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View Full Version : Don't Panic, It's Only A Drill



Sonia
March 30th, 2005, 11:36 AM
According to the Jersey Journal, coming soon (starting on Monday) to all New Jersey counties is a simulated bio-terrorist attack drill, see article below:

Don't panic, it's only drill, gov says
State's 5-day terror response test called largest ever in U.S.

Wednesday, March 30, 2005
By Wayne Parry
Associated Press writer

TRENTON - State officials are invoking the panic touched off by an infamous radio broadcast as they warn residents to stay calm during a massive terrorism drill planned for next week.

"The public needs to know that an exercise is going on," acting Gov. Richard J. Codey said yesterday. "You might hear about something strange at your local hospital, or see first responders in hazardous materials suits, or see a large number of ambulances in your area."

Starting Monday, New Jersey officials will begin responding to a simulated bio-terror attack designed to strain the limits of the state's health care capabilities. Ambulances will be whizzing to hospitals, investigators will be searching for clues in marked and unmarked cars, and volunteers acting as "victims" will pour into emergency rooms.

"Don't be alarmed," Codey said. "We don't want this to turn into 'War Of The Worlds.' It happened before, and it could happen again."

Orson Wells' 1938 "War Of The Worlds" broadcast of a fake Martian invasion in Grovers Mill, N.J., created panic among people who didn't realize it was fictitious.

Next week's "attack," which has taken two years to plan, will be centered in Middlesex and Union counties, selected for their population densities and major highways and train systems. The five-day exercise will start when a vehicle used to disperse a "biological agent" is found in New Jersey and people pretending to be seriously ill start to overwhelm hospitals, federal officials said. An attack involving fake chemical weapons is to occur concurrently in New London, Conn.

In New Jersey, all 21 counties and 82 hospitals have roles to play, as do state police, hazardous materials teams, emergency management personnel, and police, fire and emergency first-responders, such as emergency room staff.

Codey acknowledged word of the drill will not have reached everyone by the time it begins, and said officials are prepared for anxious calls from the public. He urged anyone who sees something amiss and who is unsure if there is a real problem to call the state's Domestic Security Task Force at 1-866-4SAFENJ.

"Tell them you saw something, you're not sure what it is, but you wanted to report it," Codey said.

The drill - called TOPOFF 3 - will be the largest, most comprehensive counter-terrorism drill ever held in the United States, said Matt Mayer, acting executive director of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Office of State and Local Government Coordination and Preparedness.

NewportLady
March 30th, 2005, 03:46 PM
And from the Star Ledger:

Hey Jersey, that bioterror response is only a drill
Codey tells residents 'don't be alarmed' as massive mock exercise TopOff 3 unfolds

Wednesday, March 30, 2005
BY RICK HEPP
Star-Ledger Staff


Acting Gov. Richard Codey said yesterday residents should not panic at the sights and sounds of a mock terrorism exercise that will kick off in New Jersey on Monday.

"You might hear about something strange at your local hospital, you might see first responders in hazardous material suits or a large number of ambulances in your area," acting Gov. Richard Codey said. "Don't be alarmed. We don't want this to turn into 'War of the Worlds.'"

Codey's comments came as state officials announced TopOff 3, a full-scale national drill in which New Jersey is a major player.

Being billed as the largest of its kind, the homeland security drill will involve more than 10,000 employees from federal, state and local agencies in New Jersey, Connecticut, Washington, D.C., Canada and the United Kingdom.

The exercise, which begins Monday, will test how well law enforcement and health workers gather intelligence, share information, respond to an ongoing emergency and recover from it. The five- day drill in New Jersey will begin with a fake biological agent being unleashed in either Middlesex or Union counties.

More than 5,000 volunteers acting as seriously ill patients infected by the bioterrorism bug are expected to swarm the state's 82 acute care hospitals as part of the drill. Eventually, the Department of Health and Senior Services will have to make a decision whether to require the widespread distribution of antibiotics.

"While this is under way the public needs to know an exercise is going on," Codey said. "If a real life situation makes it necessary, we will stop the exercise and respond."

The state has been preparing for the drill for the last two years, working with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to arrange the exercise and training its own personnel on how to respond.

"The question is: How do we know whether any of these well- laid plans work?" Attorney General Peter Harvey said. "This is what TopOff 3 will tell us. This is the first time we will run a full-scale live exercise that tests various aspects of our system."

Codey also hopes that hosting the exercise will pay dividends when the federal government doles out homeland security grants. The Bush administration slashed $12 million from grants intended for Newark and Jersey City this year, a move that state officials have criticized.

"The two most dangerous miles in America, according to the FBI, are in New Jersey," Codey said. "This is, in my opinion, a great investment ... to show New Jersey, along with New York, is the largest at-risk state."

Matt Mayer, acting executive director of Homeland Security's Office of State and Local Government Coordination and Preparedness, who was at yesterday's Statehouse news conference, responded that the federal government is "always looking at better ways to ensure that the areas of highest risk get the resources we have, whether it's personnel or finances."

To which Codey replied, "I'll take the finances, by the way."



Rick Hepp covers criminal jus tice. He can be reached at rhep p@starledger.com or (609) 989-0398.