed in an elementary school at that location. There will be no night operations and the team will be bedding down for the evening. The team is expected to begin operations first thing in the morning.

The Fairfax County Urban Search and Rescue Team arrived in Japan at about 1:30 a.m. ET Sunday (3 p.m. local time) to help with search and rescue efforts there, according to the group's Web site tracking the team. The group was deployed to Japan after a devastating 8.9 earthquake and resulting tsunami hit the area on Friday. The crew landed at Misawa Air Base, a U.S. military base about 150 miles north of Sendai, the area that saw the biggest hit from the tsunami. The base is home to the 35th U.S. Fighter Wing.

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The Fairfax County International Urban Search & Rescue Team (aka Virginia Task Force 1) has been assigned to Ofunato, a fishing village near Miyagi Prefecture, according to the air base Web site. Associated Press news reports estimated Japan saw up to 10,000 deaths from the earthquake and tsunami. The Sendai area is about 150 miles south of Misawa. Stars and Stripes reports it will take six hours for the teams to get there by bus.

The team will headed out Monday morning, local time, joining a similar team from Los Angeles, according to Virginia Task Force 1. The team is one of 28 domestic resources qualified by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to assist with Homeland Security, and one of two resources utilized by USAID-OFDA for international response. In all, in Japan, there are about 150 rescuers, 12 rescue dogs and 75 tons of rescue equipment from the two teams from Fairfax County and Los Angeles.

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

The Fairfax County team flew to Japan after a stopover in Anchorage, Alaska.

The teams are deploying at the request of the Japanese government, under the direction of the U.S. Agency for International Development, according to FEMA. When activated by either federal partner, all related expenses are fully reimbursed by either, resulting in no cost to the citizens of Fairfax County, according to the Virginia Task Force 1 Web site.


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