CERT

CERT (Community Emergency Response Team) training promotes a partnering effort between emergency services and the people that they serve. The goal is for emergency personnel to train members of neighborhoods, community organizations, or workplaces in basic response skills. CERT members are then integrated into the emergency response capability for their area.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), using the model created by the Los Angeles City Fire Department, began promoting nationwide use of the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) concept in 1994. Since then, CERT’s have been established in hundreds of communities.

 

CERT Training

CERT training promotes a partnering effort between emergency services and the people that they serve. The goal is for emergency personnel to train members of neighborhoods, community organizations, or workplaces in basic response skills. CERT members are then integrated into the emergency response capability for their area.

If a disastrous event overwhelms or delays the community’s professional response, CERT members can assist others by applying the basic response and organizational skills that they learned during training. These skills can help save and sustain lives following a disaster until help arrives. CERT skills also apply to daily emergencies.

CERT members maintain and refine their skills by participating in exercises and activities. They can attend supplemental training opportunities offered by the sponsoring agency and others i.e. Red Cross, American Heart Association (AHA), etc that further their skills base. Finally, CERT members can volunteer for projects that improve community emergency preparedness.

 

CERT Training will teach Participants to:

  •     Describe the types of hazards most likely to affect their homes and communities.
  •     Describe the function of CERT and their roles in immediate response.
  •     Take steps to prepare themselves for a disaster.
  •     Identify and reduce potential fire hazards in their homes and workplaces.
  •     Work as a team to apply basic fire suppression strategies, resources, and safety measures to extinguish a burning liquid.
  •     Apply techniques for opening airways, controlling bleeding, and treating shock.
  •     Conduct basic triage.
  •     Perform head-to-toe assessments.
  •     Select and set up a treatment area.
  •     Employ basic treatment for various wounds.
  •     Identify planning and size-up requirements for potential search and rescue situations.
  •     Describe the most common techniques for searching a structure.
  •     Use safe techniques for debris removal and victim extrication.
    • Describe ways to protect rescuers during search and rescue.

 

Target Audience:

  •     Neighborhoods
  •     Businesses
  •     Communities of Faith
  •     Scouting Organizations
  •     School Staff/Students
  •     Clubs/Organizations
  •     Amateur Radio Emergency Services

 

CERT training sessions are designed to cover the following:

  •     Disaster Preparedness
  •     Fire Safety
  •     Disaster Medical Operations-Triage and Treating Life Threatening Injuries
  •     Disaster Medical Operations- Assessment, Treatment and Hygiene
  •     Light Search and Rescue
  •     Team Organization
  •     Disaster Psychology
  •     Terrorism and CERT
  •     Final Exercise

Each session requires about two hours for completion.

For more information about CERT Teams, please visit FEMA. To obtain more information about CERT, please call the Fire Chief’s office at 636-441-8799

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About Us

More than 2,500 times every year the firefighter/EMTs of the Cottleville Fire Protection District respond to emergency calls from residents of Cottleville, Weldon Spring, Dardenne Prairie, St. Peters, and O’Fallon, Missouri. The District covers 38-square miles of southwestern St. Charles County and operates four fire stations. Firefighters respond to a variety of emergency situations including fires, hazardous materials incidents, motor vehicle accidents and medical emergencies.

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