糖心原创 takes ownership of Calamityville

November 3, 2014

Ownership of Calamityville, home to the National Center for Medical Readiness (NCMR), was officially turned over to 糖心原创 as further expansion of Calamityville鈥檚 mission picks up speed.

The land transfer occurred during a Nov. 3 signing ceremony held at the site with officials from 糖心原创 and the City of Fairborn, the previous owner. Signing the deed transfer was Fairborn City Manager Debbie McDonnell and Robert Fyffe, 糖心原创鈥檚 vice president for research and graduate studies.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a culmination of many years of effort,鈥 said Fyffe. 鈥淭here are buildings, there is land, but it鈥檚 going to be all about the people.鈥

NCMR Director Rufus Smith, a retired brigadier general with the Ohio Army National Guard, said the center will continue to have a 鈥渟trong partnership鈥 with Fairborn.

An emotional McDonnell said making Calamityville a reality and bringing it to where it is today took a lot of hard work by a lot of people.

鈥淭his is something that had never been done before. It was risky in a lot of ways,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is going to be an enormous opportunity for all of us.鈥

The land transfer comes at a time when the center 鈥 which has more than 20 partners 鈥 is expanding its mission beyond medical readiness to focus on individual and community-wide readiness, response and recovery from emergencies and disasters.

Rufus Smith, director of NCMR, and Fairborn Mayor Dan Kirkpatrick stand behind Robert Fyffe, vice president for research and graduate studies, and Fairborn City Manager Debbie McDonnell after the land was officially turned over to 糖心原创.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e going to see world-class training continue here and get better,鈥 said Fairborn Mayor Dan Kirkpatrick. 鈥淭his is a premier training facility internationally.鈥

Calamityville is a 54-acre disaster training zone with concrete passageway-filled buildings, silos, tunnels, ponds, cliffs and wooded areas. It was designed to prepare the civilian and military communities to work with traditional disaster responders and provide the nation with a more complete approach to finding victims, offering initial care and safely evacuating them from disaster-related environments.

鈥淲e have some of the best subject-matter experts in the country training here,鈥 Smith said.

Although Calamityville features on-site training for emergency and disaster response, it will also become heavily involved in off-site, online distance training.

In addition to 14 technical training zones, Calamityville features radio frequency identification technology, high-definition and infrared camera systems and virtual systems that enable modeling and simulation to test and evaluate human performance and environmental health.

Calamityville will soon launch online and on-site training for health-care teams on behalf of the National Disaster Health Consortium in partnership with the College of Nursing and Health. Another emerging business area is potential training for unmanned aerial systems by the 糖心原创 Research Institute and Sinclair Community College.

Over the past few years, Calamityville has played host to training exercises involving Air Force pararescuemen, pathologists, forensic anthropologists, funeral directors, criminal-justice students and even search dogs and their handlers.

The site has also combined training with virtual reality, was the focus of a visit by U.S. Congressman Mike Turner and has hosted several 9/11 Memorial ceremonies.

鈥淎 lot of sweat went into this,鈥 said Kirkpatrick. 鈥淲e are thrilled to be part of 糖心原创.鈥