507th Civil Engineer Squadron firefighters conduct fire training aboard KC-135

  • Published
  • By Senior Airman Mark Hybers
  • 507th Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs
Firefighters from the 507th Air Refueling Wing's Civil Engineer Squadron conducted simulated aircraft fire training on a KC-135R Stratotanker here Sept. 5.

Teams from the Fire and Emergency Services Flight conducted the training in a contingency environment with limited fire department resources. According to CES Assistant Chief of Training Master Sgt. Michael Bilharz, the training is part of CES' quarterly super unit training assembly.

"The fire flight and Emergency Management Flights hold one super UTA per quarter in order to facilitate in depth training that cannot be conducted on two-day drill weekends," said Sergeant Bilharz. "It also helps build camaraderie and esprit de corps."

Sergeant Bilharz said the fire flight's structure mirrors a civilian fire department. There are fire and deputy chiefs, assistant chiefs and three to five person crews.

"We do our best to structure and keep our crews working together when they are here in UTA status, on annual tour, or deployed," Sergeant Bilharz said.

During This training exercise, those crews drove fire trucks across the flight light and entering the distressed aircraft from the wing door with instructors watching from inside and outside the KC-135.

Two crews entered the aircraft and split forward and aft checking for fires, smoke and personnel that may need assistance. Sergeant Bilharz said instructors were looking for overall safety, the ability to establish command, form an appropriate plan of action and execute it in a timely and safe manner. He said it's important for the members to mitigate the risk of the situation and act appropriately to save victims, put out any fires and keep everyone safe.

"The performance of our crews today was outstanding," Sergeant Bilharz said. "Everyone walked away with a fresh understanding of what's expected of them during a real-world aircraft emergency."

Sergeant Bilharz added most of the firefighters will do these large exercises twice a year, which makes them all more proficient and better prepared.

"We are always preparing to deploy to a bare base environment anywhere in the world and provide fire and emergency services at a moment's notice," he said.