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Law enforcement officers and firefighters team up in Great Falls for active shooter training

GFPD, GFFR, and CCSO partner to help save lives
Posted at 3:16 PM, Aug 30, 2019
and last updated 2019-08-30 17:16:51-04

Great Falls Fire Rescue, Great Falls Police Department, and Cascade County Sheriff’s Office are joining together and adopting a new protocol to respond to active shooter threats.

This new protocol is called the Rescue Task Force (RTF).

Assistant Fire Chief Jeremy Jones is one of the organizers of this training. He said, “Rescue Task Force Training is a product of all of the events happening across the nation over the past 10 to 15 years involving active shooter events in large facilities.”

With RTF training, fire rescue/EMT personnel are teamed up with law enforcement personnel, where law enforcement will allow fire rescue/EMT to enter an active shooter scene earlier in the response.

Jeremy added, “We’ve always staged away from the emergency and waited for law enforcement to bring us the problem, the goal now is to have armed guards bring us into a warm area where we can do good, stop the bleed, help save savable lives that we can but do that securely.”

The main goal for this RTF protocol is to save more lives.

Another organizer of the training, Cascade County Sheriff’s Office Sgt. Of Patrol Jason Boyd, said, “As far as law enforcement acts, we want to be there and get the scene safe. The fire guys want to get in and save lives. Now we’re bringing that together and that’s the mission of both.”

By spending several days doing this type of training, they learn new things every day.

First, they learn by switching jobs, so they understand each other’s responsibilities in separate groups. Next, they come together and do a real-life situation with information they just learned. Lastly, they brief on what went well and what went bad.

Although hoping they never have to use the training, they need to be prepared.

“It’s something we want to be prepared for but hope we never have to test,” said Boyd. “If we don’t prepare for it, we’re just sticking our heads in the sand and hoping that it doesn’t happen. At least this way we’re getting prepared. The hope is that, if this happens, which we hope doesn’t, but if it does happen, we can bring this training in and efficiently save lives.”

The RTF training has been a year in the making and is the first of its kind in Great Falls.

This is the first joint command training between the City and the County.

The agencies will continue to do more training through Friday.