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THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 2020 VOLUME 94 ■ ISSUE 46

STAY UP TO DATE ON NOVEL CORONAVIRUS (COVID-19) NEWS VIA THE CORONAVIRUS THREAD ON OUR WEBSITE. LA VIDA

SPORTS

OPINIONS

ONLINE

INDEX

Yellow Caped Raiders raises puppies, educates community.

Thomson sets program record in doubles wins.

COVID-19 tagging along for memorable spring break.

Check out more photos from the Lubbock full-scale airport emergency exercise.

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ONLINE

SPORTS OPINIONS CROSSWORD CLASSIFIEDS SUDOKU

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LOCAL

DISASTER REHEARSED CHASE SEABOLT The Daily Toreador

The city of Lubbock hosted a full-scale airport emergency exercise on Wednesday, March 11. The exercise consisted of a simulated plane crash.

Lubbock units participate in airport emergency exercise By ADÁN RUBIO

News & L a Vida Editor To ensure the city is ready to take on large-scale emergencies, multiple Lubbock departments took part in a training session like no other. Different city units participated in a full-scale exercise that involved simulating a plane crash slightly before 8 a.m. Wednesday at the Lubbock Preston Smith National Airport. This exercise, which the Federal Aviation Adminis-

tration requires to take place every three years, was conducted to prepare local public safety departments for potential future mass-casualty events impacting the city. The exercise, which carried on until noon, gave public safety workers and other city departments the chance to practice their response to a large-scale emergency at the airport and other locations in Lubbock, such as hospitals and the Emergency Operations Center.

Bill Glass, Lubbock Fire Rescue battalion chief, said the exercise consisted of multiple departments within the city’s infrastructure and hundreds of volunteers coming together to practice response and safety procedures for large-scale emergencies. “And it’s really a neat aspect when you see the entire community come together for one goal,” he said. “We have to run this drill every three years. The planning for this started approximately eight to nine months ago.”

The Crash Site

For this year’s exercise, the city simulated an American Airlines’ 737 plane crash near a runway at the Lubbock Airport, Glass said. Local units responded to the situation as if the plane crashed with nearly 10,000 pounds of fuel and 157 passengers onboard. At the site of the simulated crash, a controlled fire was started on parts of a 737 plane. LFR firefighters arrived on the scene to put the fire out. In addition to LFR arriving

to put out the fire, Emergency Medical Services arrived at the scene to practice response procedures and provide medical services to the injured, who consisted of volunteers acting. During mass-casualty events, paramedics and other first responders must conduct a triage, which is the process of making quick assessments of multiple injured people at an incident, Glass said. While conducting a triage, first responders make a 20 to 30 second assessment of

everyone involved in the crash and separate the injured into different categories based on the severity of their injuries, Glass said. Red-tagged individuals need immediate treatment, yellow-tagged individuals need treatment but not as quickly as those with red tags, green-tagged individuals are considered walking wounded, white tags mean one has minor injuries and those with black tags are considered deceased.

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CHASE SEABOLT/The Daily Toreador

Lubbock Fire Rescue puts out a fire on a prop plane during the full-scale airport emergency exercise. The training was conducted to ensure the city would be prepared for a plane crash emergency and is required every three years by the Federal Aviation Administration.

HEALTH

City officials discuss precautions regarding coronavirus pandemic By AUSTIN WATTS Editor-In-Chief

Following concern over the global spread of the novel coronavirus, the City of Lubbock hosted a conference on Wednesday to update the community on steps being taken to prevent the coronavirus’ spread in Lubbock. “As a community, we take this virus situation very seriously,” Lubbock Mayor Dan Pope said. “And we didn’t wake up Monday morning and start making plans. We’re thankful that we have

a group of people that plan for these types of things every day and so working with our partners, I think we’re very well prepared.” Pope, along with Lubbock City Manager Jarrett Atkinson, Director of Public Health Katherine Wells and Dr. Ronald Cook, local health authority, spoke with the assembled media about the preparations made by the City of Lubbock in the event the coronavirus is confirmed in the city. “We really closely monitor the situation that is

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following our long standing public health plans that have worked for us in the past, as we’ve had other disease outbreaks in our community,” Wells said. Cook, a physician at the Covenant Health System, reiterated the dangers of the coronavirus, especially to members of the community who are pregnant or over 60 years of age. “So, the unique thing about this one is our immune system hasn’t seen this virus before and that’s why it’s affecting us so severely,” Cook

said, “It seems to be a little more virulent, much more infectious than the flu virus and that’s why we’re seeing it bloom so rapidly across the United States and the world.” Although a person with the coronavirus can take several days to show symptoms, Cook said. During that time frame the potential still exists for the virus to spread to others. “It’s anywhere from two to 14 days roughly, and we think that most of this happens, oh four to five days into it, where most people show up with this infection,” Cook said.

If someone suspects they may have the coronavirus, Cook said distance is the best precaution to take to limit exposure to others. Shortness of breath, chest pains or high fever could be symptoms of the coronavirus, but Cook said to call the doctor, rather than potentially expose others to the virus. “And then the other thing to do is, like I said, stay at home. We call that social distancing if you’re infected,” Cook said. “We don’t want you in the clinic. We don’t want you at the hospital. We

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don’t want you at the mall. You should stay home with all that social distancing.” If the coronavirus is allowed to rapidly and exponentially spread, Cook said this could cause the amount of help needed to exceed the resources available, which is why slowing the rate of infection is the primary concern. “So, we’re not saturated yet, but we can easily be overwhelmed if we don’t slow this infection rate down,” Cook said.

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031220 by The Daily Toreador - Issuu