Southern Nevada-based search and rescue unit races toward Gulf Coast

Members of the FEMA Nevada Task Force 1 Urban Search & Rescue team load equipment at their ...

A team of Las Vegas Valley firefighters and civilians are expected to arrive in Louisiana Monday evening to help those impacted by Hurricane Ida.

Clark County Fire Department Battalion Chief John Grana said by phone that the 38 members of the Nevada Task Force 1 Urban Search and Rescue team were in the Dallas area Monday afternoon following an all-night drive from Southern Nevada. The team, consisting mostly of firefighters from the Clark County, North Las Vegas, Las Vegas and Henderson fire departments, are headed to the Baton Rouge area as part of a Federal Emergency Management Agency hurricane response plan.

“We are driving nonstop,” Grana said. “We have alternate drivers so we are rotating drivers. We haven’t been told yet what our mission will be. What they are doing now is assessments in Louisiana to see what the storm has done up to now.”

The team consists of firefighters who specialize in water rescues along with civilian heavy equipment operators. The team also has dogs that can help with search and rescue efforts.

“We have hazardous materials and medical (staff first responders) as well,” Grana said.

Once in Louisiana, it is unclear whether the team will be able to communicate with their fire departments and the Las Vegas Valley public about their progress.

“My understanding is Louisiana right now, if that’s where we end up, there is no cell service. And I understand Louisiana has also lost all internet,” Grana said.

The team is also prepared to assist in debris removal and whatever else local first responders need help with.

The Associated Press reported that rescuers set out in hundreds of boats and helicopters to reach people trapped by floodwaters Monday, and utility repair crews rushed in, after the furious hurricane swamped the Louisiana coast and ravaged the electrical grid in the stifling, late-summer heat.

Residents living amid the maze of rivers and bayous along the state’s Gulf Coast retreated desperately to their attics or roofs and posted their addresses on social media with instructions for search-and-rescue teams on where to find them.

More than 1 million customers in Louisiana and Mississippi — including all of New Orleans — were left without power as Ida, a Category 4 hurricane and one of the most powerful storms ever to hit the U.S. mainland, pushed through on Sunday and early Monday before weakening to a tropical storm.

Contact Glenn Puit by email at gpuit@reviewjournal.com. Follow @GlennatRJ on Twitter.

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