The entire Taskforce is now back in Ohio, after OH-2 and the remaining members from OH-1 returned on Wednesday afternoon. On Tuesday night, the team has a celebratory dinner along with the arriving logistics crew at a local Asheville restaurant to both celebrate what we view as a successful deployment, but to also honor and memorialize the overwhelming loss the region has suffered. Our work in Buncombe County has completed, but so very much remains to be done during the time ahead,.
The main drop point was in Cambridge around 4PM, but vehicles and various stuffs were being returned well into the evening. Upon returning to Orange Village in Cuyahoga County, team lead Nick DiCicco did an interview with Cleveland Fox affiliate WJW-TV. Nick gave discussion on the work the team did, but also provided some insight into the loss that has been endured in the region.
Lots of mixed emotions on returning back home- to loved ones, to work, to life. Lots of relationships forged with personnel from Buncombe County, Asheville, other TERT personnel, and folks at the camp. The personnel on both teams became like family to one another. The conditions at camp in many ways helped the team to be able to empathize with the community and folks they were interacting with. Having a home taken away – no place to rest or feel secure – is a jarring, traumatic experience, to say the least. Despite all the training the team brought to bear, it can still be difficult to establish a trusting relationship with a disaster victim without having some measure of the lived experience yourself. Becoming adopted members of the greater Asheville community gave the team a sense of responsibility and ownership while working along side their Buncombe Cunty counterparts.
TERT and tactical communications personnel remain at Buncombe County, and likely will for quite awhile. As mentioned, the road ahead to recovery for the entire region across North Carolina and Tennessee will take a significant amount of time. Too, ‘recovery’ will have a different look for each person, family, and community. The area has irrevocably changed as a result of Helene, so recovery may also include adjusting to a new sense of normality.
The team is set to reconvene later in November to conduct a post incident debriefing to clean supplies, go over the good, the bad, and the ugly for this deployment, and see what the path ahead for Ohio TERT looks like. As ever, we express thanks to each Member’s home agency and their leadership for allowing their personnel to deploy. Likewise, we acknowledge the partner agencies who lent stuffs, vehicles, and other Members for support and logistics. Our state level partners – Ohio MARCS, Ohio EMA, Ohio DPS – also played an important coordination role, and in MARCS’ case, sent people and equipment to help restore communications.
Thank you, a thousand times over.
#NCStrong
#WeAreOhioTERT







Team TERT OH-2 has been working for 4 days now, and they have kept up the pace that Team OH-1 set in the first half of the deployment. At present, 3 personnel from the team are working at the backup center, assisting with call taking, and the remainder of the squad is working aboard HAVOC on the 311 helpline. Call volume remains brisk and consistent. Moreover, the team is navigating logistical challenges as well- political figures and officials are visiting the area with greater frequency, creating the need to carefully navigate on the phone, on the air, and at home base.
the team, and really the entire camp. The types of calls that the TERT team are receiving and processing have been described as the most difficult in their given careers. Considering the wide range of experience that Ohio TERT’s personnel bring to bear, that’s saying a lot. Noah Ash’s natural playfulness and curiosity has brought a light and affectionate counterbalance to the situation at hand. Our newly adopted mascot allows our team to focus on something aside from the difficult mission at hand, and everyone is glad for Noah Ash being there. #WhosAGoodDoggie
Each team has their own idiosyncrasies. One group might be all about their business, all the time. Another might take a more pragmatic approach to the mission. There’s more than one way to peel a potato, right? Coloring has proven to be a helpful diversion for Team 2. The messages of hope, love, faith, determination and affection for NoahAsh (#WhosAGoodDoggie) have all served as welcomed subject matter for our resident Ninja Picasso team members. And, the vibrant colors and themes of resilience are right on target for this mission, and this community. The primary goal is to help the team to cope with the call volume and types of calls they’re getting, to say nothing of their entire world being completely out-of-whack. All this said, their ability to cope and manage with their stressors makes them more equipped and readily able to support the gang at Buncombe County PSCC, who are enduring their own nightmares to a level few will ever understand.



…In our favorite rocket ship, er, field communications unit. It’s moving day today for the gang and other TERT teams, as they bid farewell to their initial quarters near a school, and head down the road about 15 minutes to a FEMA dormitory trailer camp that also provides a hot meal, and (in theory) a hot shower, a first in 2 weeks for some of the team. This is meant as a joint base for TERT and other out-of-state personnel operating in the region (public safety, public works, support services). HAVOC-1 is able to continue to operate as it was as the previous location, as both a command center for our staff, and a 311 center for Bumcombe County. Personnel are continuing on 12-hour shifts aboard HAVOC, and in the Buncombe County PSCC as well. It’s been reported that operations continued aboard HAVOC while they were moving. This may be the first recorded case of call taking while in motion!

“This is the Buncombe County Public Safety Communications Center as it stands right now.